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China's involvement with Khartoum's crimes in Darfur: What next?

Posted to: Crisis in Sudan Group by Jim Fussell (CCAL30) (1135), Tue, 30 Jan 2007 20:33:43 PST
Edited: Mon, 05 Feb 2007 09:33:31 PST
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Comments: 158 by 16 members
Viewed: 1525 times by 55 members

http://www.chinaconsulatesf.org/eng/xw/W020050428644256419578.jpg

China is the most important powerful ally of the Sudan's Bashir regime. Oil politics, weapons trade and the policy of non-interference all are parts of this close relationship.

Yet some younger Chinese are becoming sensitive to the Darfur crisis. While China held a 46 nation Africa summit in Beijing last November 2006 and in early 2007 Chinese President Hu Jintao is on his third extended tour of Africa.

In the past activists have highlighted the role of PetroChina and Sinopec in providing Khartoum with revenue from oil sales. Some have highlighted Chinese trucks and weapons being used by the Sudan Army in Darfur. Will the Summer 2008 Olympics in Beijing become a focal point for spotlighting Chinese policy concering Darfur?

The Chinese are going to be very sensitive to any efforts to use the Olympics to raise Human Rights policy. Many Chinese feel their nation is finally regaining a national position in the world they haven't had for about 200 years or more. Also many Chinese feel the 1937 Nanking massacre is only now being recognized. Many feel that critisicm of their policies by other nations or peoples with negative historical legacies is hypocricy.

Therefore efforts to motivate or shame them into better conduct or more responsible behavior needs to be framed carefully, to elicit genuine improvement and not just defensiveness. The primary Chinese defensiveness will be on criticisms linking the Olympics to policies concerning Tibet, Uighar Muslims in Western China or sovereignty over Taiwan.

On Chinese Darfur policy we want Chinese people to take criticisms to heart if possilble.

Nationalism in France, the USA, China or any country is a curious thing. We want to use Chinese national pride and desire for a good image at the time of the Olympics to help instigate better Chinese policies toward Sudan which actually help people in Darfur. The message needs to be shaped to create the best chances for better outcomes for Darfuris to actually happen.

Links:

"Dear China" Children's letters and drawings to China http://youtube.com/watch?v=OlA9wGg-hQs

China, Africa, and Oil Author: Esther Pan Updated: January 26, 2007 This CFR backgrounder helps to put Chinese activity in Sudan in context. http://www.cfr.org/publication/9557/

http://www.genocidewatch.org/SudanChinaandDarfur-TheGenocideOlympics14December2006.htm

"China's Crude Conscience," by Ronan Farrow in The Wall Street Journal, August 10, 2006

China Invests Heavily In Sudan's Oil Industry Beijing Supplies Arms Used on Villagers By Peter S. Goodman Washington Post 23, 2004; Page A01 http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A21143-2004Dec22.html

Africa Action’s report “Leveraging New International Action on Darfur” (Dec. 14, 2006) lays out next steps for the international community on this crisis, and looks at how the U.S., China and other powers can use their influence to persuade Khartoum to allow the necessary peacekeeping force into Darfur. This report is available at: http://www.africaaction.org/resources/page.php?op=read&documentid=2235&type=6&issues=1024

Excerpt: The U.S. must point out China’s unique role with Khartoum, and the leverage it can exert to achieve Sudan’s cooperation with the international community. The U.S. must make clear that instability in Darfur undermines China’s economic interests in Sudan, and broader international interests in the region. It must further assert that achieving China’s support on this matter is a priority for the U.S. and is important to these countries’ future bilateral relationship.

On the economic front, the U.S. should urge China to impose sanctions against Khartoum, particularly to halt Chinese investment in Sudan’s oil industry, until Sudan consents to a UN peacekeeping force. Though this is perhaps an unlikely prospect, it would exert immense pressure on the Sudanese government, if realized. Even if not, the U.S. request would encourage China to explore leveraging its various other connections with Sudan in this regard.

China has made clear that it supports a UN transition in Darfur, but that Khartoum’s consent must be achieved first. Now, the U.S. must work to actively engage the Chinese government in gaining this consent and removing the final obstacles to the necessary peacekeeping force for Darfur.

From January 11, 2007 TIME magazine: "younger Chinese diplomats 'are embarrassed' "

A former senior U.S. official says Chinese officials have been closely monitoring the growing international distaste over its support for the Sudanese government. Congressman Lantos says younger Chinese diplomats "are embarrassed that the Chinese government is prepared to do any business with Sudan for oil despite what is happening in Darfur."

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1576831-9,00.html



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By Jim Fussell (CCAL30) (1135), Fri, 02 Feb 2007 18:52:34 PST
Edited: Fri, 02 Feb 2007 19:19:52 PST
Comment feedback score: 0

China's Hu Jintao is in Sudan backing Bashir soverignty in Darfur, but telling him to resolve the issue.

This is "constructive engagement" of a sort. What was said behind the scenes? These two articles have very different takes on the Bashir-Jintao meeting.

BBC 2 February 2007

Chinese leader boosts Sudan ties

Chinese President Hu Jintao has agreed on a series of economic deals in Sudan, which China has protected from UN sanctions over the Darfur conflict. China announced an interest-free loan to build a new presidential palace, and said it would build two schools. China already buys most of Sudan's oil.

CHINA, SUDAN TIES -China buys some 400,000 barrels of oil a day from Sudan -China financed Sudan's oil pipeline -China sells weapons to Sudan -China to build new presidential palace for Sudan -China uses UN Security Council veto to help Sudan

Mr Hu did mention Darfur in his discussion with Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir.

Only Sudanese and Chinese journalists were allowed to see the discussion.

Xinhua, China's state-owned news agency, quoted Mr Hu as saying: "Any solution [in Darfur] needs to respect the sovereignty of Sudan and be based on dialogue." . . . http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6323017.stm

China's Hu tells Sudan it must solve Darfur issue

Sat Feb 3, 2007 By Opheera McDoom

KHARTOUM (Reuters) - Chinese President Hu Jintao told Sudan's President Omar Hassan al-Bashir on Friday Khartoum had to resolve the four-year-old conflict in Darfur, a source said after talks between the two leaders.

The source did not elaborate on the comments by Hu, who Western leaders hoped would use his first trip to Sudan, China's third-largest African trading partner, to press Bashir to accept U.N. peacekeepers in the western region. . .

Hu told Bashir "Darfur is a part of Sudan and you have to resolve this problem", said the source, declining to be named. . .

China Given Credit for Darfur Role

U.S. Official Cites New Willingness to Wield Influence in Sudan

By Edward Cody Washington Post Foreign Service Saturday, January 13, 2007; Page A13

BEIJING, Jan. 12 -- The U.S. special envoy to Sudan said Friday that China has pushed the Sudanese government recently to help resolve the bloody Darfur conflict and ease the plight of the region's nearly 3 million refugees. . .

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/12/AR2007011201924.html


By Niny Khor (1454), Fri, 02 Feb 2007 20:06:16 PST
Comment feedback score: 0

Jim - thanks for starting this thread. I find it encouraging that Hu does seem to 'encourage' Bashir to resolve the Darfur issue. Will check and see what the Chinese press say.


By Jim Fussell (CCAL30) (1135), Sat, 03 Feb 2007 07:35:50 PST
Comment feedback score: 1 (*)

Thank you Niny! It seems like one source of pressure on China to pressure Sudan could be other African States. Imagine who Hu Jintao's visit to Sudan would have played out if Sudan had become chair of the African Union.

China and Egypt appear to be the States with the most leverage in Khartoum. If Nigeria, South Africa and other African States were able to get China to do and say more about Darfur that sould help.

What do other people think?


By Niny Khor (1454), Sun, 04 Feb 2007 22:18:12 PST
Comment feedback score: 0

Well, interesting... Here's Xinhua's report on President Hu's 4 point principle on Darfur:

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-02/03/content_5688991.htm

Hu puts forward four-point principle on solving Darfur issue

[....]

  • The first principle is to respect Sudan's sovereignty and territorial integrity, he said, adding that the settlement of the issue should be helpful for Sudan's reconciliation process, its national unity and regional peace and stability.
  • The second principle is to solve the issue by peaceful means and by sticking to dialogue and coordination based on equality. It is imperative for the parties concerned to take into consideration the overall situation and from a long-term perspective, respect and address each other's reasonable concerns, and seek shared interests through dialogue in order to find out a just solution, he said.
  • Hu went on to say that the African Union and the United Nations should play constructive roles in a peacekeeping mission in Darfur, adding that wisdom and creativity should be employed in order to improve the efficiency of the peacekeeping mission to create favorable conditions for achieving peace in the region.
"China supports the process of seeking a political solution to the issue," Hu said.
  • The fourth principle is that it is imperative to improve the situation in Darfur and living conditions of local people, he said. What is important right now is to achieve a comprehensive ceasefire in Darfur and speed up the process of political negotiations and let those who have not signed the Darfur Peace Accord join the peace process as soon as possible, he said.

[.......]


Now the Chinese version of this piece of news include more details, like the beginning paragraph (my own translation, pls excuse the mistakes):

"President Hu arrived at 2 am in Khartoum, to begin his visit of Sudan. Earlier in the day, the two leaders conducted sincere, deep, full of productive discussion. Both parties exchange views on bilateral relation and the larger geopolitic issues and reach important common grounds, and together agreed to mutually nurture and realize that common ground, working hard to bring the friendly relations between Sudan and China into another level.

The two leaders very enthusiastically evaluated the development and fruits of Sudan-Chinese relations. President Hu said that Sudan is the earliest African and Arabic country which extended diplomatic ties with China. 43 years ago, Premier Zhou En Lai visitied Sudan, and began the history of Sino-Sudanese ties. In the nearly half a century of friendship, the citizens of two countries trust each other, sincere friendship, and the is relationship survived the challenge of changes in international diplomacy. In the recent years, under hardwork of both parties, the friendly cooperation of the two countries does not stop yielding wonderful outcomes. Both countries succesful collaboration has enahaced the quality of the two countries' relationship, and benefits the citizens of boths countries.... "

More later. :)


By Jim Fussell (CCAL30) (1135), Mon, 05 Feb 2007 06:30:44 PST
Comment feedback score: 0

Does China have a Plan B?

Niny,

Thanks for this summary. The Hu Jintao's four points for Darfur sound good:
  1. sovereignty and territorial integrity,
  2. dialogue based on equality
  3. AU and UN peacekeeping
  4. real improvement on the group for local people

Among the items missing from the list are:

  1. immediate halt to bombing and air attacks,
  2. disarming the janjaweed, justice and accountability of individual perpetrators for mass atrocities,
  3. return of refugees and IDPs to their homes,
  4. acceptance of a multilateral peacekeeping force sufficiently robust to provide real security.

Will China pledge to take any specific actions should the Khartoum regime fail to take actions?

Does China have a Plan B?

Jim


By Jim Fussell (CCAL30) (1135), Mon, 05 Feb 2007 09:36:40 PST
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Palace For Sudan China's No-Strings Aid Undermines the West

By Sebastian Mallaby Monday, February 5, 2007; Page A15

Last week China's leader, Hu Jintao, provided Sudan with an interest-free loan to build a presidential palace. With that gesture, Hu demonstrated his contempt for the Western understanding of the world . . .But China's talk of "sovereignty" is code for the opposite policy. As well as paying for a presidential palace, Hu used his trip to cancel $80 million of Sudanese debt, to announce a plan to build a railway line and to visit an oil refinery that China partly owns, basking in the fact that 80 percent of Sudan's oil goes to his country. . . Hu's visit was a statement that, in the Chinese view of the world, the principle of sovereignty trumps even the most appalling human rights abuses: It brushed aside the memory of the Rwandan genocide and the Holocaust. But at the same time, Hu was saying more than that. He was advancing an understanding of modernization that the West discarded 15 years ago. By pursuing commercial ties with Sudan, Hu was implicitly saying that economic development comes first and that political development is unimportant. . . China's Sudan policy is an assertion that this link between economic and political modernization is by no means inevitable, even in the extreme case. You can construct oil refineries, educate scientists, build ambitious new railways -- and simultaneously pursue a policy of genocide. smallaby@cfr.org http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/04/AR2007020401047.html


By Craig Steel (CCAL30) (439), Mon, 05 Feb 2007 10:23:42 PST
Edited: Mon, 05 Feb 2007 10:25:15 PST
Comment feedback score: 0

In the book of Revelations, chapter 9, verse 19, there is speaking of a 200,000,000-man army, which is connected to an earlier speaking of "the kings of the rising sun" joining the war. This is understood to be an army from the east; and the thinking is that it will be China.

as Jim stated above, China seems to be pursuing a policy of economic development, one that trumps all other considerations. In order to do this China requires what can be found in Africa,... at a cheap price. And there is nowhere on earth that can be bought cheaper than Africa. Remember, always economics first, not human life, is the Chinese way.

Additionally, history has shown us that China is very much into ownership of what it sees/deems as its possessions (Hong Kong, Tibet, etc.), and should it ever feel that its "possessions" in other countries are at risk of being lost then I have no doubt that it will act in a military manner to secure them (much like both English, French, German, American, and really, most everyone else have or would).

Having a prophesy of a 200,000,000-man army marching from the east, tells us that what China is doing today is establishing pockets of ownership that will someday justify the response of this army.

Look for China to continue doing more of exactly what its doing in the coming years.

cj


By P (CCAL30) (1419), Mon, 05 Feb 2007 15:23:03 PST
Comment feedback score: 0

Thanks Jim, for starting this post... just ran across it.

I will post more soon.... Eric Reeves is very active on this subject - let me post some of his most recent writings soon.


By Jim Fussell (CCAL30) (1135), Mon, 05 Feb 2007 15:43:07 PST
Edited: Mon, 05 Feb 2007 15:52:26 PST
Comment feedback score: 0

Quotes and/or links from Eric Reeves would be a great addition.

It seemed like the China -Darfur subject was discussed every few weeks on the monthly Crisis in Sudan thread, but the posts were getting lost among other items and harder to review cumulatively.

Natsios was pretty frank and direct with the group that came to the State Department last November. I wonder what he will say at the upcoming Hearings on the Hill about the aftermath of his January trip to China. What does he think of President Hu Jintao's initiative? What did he hope for?

I also recall last May Robert Zoellick saying his role as Deputy Secretary of State gave him access and clout in China which a Special Envoy wouldn't have. It seems to me if State had given Roger Winter a bigger mandate a year ago it would have been better.


By P (CCAL30) (1419), Mon, 05 Feb 2007 20:11:43 PST
Comment feedback score: 2 (* *)

YES. It would have been better to reach China before they got into a defensive posture.

To be honest, my personal thought was that the visit by President Hu only makes the Government of Sudan act with more impunity. Highly frustrating that the US has lost its political capital. We have no good will credits left.


By P (CCAL30) (1419), Mon, 05 Feb 2007 20:13:13 PST
Comment feedback score: 0

Understanding Chinese President Hu's Business Trip to Khartoum

Skilled diplomacy leaves the illusion of having responded to genocide in Darfur, yet with no change in the political or diplomatic dynamic---and thus no change in security on the ground

Eric Reeves February 4, 2007

To understand just how little was accomplished in halting ongoing genocidal destruction in Darfur during Chinese President Hu Jintao’s much-touted business trip to Khartoum, we need to understand the larger context in which Beijing’s leader arrived. And here we can do no better than to recall the recent words of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon:

“‘We need to be patient in following up this political process as well as the peacekeeping process,’ Ban said in reference to Darfur. ‘Both tracks are moving well at this time, it may take a little longer to have a detailed agreement,’ the former South Korean foreign minister said Wednesday [January 31, 2007].” (Agence France-Presse [dateline: Addis Ababa], January 31, 2007)

What is the meaning of Secretary-General Ban’s words? Why, in the context of an unsurpassably urgent need to address disintegrating security for civilians and humanitarians in Darfur and eastern Chad, would he urge “patience”? Is there any evidence that “patience” has been rewarded during the international efforts, now of five months, to secure from Khartoum consent to deploy the robust peace support operation outlined in Security Council Resolution 1706 (August 31, 2006)? How are Ban’s words here to be squared with comments made the day before, when he declared of efforts to secure access for UN peace support personnel, "‘No more time can be lost. The people of Darfur have waited far too long,’ Ban said. ‘This is just unacceptable’” (Reuters [dateline: Addis Ababa], January 30, 2007)?

The answers lie all too predictably in continuing defiance on the part of Khartoum---in the regime’s obdurate refusal to allow a meaningful international force into Darfur, one that might provide desperately needed civilian and humanitarian security. Khartoum persists in this defiance because it is confident that whatever China’s President Hu found expedient to say, or suggest he might have said during his stay, in the end China will not, under present circumstances, put meaningful diplomatic pressure on the National Islamic Front regime over this “internal matter.”

Indeed, the Khartoum regime’s confidence was conspicuously in evidence during the recent African Union summit in Addis Ababa (January 29-30, 2007), where National Islamic Front President Omar al-Bashir was rightly denied the chairmanship of the AU. But largely lost amidst reporting on this important story were the results of al-Bashir’s meeting with Ban Ki-moon, who has tried at least rhetorically to increase Darfur’s profile. A BBC dispatch, from a correspondent traveling with Ban, offers the most detailed account of how badly this meeting went, and why the UN Secretary-General was left following his encounter to ask only for “patience,” despite his declaration prior to the meeting with al-Bashir that "no more time can be lost,” “the people of Darfur have waited far too long,” “this is just unacceptable”:

“For an hour the new secretary general and his top officials---including the head of UN peacekeeping Jean-Marie Guehenno---met President Omar al-Bashir of Sudan. Then, for half an hour, Mr Ban and the Sudanese leader had what the secretary general called a tete-a-tete.” [ ]

“UN officials were hoping ahead of Mr Ban's meeting with President Bashir that there might be some movement on this key issue---the deployment of the 20,000-strong peacekeeping force. A new secretary general, a new dynamic---perhaps President Bashir will offer something, observed one UN official.”

“In the event, the hour-and-a-half meeting produced little new. The discussions were all about Phase Two, what is known in jargon as the UN heavy support package for the AU troops in Darfur. But that is only 2,250 peacekeepers. On the all-important deployment---the 20,000 strong hybrid force [sic]---the discussions did not even get off the ground.” (BBC [dateline: Addis Ababa], January 31, 2007)

Here we need to recall that although Khartoum denounced UN Security Council Resolution 1706 and declared that it would not accept the authorized force, the regime nonetheless found it expedient to participate in the so-called “High Level Consultation on the Situation in Darfur” (Addis Ababa, November 16, 2006). This was the occasion that allowed Khartoum’s génocidaires to appear to accept an international force, in some respects vaguely like that outlined in Resolution 1706, but with no firm commitments. Indeed, the outcome of this “Consultation” was a “Conclusions” document (not an “agreement,” as has often been disingenuously suggested) that specified very little on the key terms of deployment, most significantly what the BBC refers to correctly as “Phase Three” of the “Conclusions” document.

“Phase Three” is modeled roughly on the assessment of force requirements offered by the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations (UN DPKO) in developing recommendations for Resolution 1706---17,300 troops, 3,300 civilian police, and 16 Formed Police Units. This force of approximately 22,500 personnel was to have had a robust mandate for civilian and humanitarian protection, as well as authority to establish a “multi-dimensional presence consisting of political, humanitarian, military and civilian police officers in key locations in Chad [and] in Central African Republic.” But of “Phase Three” the Addis Ababa “Conclusions” document says only that “the strength of the peacekeeping [sic] force should be 17,000 and 3,000 police” (Paragraph 31). And even this “should” is held hostage to the key escape clause upon which Khartoum insisted:

“A hybrid operation [NB: not a “hybrid force”---ER] (Phase 3) is also agreed in principle, pending clarification of the size of the force” (Paragraph 28). But “clarification of the size of the force” has meant, over the course of the past two and a half months, Khartoum’s refusal to accept either the size of force specified in the “Conclusions” document, or even that the adjective “hybrid” refers to a UN/AU “force.” The regime continues to cleave insistently, at the highest levels, to the notion that a “hybrid operation” does not entail deployment of any non-AU forces---merely UN logistical, technical, and financial assistance.

This was the import of comments last week by two very senior NIF Presidential advisors, Nafie Ali Nafie and Majzoub al-Khalifa. Reuters reports al-Khalifa declaring (January 29, 2007) that, “‘We have agreed on a hybrid [AU/UN] operation not a hybrid force’” ([dateline: Khartoum], January 29, 2007). The February 1, 2007 UN Bulletin for Sudan reports that,

“On 31 January [2007], local media reported that Presidential Assistant Nafie [Ali Nafie] reiterated Government of Sudan rejection of any form of what he described as ‘evil’ colonization, saying that the Government of Sudan will categorically refuse deployment of foreign troops regardless of the helmet they wear. The statement was made during his visit to Kabkabiya, North Darfur.”

These two comments, one for international the other for domestic consumption, are entirely consistent with remarks coming from the most senior members of the National Islamic Front for months now, including from President al-Bashir.

Indeed, discussion between Ban Ki-moon and al-Bashir at the recent AU summit in Addis (January 29-30, 2007) never moved to a discussion of either the size or nature of the Phase 3 security force in Darfur---the large and critical element of the peace support operation that would be of a “hybrid” nature. As the BBC reports and others confirm:

“The discussions [in Addis Ababa between Ban and al-Bashir] were all about Phase Two, what is known in jargon as the UN heavy support package for the AU troops in Darfur. But that is only 2,250 peacekeepers. On the all-important deployment---the 20,000 strong hybrid force [sic]---the discussions did not even get off the ground.”

To make matters worse, reliable sources report that the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations now contemplates only a May/June deployment for these Phase Two elements (the current Phase One support package amounts to only approximately 200 advisory and technical UN personnel, the so-called “light support package”).

In other words, the security dynamic on the ground in Darfur---the critical issue for some 4.5 million conflict-affected persons in the greater humanitarian theater of Darfur and eastern Chad---remains unchanged, indeed continues to deteriorate, even as the international community cannot find the will to bring pressure to bear that would ensure access for a force that can actually protect civilians and the increasingly fragile humanitarian lifeline upon which they depend.

CHINA’S HU IN KHARTOUM

This is the context in which to understand how the issue of Darfur was apparently raised during Chinese President Hu’s business trip to Khartoum. Wire reports on the visit have come from a range of sources. Perhaps of most significance is the dispatch from China’s state-controlled Xinhuanet: here we know we are getting what amounts to Beijing’s official word on the meeting between President’s Hu and al-Bashir. But let us examine seriatim what has been reported:

Reuters, on the basis of an uncharacterized source, reports that, “Hu told Bashir ‘Darfur is a part of Sudan and you have to resolve this problem,’ said the source, declining to be named” (Reuters [dateline: Khartoum], February 2, 2007).

Even if we accept this at face value, and as coming from an official regime source, it is difficult to see how this puts additional pressure on Khartoum. For of course the regime continues to insist that it is working hard to resolve the “problem” of Darfur, even as it also continues with its large military offensive, its indiscriminate aerial bombardment of civilians in rebel-held areas, and its re-mobilizing and heavy re-arming of the Janjaweed. Khartoum also continues to assert that peace has been largely secured in Darfur, and that if only non-signatory rebels groups would sign the disastrous Darfur Peace Agreement (May 2006), peace would be achieved and the Darfur “problem” resolved.

This is one reason that Khartoum continues to insist that the phrase “Darfur Peace Agreement” be included in every document it commits to. The phrase appears a dozen times in the brief “Conclusions” document of the November 16, 2006 “High Level Consultation” in Addis (subsequently ratified by the AU Peace and Security Commission two weeks later in Abuja). The phrase even appears in the absurd “cease-fire agreement” negotiated by US presidential aspirant Bill Richardson, along with the Save Darfur Coalition and its naïve diplomatic emissary, former Ambassador to Croatia Lawrence Rossin. The phrase appears yet again in the December 23, 2006 letter from President al-Bashir to former Secretary-General Kofi Annan.

There can be no mistaking the import of this insistent cleaving to a document that was signed by only one rebel faction, and certainly the least representative---that of Minni Minawi, now thoroughly sidelined in Khartoum despite nominally serving as the fourth-ranking member of the Presidency in the “Government of National Unity.” The Darfur Peace Agreement could hardly be less responsive to the key demands of Darfuris, especially on matters of security.

Another and more revealing account of the Hu visit to Khartoum comes from a still unnamed source in an Associated Press dispatch:

“Chinese President Hu Jintao urged Sudan's Omar al-Bashir on Friday to work harder to bring more Darfur rebels into the peace process, a Sudanese official told The Associated Press. Hu raised the issue at a closed-door meeting during the Chinese leader's landmark visit, the first ever by a Chinese president. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue, said Hu told al-Bashir his ‘government should work more earnestly to get the rebels who did not sign the Darfur peace agreement to join the peace process.’” (Associated Press [dateline: Khartoum], February 2, 2007)

If this is the extent of Hu’s “pressuring” Khartoum, the regime could hardly have asked for more, and indeed this might well provide the motive for a strategic “leak.” For the regime would like nothing more than to re-engage the non-signatory rebels groups, particularly the militarily potent Group of 19, in another endless round of peace talks, with the Darfur Peace Agreement (May 2006) as its stipulated starting point. Khartoum has made publicly clear that it would welcome such talks, which would provide diplomatic cover for ongoing genocide by attrition on the ground in Darfur. So long as China did not pressure the regime on allowing an effective, international peace support operation, both regimes achieve their diplomatic goals: China is hoping to be perceived as having engaged on the high-profile issue of Darfur; Khartoum has been enjoined, without criticism, to do what it wishes to do in any event.

We should hardly be surprised that Associated Press also reports, “After the closed door meeting, Sudanese Foreign Minister Lam Akol insisted Sudan and China were ‘in complete agreement’ over Darfur. ‘We don't need any Chinese pressure on Darfur, because we all agree,’ he told reporters.” As Agence France-Presse reports, the expediency of the November 16, 2006 Addis Ababa “Conclusions” document lives on: “Turning to Darfur, Akol told reporters: ‘The two sides agreed to support the Addis Ababa agreement’” ([dateline: Khartoum], February 2, 2007).

This represents the most perverse of “win-win” situations, with the people of Darfur and courageous humanitarian organizations on the ground the conspicuous losers.

The most comprehensive report on what Hu stressed in his meeting with al-Bashir comes from Xinhuanet, a generally unreliable, state-controlled news source that nonetheless on this occasion may be of significance because of how closely it is reporting on how Beijing wishes the Hu/al-Bashir meeting to be perceived, both in Sudan and in the international community.

“Visiting Chinese President Hu Jintao on Friday put forward a four-point principle for the concerned parties to observe in the pursuit of a solution to the Darfur issue. During the talks with his Sudanese counterpart Omar Hassan Ahmed al-Bashir in Khartoum, Hu said that China appreciates efforts by the Sudanese government, the African Union, the Arab League, the United Nations and countries concerned to solve the Darfur issue, and hopes that the issue could be solved as soon as possible. He said China believes that it is imperative to observe the following four principles in the pursuit of a solution to the Darfur issue:

“The first principle is to respect Sudan’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, he said, adding that the settlement of the issue should be helpful for Sudan’s reconciliation process, its national unity, and regional peace and stability.”

Since Khartoum continues to assert national sovereignty as a means of forestalling the deployment of international forces to Darfur, this cornerstone Chinese “principle” is the context in which to understand the other three “principles.” Notably, China says nothing about the principle of a “responsibility to protect,” framed in the UN World Summit “Outcome Document” (September 2005) specifically so as to supersede claims of national sovereignty when civilians are unprotected from “genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing, and crimes against humanity.” China voted with all other UN Security Council members to pass UN Security Council Resolution 1674 (April 2006), thereby declaring itself,

"prepared to take collective action, in a timely and decisive manner, through the Security Council, in accordance with the UN Charter, including Chapter VII, on a case by case basis and in cooperation with relevant regional organizations as appropriate, should peaceful means be inadequate and national authorities manifestly failing to protect their populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing, and crimes against humanity and its implications, bearing in mind the principles of the Charter and international law.”

China will pick and choose which “principles” will guide its actions because it is fundamentally unprincipled, indeed committed only to a brutal, if diplomatically sophisticated Realpolitik.

The “second principle” articulated by the Chinese amounts to a re-formulating of the first principle:

“The second principle is to solve the issue by peaceful means and by sticking to dialogue and coordination based on equality.”

This is a “principle” so vague as to be susceptible of many interpretations; but certainly one way of understanding “peaceful means” is as a code phrase for no humanitarian intervention in Darfur, no matter how massively destructive the genocide might become in the wake of humanitarian withdrawal. “Sticking to dialogue” might also be understood as a code phrase for no resort to international pressures, whether in the form of sanctions or military actions. Though the most opaque of all the phrases deployed here, “based on equality” is probably meant to suggest that all nations are equal, and therefore no nation has the right to interfere in the affairs of another, no matter what the nature of international crimes being committed.

As reported by Xinhuanet, Hu’s “third principle” is not really a principle so much as an abstract and strategically vague exhortation. Certainly it does nothing to suggest that Beijing has pressured Khartoum on composition of the so-called “hybrid operation”:

“It is imperative for the parties concerned to take into consideration the overall situation and from a long-term perspective, respect and address each other’s reasonable concerns, and seek shared interests through dialogue in order to find out a just solution, he said. Hu went on to say that the African Union and the United Nations should play constructive roles in a peacekeeping mission in Darfur, adding that wisdom and creativity should be employed in order to improve the efficiency of the peacekeeping mission to create favorable conditions for achieving peace in the region. China supports the process of seeking a political solution to the issue,’ Hu said.”

Nothing to discomfit Khartoum’s génocidaires here: indeed, such language is so unthreatening that it actually gives the regime something to point to in public statements. And by refusing to characterize in any way the role of the UN, or more broadly non-AU forces, in a peace support operation in Darfur, the Chinese have made it harder to persuade Khartoum that it must accept any part of a Phase Three deployment that extends beyond technical, logistical, and financial roles for the UN.

The fourth principle is the vaguest and least consequential of all; again, it is not so much a “principle” as an expedient means of putting China on record as caring about the people of Darfur, and perhaps urging Khartoum to be more discreet in its continuing obstruction, harassment, and intimidation of humanitarian workers and operations:

“The fourth principle is that it is imperative to improve the [humanitarian] situation in Darfur and living conditions of local people, [Hu] said.”

As reported by Reuters, Associated Press, and Xinhuanet, Hu’s visit has done nothing to change the larger diplomatic dynamic that presently obstructs actions to strengthen security on the ground in Darfur.

THE REAL BUSINESS OF THE HU TRIP

And with the diplomatic difficulty so thoroughly and deftly finessed (Hu of course made no public mention of Darfur), the real issues could be addressed. Perhaps most revealingly, Hu promised to build génocidaire-in-chief Omar al-Bashir a new Presidential Palace, perhaps a permanent refuge from the reaches of the International Criminal Court, which is scheduled to announce indictments this month of those most responsible for the atrocity crimes in Darfur. No credible investigation can fail to indict al-Bashir, but there are many indications that chief ICC Prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo is politically too wary to speak such truth to power.

China lavished other commercial and economic benefits on the Khartoum-dominated economy, and solidified a bilateral trade relationship (exceeding $3 billion annually) that was summarized in a number of news-wire dispatches:

“China is the biggest foreign investor in Sudan and buys two-thirds of the country's oil exports. It has used its veto-wielding status at the UN Security Council to prevent harsh measures against Sudan over the Darfur conflict.”

“After fanfare and a red-carpet welcome at the Khartoum airport, the two leaders drove to Khartoum's multimillion dollar China-sponsored Friendship Hall overlooking the Nile, close to a new bridge under construction, also funded by Beijing. There, the presidents and cabinet ministers signed several partnership accords on China building two schools, a new presidential palace, knocking off taxes on Sudanese exports, as well as a $12 million loan and a $5.1 million grant to Sudan. China also canceled a portion of previous Sudanese debt, but the figure involved was not immediately known.” [ ]

“The Sudanese economy grew by 12 percent last year according to the International Monetary Fund. Chinese investment has largely contributed to boost production of the country's prime resource---oil---which has risen to an output of 500,000 barrels a day. China is also funding large projects such as the $1.8 billion Merowe hydroelectric complex.” (Associated Press [dateline: Khartoum], February 2, 2007)

It should be noted that the Merowe Dam project is arguably the most environmentally irresponsible large-scale construction project in the world today, and has entailed the violent (and uncompensated) removal of large numbers of people from the project area. China’s own dam-construction behavior domestically is perfectly in keeping with what was reported in March 2006 by the International Rivers Network:

“In a report published today [March 23, 2006], the US-based International Rivers Network (IRN) calls on the companies that are developing the [Merowe Dam] project---China’s CCMD Consortium, Alstom, Lahmeyer International, and ABB---to suspend project construction until the environmental impacts have been adequately addressed.”

“The Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) for the Merowe Dam in Sudan, the largest hydropower project currently under construction in Africa, is of poor quality and does not address many of the project’s potential impacts on the environment.”

“These are the main findings of an independent review of the EIA which was just published by EAWAG, the Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology. The main conclusions of the EAWAG review are: poor quality EIA, the strong fluctuations will erode the river banks, making it difficult for farmers to collect water and fish in the river and reservoir, sedimentation will seriously diminish the capacity of the project to generate electricity, the dam will block fish migration. Regarding water quality and health ‘the pollution and the decomposition of organic matter may create public health hazards for people drinking water or eating fish from the reservoir’ the report said.” (Sudan Tribune [dateline: London], March 23, 2006)

Needless to say, electricity generated by the dam will benefit few outside of the Khartoum area: there are few if any connections to a national electrical grid in the marginalized areas of Sudan, and none to southern Sudan. In short, this is China’s kind of project, and one that reflects Beijing’s indifference to the consequences of investment in the Khartoum-dominated economy. Here we should recall that the same was true of the disastrous Jonglei Canal project, begun with Egyptian backing in the years before the second phase of the north/south civil war, and on the verge of completion when the war resumed in 1983.

A DIFFERENT KIND OF “MILITARY INTERVENTION”

Certainly a refusal to “intervene in other countries’ affairs” does not preclude China from making large-scale weapons sales for purposes of Khartoum’s genocidal counter-insurgency warfare, as human rights groups have reported for many years. Amnesty International offered a recent brief overview of this deadly trade in its November 2006 appeal on the eve of the Africa/China summit held in Beijing:

“Arms deliveries from China to Sudan since the 1990s have included ammunition, tanks, helicopters, and fighter aircraft. The Sudanese government and militias it has supported have used such types of weapons to commit massive violations of international human rights and humanitarian law in armed conflicts in southern Sudan and Darfur. Such violations have included direct and indiscriminate attacks on civilians and civilian settlements, which have caused deaths and mass forced displacement of hundreds of thousands of people. Planes and helicopters have been used to launch aerial bombings on villages; for reconnaissance before attacks; and to support ground troops in the armed conflict in southern Sudan until 2002 and in the war in Darfur from 2003 up to now. Planes and helicopters have also been used to transfer troops and arms to areas of conflict.”

“In the 1990s, China reportedly sold aircraft including helicopters to Sudan. In 1996, China was said to have supplied Z-6 helicopters, manufactured by Changhe Aircraft Industries and designed to carry troops. In 2001, the Harbin Dongan Engine Manufacturing Company (Harbin) performed repairs on Mi-8 helicopter engines for various governments including those of Pakistan and Sudan. Mi-8 helicopters are commonly used for transporting troops, but variants also carry a range of weapon systems. Although transport helicopters may not carry rockets and missiles, they have been used to ferry troops to areas in which fighting is taking place or where atrocities have been carried out against civilians.”

“China has also sold military trucks produced by the Chinese company Dong Feng to the Sudanese government. Dong Feng produces a range of military vehicles. It exports under the name Dongfeng Aeolus. Its EQ2081/2100 series of military trucks have reportedly been a popular carrier vehicle of the Chinese armed forces.”

“In Sudan in August 2005, the UN Panel of Experts on the Sudan established pursuant to Security Council Resolution 1591 (2005), which was investigating violations of the international arms embargo on all parties to the conflict in Darfur, documented a shipment of green Dong Feng military trucks in the Port of Sudan. ‘New green trucks of a similar type were also seen on the Sudanese air force premises in Darfur in October.’” (Amnesty International, “Sudan/China: Appeal by Amnesty International to the Chinese government on the occasion of the China-Africa Summit for Development and Cooperation,” [AI Index AFR 54/072/2006], November 2006)

Human Rights Watch has also extensively documented the arms trade between Khartoum and Beijing going back over the past decade.

Moreover, what is not usually noted is the extensive weapons engineering and manufacturing expertise that the Chinese have provided to Khartoum---so extensive that the regime now is largely self-sufficient in small- and medium-sized arms.

In short, China---knowing full well the enormous civilian destruction consequent upon such an arms trade---unhesitatingly continues to put profits before human lives in Sudan. Of course many are involved in the obscene international weapons trade; but China has made its own highly distinctive mark in Darfur and the oil regions of southern Sudan.

BAN KI-MOON’S “PATIENCE”: WAITING FOR WHAT?

Almost without missing a beat, Ban Ki-moon has continued the disingenuous ways of speaking about Darfur that defined the tenure of the preceding Secretary-General. Certainly Ban’s recent comments about security in Darfur and the status of peace negotiations are a suspiciously indirect way of conveying the nature of Khartoum’s obdurate refusal to comply with the terms of Resolution 1706 or even the spirit of the Addis Ababa “Conclusions” document:

“‘We need to be patient in following up this political process as well as the peacekeeping process,’ Ban said in reference to Darfur. ‘Both tracks are moving well at this time, it may take a little longer to have a detailed agreement,’ the former South Korean foreign minister said Wednesday [January 31, 2007].” (Agence France-Presse [dateline: Addis Ababa], January 31, 2007)

What, we might wonder, is Ban referring to? Which political process is “moving well” and requires only a bit more patience---“a little longer to have a detailed agreement”? What agreement? Negotiated by whom? Certainly the non-signatory rebels on the ground would be bewildered by Ban’s comments: every time that these commanders, especially those of the so-called Group of 19, attempt to meet in order to fashion a united diplomatic and negotiating front, Khartoum attempts to bomb them with its Antonov aircraft. Does Ban, or those in the UN Secretariat, bother to read the reports from the African Union in the field? ---

“The African Union has confirmed Sudan's army bombed two villages in North Darfur, violating ceasefire agreements and jeopardising efforts to revive a stalled peace process. [ ] In the first independent confirmation of rebel reports that the government bombarded their positions in Anka and Korma on January 16 and 19, [2007] the AU condemned the attacks. ‘The (AU) ceasefire commission is once again calling on all parties to refrain from any activities that will jeopardize the peace process,’ the statement sent late on Monday [January 22, 2007] said.”

“Rebels are trying to hold a conference in Darfur to unify their position ahead of a renewed push for peace talks. They want government guarantees that the conference will not be attacked, but the army has three times bombed rebel positions in the past two months, the AU says.” (Reuters [dateline: Khartoum], January 23, 2007)

Earlier (January 21, 2007) Reuters had reported the comments of rebel commander Jar el-Naby, perhaps the most principled of those fighting in the Group of 19 faction of what was formerly the SLA:

“Rebel commander Jar el-Neby also accused the government of bombing. ‘They bombed for about five hours (on Saturday [January 20, 2007]),’ he said. ‘I think they are trying to stop our commanders' conference.’ Rebel commanders want to hold a conference in Darfur to unite their positions ahead of peace talks. There are more than a dozen rebel factions. Rebels say they want guarantees the army will not attack or bomb their meeting.”

What political process is Ban referring to?

And again, the deployment of security forces to Darfur---forces that might actually improve security for civilians and humanitarian operations---is no further advanced than it was months ago. If disagreements still focus on Phase Two of the plan sketched incompletely in the Addis “Conclusions” document---and if the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations is willing to countenance an exceedingly dilatory time-frame for deployment of Phase Two forces (May/June)---then honesty demands much more than Secretary-General Ban has offered. Indeed, we must wonder just how committed to an honest assessment of Darfur Ban really is.

Certainly the “patience” he counsels seems grotesquely inappropriate, given the accelerating security crisis. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reports that last month alone another 25,000 human being were added to the list of Internally Displaced Persons in Darfur (more fled to eastern Chad). Threats to humanitarians also continue to escalate, and the consequences have recently been particularly notable. Associated Press reports from Khartoum (January 29, 2007):

“A leading French aid group said Monday [January 29, 2007] it was pulling out of Darfur because the violence in the western Sudan region posed too high a risk to its workers. Medecins du Monde, or Doctors of the World, has ‘suspended its activities in Darfur for an undetermined period of time,’ said the group's director of international missions, Eric Chevallier, in a phone interview. ‘The balance between the help we were able to provide and the risks our staff were taking had reached breaking point,’ Chevallier said.” [ ]

“The French aid group has begun pulling out more than a dozen international aid workers and some 200 Sudanese nationals working in the region, its international director said. ‘It's a very difficult decision, and we hope we will be able to go back in when security improves,’ said Chevallier. The aid group had been assisting some 90,000 refugees in the Kalma refugee camp of South Darfur, and had operated a mobile clinic treating about 30,000 people in remote villages in the Jebel Marra mountains where there was an outbreak of cholera last year.”

Just as disturbing is a recent violent assault on aid workers in Nyala (capital of South Darfur) by Khartoum’s local “police” thugs. The viciousness of the attack speaks volumes about the regime’s attitudes towards a humanitarian presence in Darfur:

“Aid workers have described how they watched helplessly as Sudanese police officers dragged a female United Nations worker from an aid agency compound in Darfur and subjected her to a vicious sexual attack. Staff say they feared for their lives when armed police raided their compound in Nyala, dragging one European woman out into the street by her hair and savagely beating several other international staff before arresting a total of 20 UN, aid agency, and African Union staff.” [ ]

“A UN official in Darfur said: ‘If the people responsible for beating and molesting the aid workers and UN staff are not punished, others will think they can get away with such crimes and it will happen again. Should the security situation for international aid workers not improve and the overall safety of our staff be assured, we will be forced to withdraw from Darfur.’”

“The latest incident came when police and national security staff stormed an impromptu party at the aid agency compound in Nyala. The UN said police beat staff with batons, with UN and aid agency personnel sustaining serious injuries. Workers at the party said the attacks were part of a campaign of harassment. ‘It seemed as if they had been waiting for an excuse to get stuck into some foreign aid workers, and this was their chance,’ said one.”

"‘Some of the UN guys were seriously injured. I saw a police officer repeatedly hitting one person in the face and then kicking him on the back of the head as he lay on the ground.’ Another said: ‘It has become clear to many of us here that the police and national security have been stirring up trouble in the local community by spreading rumours about aid workers and agencies. They are trying to make our work here as difficult as they can and by getting locals to resent us they can make aid operations almost impossible to run.’” (The Telegraph [UK] [dateline: Darfur], January 28, 2007)

In the camp at Gereida, now the largest camp in the world for Internally Displaced Persons, the extremely violent and threatening attack of late December 2006 has produced a near collapse in humanitarian presence. The International Committee of the Red Cross, the only remaining humanitarian organization, reports from Geneva (January 28, 2007):

“The consequences in humanitarian terms of the recent security incident in Gereida and the subsequent evacuation of aid personnel are beginning to show. Camp residents have at most two weeks of food left and are already worried. The maintenance of water-supply systems is another concern, along with sewage disposal and hygiene promotion. The link between food, hygiene and safe water is so close that neglecting any of these areas can have a direct impact on people’s health.”

Six humanitarian aid organizations, operating or formerly operating in Darfur, issued an extraordinarily dire warning on January 30, 2007, declaring that the “enormous humanitarian response in Darfur will soon be paralysed unless African and global leaders at the AU Summit take urgent action to end rising violence against civilians and aid workers.” Of course no such action was taken---Ban Ki-moon instead urges “patience”--- and organizations such as Save the Children, Action Against Hunger, CARE International, Oxfam International, Norwegian Refugee Council, World Vision are left to declare that,

“African Heads of State and the new UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon will fail the people of Darfur if they do not take concrete steps to herald the start of a new chapter in the region and ensure an immediate ceasefire is both agreed and adhered to.”

“The six agencies---Action Against Hunger, CARE International, Oxfam International, Norwegian Refugee Council, World Vision and Save the Children---said aid workers are facing violence on a scale not seen before in Darfur, leaving access to people in need at the conflict’s lowest point at a time when the humanitarian need is greater than ever. Attacks on civilians are again rising and forcing even more people to flee their homes, and a breakdown of the aid response will leave millions in even greater danger. The worsening four-year-old crisis must not be allowed to deteriorate any further.” [ ]

“More than a month after an attack on aid workers in Gereida---the most violent of the conflict so far, which saw staff raped, beaten and subjected to mock executions---it is still far too dangerous for agencies to return to the camp, the world’s largest for displaced people, where 130,000 have sought refuge from attacks on their villages.”

“Temporary evacuations of staff from other locations across Darfur have continued, with nearly 500 aid workers withdrawn since the start of December. In early January, the UN warned that malnutrition rates are again rising close to emergency levels. Progress made in stabilizing conditions over the past four years is in serious danger of being reversed.” (allAfrica.com, January 30, 2007, at http://allafrica.com/stories/200701300918.html)

What precisely are we waiting for, Secretary-General Ban?

DARFUR’S GENOCIDE CONTINUES TO BLEED INTO EASTERN CHAD AND CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC

Two important new human rights reports, from Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, offer the grimmest assessment to date of how the ethnically-targeted human destruction in Darfur continues to spread into eastern Chad and the Central African Republic, with devastating consequences.

[Human Rights Watch, “‘They Came Here to Kill Us’: Militia Attacks and Ethnic Target of Civilians in Eastern Chad,” Volume 19, No. 1[A], January 2007, at http://hrw.org/reports/2007/chad0107/chad0107web.pdf)

Amnesty International, “Chad: ‘Are we citizens of this country?’---Civilians in Chad unprotected from Janjawid attacks,” January 29, 2007, at http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGAFR200012007]

The titles alone suggest just how continuous these reports are with previous findings. The Introduction to the Amnesty report serves to make the primary point about the consequences of Khartoum’s genocidal counter-insurgency war in Darfur:

“Homes ablaze. Villagers slaughtered. Women and girls raped. Survivors scattered in terror. Civilians in eastern Chad are sharing the cruel fate of their neighbours in Darfur, hostages to Sudan's ruthless solution to rebel attacks in the region. The Janjawid militias who in recent years have laid to waste vast areas of western Sudan, form the backbone of the armed groups who are killing, tormenting and displacing civilians from targeted ethnic groups such as the Dajo and the Masalit in eastern Chad. The aim of the attacks appears to be to clear vast areas of communities primarily identified by the Janjawid as ‘African’ rather than ‘Arab,’ and to drive them further from the border with Sudan.”

“In Darfur, since 2003, the Sudanese government continues to use its proxy militia, the Janjawid to terrorize, kill and forcibly displace civilians perceived to be the support base of the armed opposition movements. The government funds and arms the Janjawid, who are notorious for their cruelty and ferocity. Janjawid operations, in coordination with the Sudanese army and air force, deliberately target and attack particular ethnic groups and drive them from their villages. These attacks continue notwithstanding the presence of African Union peacekeeping troops. [ ] Now, in eastern Chad too, a similar dynamic is evolving. Sudanese Janjawid and their local Chadian allies are plundering and killing with impunity.”

The humanitarian implications of this violence are captured in a dispatch from the Famine Early Warning System (FEWS) Net, “Emergency Alert for Chad” (January 30, 2007):

“Food security in Chad is deteriorating for many internally displaced persons (IDPs) and surrounding host populations. Continued reports of cross-border attacks from Sudan and increased inter-ethnic violence within Chad have thwarted Government-led efforts to assist in the return of some IDPs, amplified IDP numbers, and spurred new movements of these displaced populations. Increased humanitarian needs due to the continued rising numbers of IDPs come at a time when the East’s unstable security environment (UN Phase IV security status) has limited humanitarian access, stalled implementation of some food for work and school feeding safety nets, and inhibited local populations from accessing market gardens and other sources of income diversification.”

“As the number of displaced populations increase, so too do demands on the surrounding environment. Tensions between displaced populations and host communities are reportedly increasing as people vie for limited supplies of water, pasture and firewood. Continued civil insecurity and displacement also threaten to disrupt agricultural activities for the upcoming 2007 season.”

And though much less is heard or reported about the fate of civilians in the Central African Republic, we catch terrifying glimpses of what may be another vast killing field, with much evidence of Khartoum’s complicity:

“Northeastern areas of the Central African Republic are seeing more ethnically-driven attacks and torched villages in signs the war in Sudan's neighboring Darfur region increasingly is spilling over the border, the United Nations said on Friday [January 26, 2007]. A UN assessment team sent this month to the isolated area estimates that violence targeting civilians there has driven about 40,000 of the area's 200,000 residents from their homes.”

“A major problem is residents' fear of reprisals linked to ongoing fighting between Central African Republic forces and armed opposition groups, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said. Armed raiders regularly loot villages and terrorize civilians in the remote and lawless area near the border with both Chad and Sudan. But the problem has worsened significantly in 2006, the UN office said.” (Reuters [dateline: UN/New York], January 26, 2007)

Regional diplomatic and UN sources speak of an abundance of evidence linking Khartoum to the “armed raiders” referred to in this dispatch.

THE IMPATIENT OF DARFUR

Ban Ki-moon’s defeatist counsel of “patience” will of course seem incomprehensible to the people of Darfur, people who have in some cases waited almost four years for the international community to provide them with the security that will allow them to return to their homes, or the burned out remains of their villages, and attempt to resume agriculturally productive lives. But instead of such returns, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees has recently warned (Geneva, January 30, 2007) that ongoing violence and insecurity has “erased the prospects” of return for the more than 2.5 million Internally Displaced Persons and refugees in Chad:

“There is no prospect of return for internally displaced people in Darfur, nor for the more than 200,000 Sudanese refugees hosted in eastern Chad, UN High Commission for Refugees spokeswoman Jennifer Pagonis told journalists in Geneva.” (Reuters [dateline: Geneva], January 30, 2007)

Will Ban Ki-moon travel to the camps for displaced persons and dare to urge “patience” upon these long-suffering people? Will he survey life in these ghastly human warehouses, and the terrifying threats that surround them, and still ask for “patience”?

But even such counsel, proceeding mainly from weakness, is no doubt preferred by Darfuris who have been so relentlessly and profoundly betrayed by those with the power to provide them meaningful security. Indeed, we may be sure that informed people in Darfur are even more incensed by the posturing of powerful figures such as the UK’s Lord Triesman, British minister in charge of African affairs, who recently made yet another vacuous promise on behalf of the Blair government:

“Britain sent a strongly-worded warning to Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, urging him to accept the deployment of hybrid [AU/UN] peacekeeping force in Darfur or else Khartoum will face unspecified coercive measures. Lord Triesman, the British minister in charge of African affairs told BBC Arabic that the world will not stand still while atrocities occur in Darfur.” (reported by Wasil Ali in The Sudan Tribune [dateline: London], February 3, 2007)

“The world will not stand still while atrocities occur in Darfur,” Lord Triesman? What shocking mendacity, what contemptible moralizing, what viciously political posturing. The world has, precisely, for nearly four long years, “stood still while atrocities have occurred in Darfur.” No doubt it is convenient for Lord Triesman to forget Britain’s own disgraceful immobility over these many, many months; but let us call to memory a few moments for the “minister in charge of African affairs.”

The Independent (UK) reported on December 26, 2004 what was noted in peculiarly muted terms at the time: “General Sir Mike Jackson, the head of the Army, said in August [2004] that the Army could find a brigade of troops [5,000 soldiers] for a humanitarian mission to Darfur.” Nothing came of this offer; it simply disappeared amidst political and moral cowardice.

In April 2005, then Foreign Secretary Jack Straw described what was occurring in Darfur as “genocide”---presumably the “atrocity” before which it is least acceptable to “stand still. And still there was no change in British policy toward Khartoum.

In May 2006, Tony Blair declared that a non-existent Darfur peacemaking force must have “sufficient firepower” to guarantee the feeble accord signed that month in Abuja, and that “Britain and the US, with other NATO partners, [are] looking at the issue urgently to see what more could be done” (see my “International powers are talking about urgent action to enforce peace. But where are the troops?” The Guardian [on-line], May 15, 2006). In the event, of course, Blair’s words meant nothing.

And this past October, with his legacy evidently much on his mind, Blair was reported to be ordering plans drawn up for a force of “at least 1,000 troops to play a core role in an international protection force [in Darfur]” (Scotland on Sunday [UK], October 8, 2006):

“The Prime Minister has signalled his intention to back up his demands for international intervention to prevent ‘genocide’ in Darfur by sending a large British force to help protect the black African population.” [ ]

“Blair is continuing to press for the move as a gesture of intent, particularly amid the continuing failure of the international community to agree on a multi-national force---and the Sudanese government’s refusal to accept any intervention.”

And now, almost four months later, we have Lord Triesman declaring that “the world will not stand still while atrocities occur in Darfur”---as if this hadn’t been precisely British policy toward Darfur since the outbreak of major insurgency fighting four years ago, during which time “atrocities” beyond any possible reckoning have occurred on a massive scale and a daily basis.

But of course such contemptibly empty words, such profound disingenuousness, are no special feature of British policy toward Darfur, as Khartoum is well aware. And in the emptiness and mendacity and expediency of the world’s response to Darfur, the regime receives precisely the encouragement that leaves Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon with no choice but to urge upon Darfur’s long-suffering people, of all virtues, “patience.”

It will be, for many hundreds of thousands of innocent human beings, the patience of the dead.

Eric Reeves Smith College Northampton, MA 01063


By Jim Fussell (CCAL30) (1135), Mon, 05 Feb 2007 20:45:16 PST
Comment feedback score: 6 (* * * * * *)

PK - Protect Darfur Now said:

Highly frustrating that the US has lost its political capital. We have no good will credits left.

When I think about the political capital the Bush Administration and the State Department had as recently as two or three years ago. . . Colin Powell and George Bush started to speak about Darfur in April 2004 at the time of the Rwanda 10th Anniversary.

Dallaire was testifying with Samantha Power before Congress that month and Rep. Donald Payne redirected the hearing from remembering Rwanda to halting possible genocide in Darfur.

I think that the longer the delay from denunciation to decisive action - the more likely the perpetrators will calculate that the possibility of credibile action is not a factor.

Yet, I do think we still have a more than a few good will credits left in the world. It is never too late to do the right thing. It is much harder, though, in the global climate in this world in which we now live.


By Craig Steel (CCAL30) (439), Tue, 06 Feb 2007 08:35:03 PST
Comment feedback score: 0

Thing is, the same happened with the previous President and his Secretary of State. Bush is not alone in this.

I'm always reminded of an old Jamaican song that speaks about the three fingers that point back at you when you're pointing at someone else.

cj


By Niny Khor (1454), Tue, 06 Feb 2007 11:22:43 PST
Comment feedback score: 4 (* * * *)

Hi Jim, I agree with you that it's not too late. It would be great to see a roundtable with US, China, India on Sudan.

Not sure if anyone caught the Economist article on Hu's mission, but it does talk about the self-interest angle for China's involvment in Darfur.

http://www.economist.com/opinion/displaystory.cfm?story_id=E1_RGPDSRN

Mr Hu's Mission to Khartoum: WHy China should insist on UN peacekeepers for Darfur

[....]

Might Mr Hu succeed where others have failed? He should certainly try. In many ways China's growing involvement in Africa has been good for all. In exchange for the oil and raw materials that are fuelling its economic rise, China has been building up Africa's neglected infrastructure. One thing that has added to China's popularity throughout the continent is that, unlike the Western helpers who append a miscellany of irksome conditions, the Chinese say they will not interfere in Africa's politics. In the case of Darfur, however, this liberal Chinese stance is being exploited as a licence to kill. There may be profit to China in turning a blind eye to all of this, but there is no honour. And in time the profit may dry up as well.

That is because the fighting in Darfur is not just a humanitarian disaster that should rend the conscience of the world (though it should). It is also a threat to the newly established peace in the south of the country, and therefore to Sudan's future as a dependable supplier of oil and other commodities both to China and to the wider world. As it happens, most of Sudan's best oilfields are in disputed areas between the north and the south. As China's economic interests and dependencies spread, it is going to have to learn the need to invest in peace as well as pipelines. Sometimes that will require it to put unwelcome pressure on its trading partners.

Right now, Chinese pressure on Sudan could make all the difference to the prospects of inserting UN peacekeepers into Darfur. Such pressure will not be welcome in Khartoum. But the rest of Africa is repelled by the slaughter of Darfuris and by the circles Mr Bashir has run round the UN and the African Union. In Khartoum Mr Hu has a rare opportunity to combine self-interest with statesmanship. He should grab it.


By Niny Khor (1454), Tue, 06 Feb 2007 19:33:30 PST
Comment feedback score: 0

Another interesting insight to the Chinese psychology - at least reflected by the editorials of the Xinhua news ( a chinese journalist once told me that Chinese people take some news with a grain of salt, yet it is a close indicator of what the central gov wants to hear). Its implication is that criticisms of Chinese investments in Africa comes out of Western jealousy:

http://news.xinhuanet.com/world/2007-02/03/content_5689163.htm

China Brings the World's Gaze towards Africa: China's Promixity showcases a New Africa to the World

[photo caption: Sudan is one of the countries that president Hu would be visiting in Africa. In the picture are 4 beautifully/brightly dressed Sudanese women carrying water.]

Chinese Premier Hu arrived in Khartoum on Jnuary 30, to begin his 8-country tour of Arfica. Africa seems very faraway for people who live in the Northern hemisphere countries, whenever Africa appears on the western TV audience, it is either famine, or it is war and conflict. However when China comes in contact with Africa, presenting an entriely different lense of Africa to the world: it is a developed continent, with people who love peace, and with respectable relationships with the other great countries of the world. 9 months ago, Premier Hu visited Africa, and 2 months ago, many African leaders gathered in Beijing. Now, Africa and China again appears in the eyes of the world. China's respect for Africa is gaining attention and thought in the world, and also prompting other countries to see Africa in a different light. However, some western countries are therefore feeling a certain kind of pressure/anxiety. Newspaper xxxx is a local daily in Germany - in the past few years they published less than 10 articles about Africa, however starting from last year, they have been publishing articles on Arfica daily. This type of changes indicates that the world is getting a more realistic image of Africa.

THE WORLD PONDERS THE CLOSENESS OF CHINA AND AFRICA

Africa is different from other continents in the world in one aspect: there is no African countries which hold superpower in the international arena. In the past, on the international stage, therefore Africa has been getting a raw deal, and rarely able to rely on their own development strength to attract the attention of the world. The relationship between Western countries and Africa, is in reality another continuation of the colonial mentality, and has been mired in stuckness, without growth for a long time. Recently, the West is curious about the relationship between China and Africa, and one of the motivations is undoubtedly "complex psychology", but even those who are negatively critical, can not deny that the SIno-African relationship is a "new type of relationship", that breaks the stereotype the west has of Africa, the equal relationship of Sino-Africa not only is greatly welcomed by Africa, at the same time, it brings both China and Africa solid benefits.

[.........]


By Jim Fussell (CCAL30) (1135), Wed, 07 Feb 2007 08:48:28 PST
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Niny Khor said:

Another interesting insight to the Chinese psychology - at least reflected by the editorials of the Xinhua news ( a chinese journalist once told me that Chinese people take some news with a grain of salt, yet it is a close indicator of what the central gov wants to hear). Its implication is that criticisms of Chinese investments in Africa comes out of Western jealousy:

Niny, Thanks for this helpful perspective for understanding. I often appreciate Xinhua's perspective.

The China-Africa relationship, special as it may be in sme respects, is still based on self-interest with one side much stronger than the other. China provides the capital and technology and Africa the natural resources.

Fifty years ago into the mid-1960s and 1970s many in Africa and the US thought the US-Africa relationship was also special also because it was not based on a post-colonial legacy. But then after the "honeymoon" period passed and it became starkly clear that political independence still involved economic dependence. To describe this a new term was used: neocolonialism. Now China has launched into a new illusive new "honeymoon" period.

What is intriguing about the Chinese news articles is the emphasis on relationship, instead of basic rights or international law.

Some questions: In December the US sent it's first Ambassador to the African Union: Cindy L. Courville. (We had an ambassador to the European Union since the late 1950s).

Does China have a parallel diplomatic relationship. Can the AU be strong enough as a unit to deal with China together, or will China relate to African States one-by-one.

Will China ever see it in their own self-interest to help the African Union to uphold it's founding charter from 1999, which includes the prevention of genocide and mass atrocities.


By Craig Steel (CCAL30) (439), Thu, 08 Feb 2007 05:01:03 PST
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China will do exactly what the USSR did during the years that it had the clout to do so.

cj


By Craig Steel (CCAL30) (439), Thu, 08 Feb 2007 05:07:09 PST
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Niny Khor said:

Its implication is that criticisms of Chinese investments in Africa comes out of Western jealousy:

And that may be exactly what it does come out of.

But burnt toast is still burnt toast, no matter what toaster it comes out of.

China simply does not, and will never have the best interest of Africa at heart.

cj


By P (CCAL30) (1419), Thu, 08 Feb 2007 18:37:53 PST
Comment feedback score: 5 (* * * * *)

Did you see this? Eric forwarded it to me... Nick's blog:

February 5, 2007, 11:17 pm

More on Boycotting the Chinese Olympics

By Nicholas D. Kristof

There’s a flourishing debate that has been carried on in the comment section of this blog, and in loftier settings, about whether to boycott the 2008 Beijing Olympics unless China stops underwriting genocide in Darfur.

I’m a bit torn, because I’d really like the Chinese government to worry about a boycott. China wants the Olympics to go well, and if it’s alarmed about a boycott itthe idea.

Partly that’s because I think a boycott would antagonize the Chinese people, just as the successful effort to prevent China from getting the 2000 Olympics because of human rights abuses alienated many ordinary Chinese people. And ultimately one way to get China to help on Darfur is to get the Chinese people to be more concerned with Sudan. There are some 10 million blogs in China, and it would help enormously if more of them showed an interest in Darfur. The bloggers are limited in what they can say, but the main red lines have to do with domestic politics; complaining about government policy in Sudan is something that the blogs could get away with.

And criticism is certainly justified. A generation ago, China underwrote the Khmer Rouge genocide in Cambodia; now it’s doing the same thing in Sudan. Because 65 percent of Sudan’s oil exports go to China, Beijing ships weapons to Sudan, operates three arms factories there, and protects Sudan in the U.N. Security Council. When kids are killed by the Janjaweed in Darfur, it’s with Chinese Ak-47’s. China’s role has been utterly disgraceful, and it is in a sense providing political cover for atrocities in Sudan that are every bit as awful as the Rape of Nanjing.

Ultimately, I think the most effective way to have an impact would be to ask athletes to pledge to wear warm-ups that say “Save Darfur” or — much better — “Hu Jintao, Stop Killing Darfur.” The athletes and coaches could also hold a vigil at Tiananmen Square for the people of Darfur. They could give press conferences. They could plan a trip before and after to a Chad refugee camp. Joey Cheek, the speed skater, singlehandedly called considerable attention to Darfur in the last winter Olympics, and he could be in charge of the effort to have athletes participate in the Beijing Olympics — but without forgetting the people of Darfur.

One of the problems is that in the aftermath of Iraq, ordinary Chinese would see a boycott as a nationalist insult, and a hypocritical one at that. So let’s attend the Olympics, but in ways that will call attention to Chinese complicity in genocide, in ways that will embarrass the Chinese government but not the people.

And these steps don’t have to wait ’til the Olympics. Anti-genocide activists are increasingly trying to hold rallies in front of Chinese diplomatic missions in the U.S., and these may indeed have an effect of raising the cost of Chinese support for genocide.

By the way, I’d welcome anybody’s comments below, but I’d particularly welcome comments from Chinese readers. If you think I’m nuts, feel free to say so.


By Niny Khor (1454), Thu, 08 Feb 2007 23:51:59 PST
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Thanks - nope - these days haven't read much behind the TimesSelect wall. I tend to agree with Kristof - complete boycott is not the way to go. Appealling (very pointed) to the conscience, that might work. Barely any Chinese materials on Darfur so far, though just read that the Malaysian Council of Churches' 2006 Christmas appeal went to Darfur for food (no mention of genocide, unfortunately).


By Niny Khor (1454), Fri, 09 Feb 2007 10:44:03 PST
Edited: Fri, 09 Feb 2007 10:44:50 PST
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Have been thinking about divestment lately - the efficacy of divestment really depends on whether the economic repercussion is felt by those in power. In a semi-democratic country, divestment works faster. Less so in a semi-autocratic polity (see Saddam Hussein's era when the sanctions lead to deprivation of public and health services to the very poor and young). Nonetheless the divestment movement as a whole plays a very important role in creating public (local and global) awareness.

When TIAA-CREF divested from Talisman (Canada) a couple years back, their stock price plunged 30% in a day, leading to Talisman to pull out from Sudan. But immediately its interest there is sold to other companies.

Hey PK, perhaps another angle that Enough! ought to push is that of self-interest. The only reason that China is there is because it needs the oil. Last year (1st quarter 2006) there was a mini economic-crisis in China because of energy squeeze - this was already when there was no actual shortage, but the situation was worsened by everyone's expectation, and stockpiling thinking there would be a shortage. Given that 65% of Sudan's oil go to China, it would present an actual squeeze on supply should the North-South peace breaks down. And the probability of the latter is highly correlated with the increasing violence in Darfur.

I'm looking at the oil fields map of Sudan and here's China's interest:

  • Block 1,2,4: CNPC 40%
  • Block 6: CNPC 95%
  • Block 3,7: CNPC 41%
  • Block 15: CNPC 35%

I haven't been able to find out the value of each blocks yet - and whether some of the other companies are China owned, but as far as I can tell, most of these blocks are south of Khartoum, and would be right in the North-South conflict area zone should civil war break out.


By P (CCAL30) (1419), Sat, 10 Feb 2007 14:02:51 PST
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Self-interest is KEY!!!!

Niny - can you write up an article on this?? Or are there other academics studying this?

I cannot imagine how allowing war and destruction of infrastructure is good for future development. Allowing such injustice to meet their immediate needs will only bite China later, just as it has the U.S. - what's the term? Blowback?

Have you seen the article on Nigeria in the latest Vanity Fair (Demi Moore cover)? There are oil pirates who actually siphon off oil and sell it. Unbelievable corruption and violence associated with it.


By Gabriel Stauring (CCAL30) (1398), Sat, 10 Feb 2007 15:25:04 PST
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From Eric Reeves, this is long, but it's important in targeting China:

On China and the 2008 Olympic Games: An open letter to Darfur activists and advocates---

Eric Reeves February 10, 2007

The full-scale launch of a large, organized campaign to highlight China’s complicity in the Darfur genocide appears likely to begin soon. But it’s past time to start thinking about how to tap the creative power of students and other Darfur advocates in this critical initiative. Enough of selling green bracelets and writing letters to those who are content with posturing or avoiding the central challenge of the moment: changing the international diplomatic dynamic in ways that will result in deployment of an international peace-support operation to Darfur, one that can provide adequate protection to civilians and humanitarians. Without such security, humanitarian organizations will continue to withdraw and hundreds of thousands of additional Darfuri lives will be lost.

It’s time, now, to begin shaming China---demanding that if the Beijing government is going to host the premier international event, the Summer Olympic Games of 2008, they must be responsible international partners. China’s slogan for these Olympic Games---“One world, one dream”---is a ghastly irony, given Beijing’s complicity in the Darfur genocide (see the website for China’s hosting of the Olympic Games at http://www.olympic.org/uk/games/beijing/index_uk.asp). The Chinese leadership must understand that if they refuse to use their unrivaled political, economic, and diplomatic leverage with Khartoum to secure access for the force authorized under UN Security Council Resolution 1706, then they will face an extremely vigorous, unrelenting, and omnipresent campaign to shame them over this refusal.

To succeed, such a campaign must be fully international in character. The first order of business, I believe, is to fashion creative means for translating key talking points and broader analyses into a variety of languages and exporting them to as many countries as possible. If people come to understand the connection between China as host of the Olympic Games and China as silent partner in the Darfur genocide, they may well be moved to object to this intensely dismaying double role. But they must understand the connection clearly.

How to proceed? With knowledge comes both power and responsibility; the key task is to transfer knowledge to those presently ignorant of China’s role in Sudan generally and Darfur specifically. Some possible bullet points are offered below. Further below is an analysis of Chinese President Hu’s recent business trip to Khartoum, as well as two opinion pieces on the “Genocide Olympics.”

It is important to remember that this should not, in my strongly held view, be a campaign to boycott the Olympics: a boycott would defeat the whole purpose of the campaign, and be deeply divisive. Moreover, if a boycott were successful (extremely unlikely) the political platform from which to challenge China would disappear. Further, a boycott in and of itself achieves nothing: the challenge is to shame China, to hold Beijing’s leaders accountable, to make them understand that without exerting all necessary pressure on Khartoum, the current campaign will only grow in strength and visibility right up to the Opening Ceremonies.

Nor are athletes the targets. Certainly they can be encouraged to wear a green stripe, of whatever prominence and size they dare, on their athletic attire as a symbol of their support for the people of Darfur. Certainly they should be encouraged to speak out publicly on Darfur. But the Olympic athletes are not the target: the Beijing regime is. The regime alone has the power to change the current diplomatic dynamic in ways that will force Khartoum to allow in the forces that can provide security to the victims of ongoing genocide. China, not the Olympic Games or its participants, is the target.

What are the key initial tasks?

There is tremendous scope for creative advocacy here, and for the deployment of diverse skills and energies: linguistiet, communications, graphic design, advocacy writing, and organizational. What happens, for example, if 1,000 students and advocates demonstrate before the Chinese embassy in Washington, DC, declaring with banner, placards, and T-shirts that China will be held accountable for its complicity in the Darfur genocide? What happens if such demonstrations are continuous, and grow, and take place outside China’s embassies in other countries? in many other countries? What happens if everywhere---everywhere---Chinese diplomats and politicians travel they are confronted by those who insist on making this an occasion for highlighting China’s role in the Darfur genocide?

Aspiring or experienced documentarians can make full use of extensive and widely available photography and videography to make short films that highlight the tradition of the Olympic Games, the Darfur genocide, and China’s role. It would not be inappropriate to include footage of the 1936 Olympic Games, held in Nazi Germany, as an example of a precedent for current concerns about genocide in Darfur. The opportunities for graphic artists, using photography and other resources, are also innumerable. Everything from high-quality PDF files to screensavers, bumper-stickers, posters, T-shirts, and coffee mugs can send the key message.

Translation is a key task: this cannot be an American or even Western campaign. China must feel the shaming pressure from all quarters. Those with advanced language skills---French, Spanish, Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Swahili, German, Italian, Russian, Hungarian, Czech, or others---should start putting those skills to use in translating key texts and advocacy suggestions from English. Those with contacts in other countries should start networking, creating an advocacy presence on as many international fronts as possible. Human Rights in China (http://www.hrichina.org/public/index) may be an organization with the potential to introduce the issue into China itself. Other such means of taking the campaign directly to Beijing are available.

Letter-writing and petition campaigns that alert the International Olympic Committee (http://www.olympic.org/uk/index_uk.asp) to the terrible disgrace of China’s dual role---sustaining the Darfur genocide and hosting the Games---will certainly register. Similar campaigns to urge Olympic corporate sponsors to use their leverage with the Chinese might also be effective: this is the season for corporate sponsorship agreements to be finalized.

To succeed, this campaign must go “viral”: it must be potent, creative, focused, and uncontrollable. It must take every advantage of the various means offered by the era of electronic communication (I’ll offer links on my website, www.sudanreeves.org, to particularly useful or creative efforts). The Chinese must be forced to see that there is a stark choice before them: either they use their leverage effectively with Khartoum and secure the regime’s assent for deployment of the UN peace support operation---authorized by Security Council Resolution 1706---or they will be the target of the most powerful international shaming campaign in history. The Chinese must understand that there is no third option, no “third way.”

The general lack of effective advocacy actions and initiatives has not been lost on Khartoum’s ruthless génocidaires. Despite the very high profile and potent nature of the American Darfur advocacy movement, and despite the enormous and consequential successes of the American-led divestment campaign, the pressure must be ratcheted up a good deal higher. Other European companies may well follow the lead of Germany’s Siemens and Switzerland’s ABB Ltd: both recently suspended operations in Sudan, as demanded by the divestment campaign that is currently a powerful success nationally. Such ongoing loss of European commercial and capital investment certainly has the full attention of the National Islamic Front leadership. But these losses musfrom the Chinese, Khartoum’s dominant economic partner and military enabler, and heretofore unwavering diplomatic protector.

The task is daunting but fully practicable, given the moral passion and creative energies of the Darfur advocacy community. Let the campaigns begin!


Some suggested bullet points on China’s complicity in the Darfur genocide:

CHINA, HOST OF THE 2008 OLYMPIC GAMES, IS COMPLICIT IN THE DARFUR GENOCIDE:

LEFT CIVILIANS IN DARFUR AT RISK •China abstained from UN Security Council Resolution 1706 (August 2006), compromising international support for a critically needed peace support operation in Darfur

SUPPORTED THE KHARTOUM REGIME •China has repeatedly and uncritically supported claims of national sovereignty by Khartoum, emboldening the regime in its defiance of the UN and international community

IGNORED ATROCITIES THROUGHOUT SUDAN •In pursuit of Sudan’s oil riches, China has for many years ignored massive human rights abuses and atrocity crimes by the Khartoum regime throughout Sudan

SUPPLIED THE WEAPONS •China has been Khartoum’s leading weapons supplier over the past decade and more; many of these weapons have been used in Darfur

GAVE THE NOD TO GENOCIDE •China has sent the diplomatic signals which, in their tepid nature, convince Khartoum it can complete its genocidal counter-insurgency war in Darfur without serious consequences


TIME FOR CHINA TO PRESSURE KHARTOUM TO STOP THE GENOCIDE •It is time for China to recognize that it cannot be a legitimate host of the 2008 Olympic Games while remaining complicit in Darfur’s genocidal destruction. China must use its enormous leverage with Khartoum to secure consent for the deployment of international forces fully capable of protecting civilians and humanitarians in Darfur and eastern Chad.

•If China refuses, Beijing must face an unprecedented, unwavering, unstoppable campaign of shame---one that will attach an unbearable opprobrium to genocidal complicity.


“Understanding President Hu’s Business Trip to Khartoum” at http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article20115 http://www.sudanreeves.org/Article151.html

Articles on the “Genocide Olympics” at http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article19956 http://www.sudanreeves.org/Article142.html

Eric Reeves

Smith College


By P (CCAL30) (1419), Sun, 11 Feb 2007 13:23:37 PST
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Bravo Eric.


http://www.contracostatimes.com/mld/cctimes/news/opinion/16675560.htm

China's aid to Sudan undermines efforts to end genocide

By Sebastian Mallaby COMMENTARY

CHINA'S LEADER, Hu Jintao, this month provided Sudan with an interest-free loan to build a presidential palace. With that gesture, Hu demonstrated his contempt for the Western understanding of the world -- and for Western policy toward his own country.

Sudan, you will recall, is the scene of the Darfur genocide. Since the killing began three years ago, the United States and its allies have flown in food and medicines, provided logistical help and money for a token African peacekeeping force, and done their best to isolate the Sudanese regime, which orchestrates the massacres. They have done this not because they have a selfish interest in Darfur but because tossing babies into bonfires is a crime against humanity.

In the run-up to Hu's visit to Sudan on Friday and Saturday, there were hopes that the Chinese leader would back the West's Sudan policy.

China's diplomats are forever reassuring the world about their country's "peaceful rise," and Hu duly expressed support for an expanded peacekeeping force in Darfur. But everything else about his visit demonstrated the gap between Chinese and Western priorities.

Hu called on nations to "respect the sovereignty of Sudan." But since the end of the Cold War, the Western view of sovereignty has grown increasingly contingent. If a nation slaughters its civilians (think Rwanda, Kosovo), harbors terrorists (Afghanistan) or refuses to cooperate with U.N. weapons inspectors (yes, Iraq), it forfeits its right to sovereignty. It may not be invaded, but it certainly can expect to face sanctions.

Sudan, by these standards, is an easy candidate for sanctions. But China's talk of "sovereignty" is code for the opposite policy. As well as paying for a presidential palace, Hu used his trip to cancel $80 million of Sudanese debt, to announce a plan to build a railway line and to visit an oil refinery that China partly owns, basking in the fact that 80 percent of Sudan's oil goes to his country.

Hu's visit was a statement that, in the Chinese view of the world, the principle of sovereignty trumps even the most appalling human rights abuses: It brushed aside the memory of the Rwandan genocide and the Holocaust. But at the same time, Hu was saying more than that. He was advancing an understanding of modernization that the West discarded 15 years ago.

By pursuing commercial ties with Sudan, Hu was implicitly saying that economic development comes first and that political development is unimportant. This was once the view of Western development organizations, which financed projects in health, education, infrastructure and so on -- but steered clear of human rights, corruption and anything else that could be deemed "political." But in the early 1990s, the Western approach changed. Development experts pointed out that independent courts and newspapers help to limit corruption and so make economic development possible. In the absence of minimal political accountability, aid money is stolen. Rather than helping Africa's poor, it is siphoned off to pay for presidential palaces.

China is not financing a presidential palace by mistake; it is doing so deliberately. It is not financing just any presidential palace; it has chosen a president so odious that his fellow African leaders hold their noses at him. But this gesture is only the tip of the iceberg. To read the accounts of Hu's Africa visit in China's People's Daily is to recall Western development thinking of a half a century ago. "From 1995 to 2003, China administered 43 sessions of the 'Advanced Education and Scientific Research Program' in 21 African countries," the paper's online version crowed over the weekend. Development, in this conception, is all about technical transfers. Politics plays no part.

This Chinese understanding of development threatens to undermine the Western one. Western development aid is increasingly linked to measures of good governance, and investment from Western corporations and banks comes with conditions designed to ensure that ordinary people benefit. This promising advance cannot succeed if African dictators can ignore Western conditions with Chinese assistance.

But then there is an even more disturbing question: What does China's policy toward Sudan say about the West's policy toward China? The West is engaging with China on the theory that economic modernization will bring political modernization as well; otherwise, the West would merely be assisting the development of a communist adversary. China's Sudan policy is an assertion that this link between economic and political modernization is by no means inevitable, even in the extreme case. You can construct oil refineries, educate scientists, build ambitious new railways -- and simultaneously pursue a policy of genocide.

Mallaby is a member of the Washington Post's editorial page staff.


By P (CCAL30) (1419), Sun, 11 Feb 2007 13:27:25 PST
Comment feedback score: 0

OK, Jim and everyone:

Eric's letter is a call to action. He wants to launch the genocide olympics campaign yesterday.

Clearly, with the increasing amount of attention being paid to China and its relationship with Sudan, there is an open window for activists to raise their voice and pressure either China directly or the US government to work more with China on this matter.

How can we do this now? Leadership is needed... proposals are being reviewed, but we still need an organization or even a person to step up to the plate.

Ideas?


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