Sunday, March 05, 2006

The 'war on terror' is out of control

 

Clumsy Leadership
The furor over Dubai's planned takeover of some U.S. ports is a sign of how out of control the ‘war on terror’ has become.

WEB-EXCLUSIVE COMMENTARY
Newsweek
Updated: 12:53 p.m. ET Feb. 22, 2006

Feb. 22, 2006 - Revolutionaries need several ingredients to succeed: charisma, for one; organization, for another. But what they need most of all is an incompetent regime, one that makes their ideas look good by comparison. "Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive," William Wordsworth famously wrote after the French Revolution, romanticizing the "enfants de la patrie" who marched on the Bastille. But no one ever quotes the next line in his poem about the "meager, stale, forbidding " old regime that collapsed so easily there.  The early Bolsheviks were nobodies in Russia before the 1917 Revolution, but thanks to the combined ineptitude of Tsar Nicholas II and Alexander Kerensky—the first one representing bumbling monarchy, the latter the most indecisive sort of democracy—Lenin and Co. established their "dictatorship of the proletariat" with a swiftness that surprised even them.

Listening this week to the latest excerpts from Osama bin Laden's and Ayman al Zawahiri's taped messages, it is hard not to marvel at how lucky these would-be revolutionaries have been in their enemy. Who would have thought that, four and a half years on, facing down the mightiest power in history, this sociopathic pair would still be out there talking trash, their continued existence a daily desecration of the memory of the 9/11 dead? Or that bin Laden and Zawahiri would have been able to whip what had been a bare ember of “global jihad”—one barely smoldering on 9/10/01—into a global conflagration? Was that a smirk I detected on Zawahiri's face as he advised George W. Bush that it was not too late for him to convert to Islam? You could not miss the contempt in bin Laden’s voice when, in a tape said to be several months old, he mocked Bush's aircraft carrier-staged declaration in April 2003 that major conflict in Iraq had ended.

What a contrast to four years ago, when the rapid collapse of the Taliban caught bin Laden by surprise as he sought to escape the Afghan mountains of Tora Bora. It was probably the last time, we must now conclude, that the terror impresario was surprised at all. As Gary Berntsen, the CIA officer in charge of the operation, records in his new book "Jawbreaker," (Crown, 2005) bin Laden told his followers, "Forgive me," and apologized for getting them pinned down by the Americans (Berntsen's men were listening on radio). Bin Laden then asked them to pray. And, lo, a miracle occurred. As Berntsen stewed in frustration over the Pentagon’s refusal to rush in more troops to encircle the trapped “sheikh,’ bin Laden was allowed to flee. And not only did Bush stop talking about the man he wanted “dead or alive,” the president began to shift U.S. Special Forces (in particular the Arabic-speaking 5th Group, which had built close relations with its Afghan allies) and Predator drones to the Iraq theater. 

It is time to have an accounting of just how badly run, and conceived, this "war on terror" has been. You won't hear it from the Democrats, who have been running a severe testosterone shortage since Vietnam. And there's certainly no need to take my word for it.

Instead, just listen to what the president's own party is saying. Let's start with Donald Rumsfeld, the man we thought was in charge of the GWOT, the global war on terror. Speaking last week at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York, Rumsfeld lamented how much better bin Laden and Zawahiri were at understanding the nature of the war. He quoted Zawahiri as saying (way back in July 2005), "We are in a media battle in a race for the hearts and minds of Muslims," and then proceeded to complain that "the U.S. government”—some entity the Defense Secretary is not on familiar terms with, presumably—“still functions as a five and dime store in an eBay world." Al Qaeda, Rumsfeld said, as if he were still head of some blue-ribbon commission questioning the competence of the Clinton administration, has made better use of the technologies we invented than we have. "Our enemies have skillfully adapted to fighting wars in today's media age, but for the most part we, our country, our government has not adapted," he said.

Uhhh, that failure to adapt, wouldn’t that be your failure, Mr. Rumsfeld? Or the president's? But Rummy was his usual unflappable self, just as full of brio and self-confidence as he appears in Eugene Jarecki's new movie, "Why We Fight," when he raps the podium in prewar 2003 and says, "We know Saddam has weapons of mass destruction.”

Again, lest I'm accused of being partisan (I'm really just a reporter, and a very disappointed hawk), I would just refer you to the rebellion within Bush's own party. The way the war was supposed to have been fought—a way that would really have distressed bin Laden and Zawahiri—was that Al Qaeda was supposed to be so isolated by now that we had most of the Arab world on our side. Deals like Dubai Ports World 's takeover of the London company that administers some U.S. ports were supposed to be pretty much routine. After all, as one commentator said to me during an appearance on al Jazeera the other day, isn't this the way globalization is intended to work: you co-opt everyone, even your rivals, into the international system?  Instead, so mistrusted is the Bush administration—and so out of control has the war on terror become—that even leading Republican politicians this week sought to cancel the Dubai contract (Bush, to his credit, did manage a presidential response, vowing to veto).

We did not have a clash of civilizations four years ago, but we're getting closer to one now. As violent anti-Western protests sweep the Islamic world, and what remains of the moderate Muslim community is cowed into silence, how unbearably sad it is to cast one 's mind back to the eve of 9/11. As Wall Street Journal reporter Alan Cullison wrote in a too-little-noted article in The Atlantic in September 2004, Al Qaeda was then a small fractious group that could not even agree among itself about what its goal was. Members had been hounded from the Arab world, from Sudan, into the hands of a lunatic fringe regime in Afghanistan. Qaeda had one A-team, and one big roll of the dice to make, with 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammad and his ace psychopath, Mohammed Atta. Cullison, quoting a remarkable series of letters he found on Zawahiri’s old computer in Afghanistan, wrote that jihadis who were members of Zawahiri's Egyptian Islamic Jihad—the biggest component of Al Qaeda—still wanted to make Egypt the main enemy. One of them even compared the grandiose war against America to tilting at "windmills." Cullison is worth quoting at length on this:

"Perhaps one of the most important insights to emerge from the computer is that 9/11 sprang not so much from Al Qaeda’s strengths as from its weaknesses. The computer did not reveal any links to Iraq or any other deep-pocketed government; amid the group's penury the members fell to bitter infighting. The blow against the United States was meant to put an end to the internal rivalries, which are manifest in vitriolic memos between Kabul and cells abroad. Al-Qaeda’s leaders worried about a military response from the United States, but in such a response they spied opportunity: they had fought the Soviet Union in Afghanistan, and they fondly remembered that war as a galvanizing experience, an event that roused the indifferent of the Arab world to fight and win against a technologically superior Western infidel. The jihadis expected the United States, like the Soviet Union, to be a clumsy opponent."

Not in their fondest dreams did they realize how clumsy.

It is just as sad to remember the support that once existed for the United States, then at the pinnacle of its power and prestige. On 9/10/01 America had adversaries, but mainly on the fringes. The invasion of Afghanistan brought barely a peep from the Arab street. No one had much use for Al Qaeda, even in the Islamic world. Global polls like those taken by Pew and the German Marshall Fund showed a remarkable degree of global consensus in favor of a one-superpower (in other words, American-dominated) world. The silver lining of 9/11 was a chance to reaffirm the legitimacy of America's role as trusted overseer of the international system. That is why Bush had so much support when he ousted the Taliban in Afghanistan, who were clearly harboring bin Laden, and so little backing when he shifted attention to Saddam, whose connection to bin Laden was plainly manufactured. The post-9/11 period was a fantastic opportunity for alliance- and institution-building. All that was required was American leadership.

How then did we arrive at this day, with anti-American Islamist governments rising in the Mideast, bin Laden sneering at us, Qaeda lieutenants escaping from prison, Iran brazenly enriching uranium, and America as hated and mistrusted as it ever has been? The answer, in a word, is incompetence. We now have testimony from enough Republicans and Bush loyalists—from former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill to former CIA senior director Paul Pillar — that the administration knew all along how flimsy its WMD case against Iraq was. We also now know, from Berntsen and others, that the administration knew then how solid the intel on bin Laden's and Zawahiri's whereabouts was. So catastrophic was Bush's decision to shift his attention and resources to Iraq, when bin Laden was panting at Tora Bora, that one is tempted to rank it with Adolf Hitler's decision to invade the Soviet Union in June 1941, at a time when Great Britain was prostrate and America was still out of the war (a decision that almost certainly cost Hitler the war then and there). Yes, Iraq may some day become a legitimate democracy. But for now it is mainly a jihadi factory, cranking out new generations of hardened bomb-ready Islamists, as we have seen with the cross-pollination that has brought Iraqi-style suicide bombs back to Afghanistan.

Bush of course has been lucky in his adversaries as well—not bin Laden, but the Democrats (not to mention many a media pundit). To this day they seem afraid to make the case that the great war presidency has been a disastrous war presidency, in large part because of the fraudulent Iraq invasion. Has any presidential candidate ever had a better talking point than this, as John Kerry did in 2004? But Kerry, a true combat hero, turned out to be a political coward, declining to attack while the Bush-Rove machine slowly emasculated him. Today the only Democratic candidate with the necessary money and renown to run for president, Hillary Clinton, is also one who must prove her presidential timber by out-hawking the hawk-in-chief. So forget about her calling it as she sees it. No wonder Karl Rove is telling the GOP that the war on terror is still the president’s ace issue in 2006, as it was in 2002.

So, yes, bin Laden and Zawahiri have been fortunate in their enemies. Had the Bush administration been more competent, these two would have long since been bloody pulp, perhaps largely forgotten. Luckily for the rest of us, the Al Qaeda revolutionary program is so abhorrent that most of the world still has no choice but to stick with us, through thick and thin—and dumb and dumber. How long we can test the world’s patience is another matter. Alan Cullison’s 2004 article based on Zawahiri’s private thoughts is again instructive here. "Al Qaeda understood that its attacks would not lead to a quick collapse of the great powers,” he wrote. “Rather, its aim was to tempt the powers to strike back in a way that would create sympathy for the terrorists. ... One wonders if the United States is indeed playing the role written for it on the computer." What I wonder is, how many more years will we have to wait for Rumsfeld to figure that one out?

Friday, March 03, 2006

Media raid piles pressure on Kenya's Kibaki

Media raid piles pressure on Kenya's Kibaki

By C. Bryson Hull 1 hour, 54 minutes ago

NAIROBI (Reuters) - Fallout from a police raid on a major media group put Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki's weakened government further on the defensive on Friday, with newspapers denouncing the action as "state thuggery."

Thursday's heavy-handed raid sparked a storm of domestic and foreign condemnation and split Kibaki's cabinet, heaping more pressure on his administration.

The operation was particularly harmful to Kibaki's image because he was elected in 2002 on a promise to usher in reform after the autocratic rule of President Daniel arap Moi.

Kibaki was already in deep trouble over graft scandals that have forced three of his ministers to resign and angered Western donors. He is also still smarting from a humiliating defeat last November in a constitutional referendum.

In the most aggressive assault on mainstream media since independence in 1963, at least 30 elite police and paramilitary commandos stormed the offices of the Kenya Television Network (KTN) and the presses of its sister newspaper the Standard.

Thousands of newspapers were burned during the raids. The paper reopened on Thursday and produced a special edition. KTN was also back on the air on Thursday.

About half of Kibaki's cabinet protested against the raid, while other ministers defended it.

"This is completely a betrayal of the people who elected this government," said Ludeki Chweya, a political science lecturer at the University of Nairobi.

"The action was so drastic that nothing in the Moi era is comparable. So it takes the country so far back."

Kibaki on Friday ordered a new session of parliament on March 21 after he closed down the assembly following the referendum. He also appointed a committee to work on a new constitution -- a demand of many Kenyans.

"LAUGHABLE FICTION"

Kenyan media united against him.

"There are few dictators, even in past years, who were capable of the actions carried out by the Kibaki administration in the past 24 hours," Kenya's biggest newspaper, the Nation, said in an editorial.

Moi's government enacted tough press laws and routinely arrested and beat journalists who wrote critical articles.

The Standard in an editorial called the police justification -- that they had evidence of a plot to bribe reporters to write articles fomenting ethnic hatred -- "a piece of laughable fiction that even they know is complete nonsense."

"State Thuggery" proclaimed the front page of the Kenya Times newspaper.

The Standard wrote to the police on Friday demanding an inventory of items taken from its office, and identity of those who entered. "We are concerned there could be attempts to manipulate the contents in our CPUs (computers) as no attempt was made to jointly verify the same," its letter added.

The Kenyan media have angered the government not only with hard-hitting exposes of corruption but with stories about political intrigue and about Kibaki's wife.

First lady Lucy Kibaki last year harangued reporters in the Nation newsroom for hours and slapped a television cameraman over a story. And last week police held staff from the Weekly Citizen newspaper over a story alleging a feud between Lucy Kibaki and another woman many call the president's second wife.

Several reporters, mostly from sex and scandal tabloids, have been arrested and charged with press crimes.

The government had said it would crack down on journalists who make up stories or engage in extortion by threatening to publish damaging material. But the assault on a respected mainstream media group shocked many Kenyans.

(Additional reporting by Andrew Cawthorne)

Thursday, March 02, 2006

We paid six lawyers Sh72 million, says Govt

 We paid six lawyers Sh72 million, says Govt

By Joseph Murimi

The Government has admitted paying Sh72 million to six lawyers who represented it in a case that sought to block last year’s referendum.

Solicitor-General Wanjuki Muchemi defended the payment, saying the amount was reasonable. He scoffed at reports alleging impropriety on the part of the State Law Office, saying it had acted "diligently, conscientiously and transparency".

He said there was nothing improper with the attorney-general hiring external lawyers and consultants as he was mandated to do so by law.

"We wish to confirm that (the) Sh72 million was a global figure to cover all such legal services as the team had been engaged to provide and included all expenses, disbursements and Value Added Tax of Sh9,931,034.45, which was deducted upfront and remitted to the relevant authorities,’’ Muchemi said.

He said the fee was reasonable given the national importance of the constitutional review process, the urgency with which the case had been lodged and the complex issues that had to be argued out.

MP Joe Khamis and 21 others had filed the referendum case with others against the AG, Justice and Constitutional Affairs minister, the Constitution of Kenya Review Commission and the Electoral Commission of Kenya.

The advocates appointed by the AG to tackle the case were Dr Gibson Kamau Kuria, Mr Waweru Gatonye, Mr Fred Ngatia, Mr Kioko Kilukumi and Mr Njoroge Regeru.

Revelations of the amount paid to the six lawyers has raised eyebrows and opened a floodgate of condemnations. They represented the Government in the review case, which lasted only five days.

Elsewhere, the Kenya Section of the International Commission of Jurists said Wako should be sacked if there was to be any progress in prosecution of corruption cases.

ICJ council member Albert Kamunde said Wako had failed to demonstrate willingness to prosecute corruption related offences. He said according to a report by the Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission, several files referred to the AG have not been acted upon.

Saitoti grilled by police and has catered lunch brought in

 Saitoti grilled over Goldenberg

By Evelyn Kwamboka

Former Vice President, Prof George Saitoti, was on Wednesday questioned over his role in the Goldenberg scandal.

It took him more than five hours to explain to the detectives at CID headquarters, why he granted 15 per cent ex-gratia payments for gold and diamonds to Goldenberg International Limited in 1990.

"I had a candid discussion with the officers and explained my role in the 15 per cent ex-gratia genesis and how it was handled," he said.

This was over and above the 20 per cent export compensation that was stipulated under the Export Compensation Act.

Saitoti said he had nothing to do with the Sh5.8 billion and Sh13.5 billion paid between April and August 1993.

"It is not me who triggered the payments in Goldenberg. I was not there in 1993 or at the Central Bank of Kenya," he said.

The payments were made during former VP Musalia Mudavadi’s tenure. Mudavadi was the first to be questioned over the scandal by the detectives on Tuesday.

Saitoti, who declined to comment on Tuesday on the Goldenberg matter, saying it was in court, arrived in the company of his lawyer, Fred Ngatia, at the CID headquarters.

The Kajiado North MP had lunch, brought in by a catering firm, with the officers as they continued to gather information from him.

"I did come here in order to assist with the investigations. I had nothing to do with the Sh5.8 billion," he said.

Saitoti told journalists that it "would not be prudent" for him to discuss details of the matter since he had already moved to court.

The court barred police from arresting and charging him last week on the offences based on the Bosire report on the Goldenberg scandal.

Justice John Nyamu granted Prof Saitoti temporary leave to challenge the findings of the report handed over to the President on February 3

Kenya Police assault newpaper and TV station - stories from Standard and Nation

 
Police shut down Standard, KTN

Story by ERIC SHIMOLI and DOMINIC WABALA
Publication Date: 3/2/2006

Armed and hooded police this morning raided the headquarters and printing plant of the Standard Group. 

BLAZE: Copies of today's Standard go up in flames after being set on fire by police in the compound of the company's printing plant at Likoni Road, Nairobi early today. Photo by Joseph Mathenge
They burnt copies of the newspaper and shut down the media group's 24-hours television station KTN. An estimated 30 policemen armed with AK-47 assault rifles first stormed the Standard's headquarters at the  I&M building, in Nairobi city centre, at 12.30am, before another squad swooped on the company’s printing plant in Likoni Road, in the industrial area, and burnt the day’s newspapers which were just rolling off the presses. 

The raids were carried out by a rapid response unit code-named the Kanga Squad, detectives from Nairobi provincial CID headquarters and officers from the General Service Unit. 

They were under the command of Mr James Njiru, the officer in charge of operations at  the provincial CID headquarters. The elite Kanga Squad was formed by the Director of Criminal Investigations, Mr Joseph Kamau, specifically to fight hardcore criminals like carjackers, bank robbers and murder hit squads. 

The raids follow a running dispute between the media house and the Government over a story in the Saturday Standard alleging President Kibaki had held a secret meeting with one of his fiercest critics, former Cabinet minister Kalonzo Musyoka. Both State House and Mr Musyoka denied the story and demanded apologies from the newspaper. 

Three of the company’s journalists were seized and held in police custody over the story for the past two days. The  board of directors of the Standard, Kenya's second largest newspaper, which is partly owned by the family of retired President Moi, had on Wednesday condemned the arrests as illegal and demanded the journalists' immediate release. 

Early today guards at the I&M building said moments before police pounced they had closed off the entire area around Muindi Mbingu Street and the parking bays with unmarked cars, surrounding the building and blocking off any escape routes or access. 

The squad included armed and masked officers who herded the guards into a corner in the reception lobby. Those who resisted were beaten up before another squad frisked them and took away their mobile phones. 

Police then moved to the second floor control room which houses the closed circuit TV surveillance and security systems for the entire building, breaking down the door and to smash their way in. 

Officers seized computer keyboards and electronic units controlling the security systems and slashed through electricity cables supplying power to the system. The officers appeared to know their way around the building and had planned their mission well, according to onlookers. 

The squads then split up into small teams with different groups targeting different floors housing KTN and Standard Newspapers. They disconnected power lines from the KTN studio, taking the station off the air. 

Police appeared particularly interested in veteran news anchorman Njoroge Mwaura who had read the late night news which replayed a statement appealing for the release of the journalists. Mr Mwaura had already left the station but the police  repeatedly demanded to know his whereabouts. 

Two technical staff working in the TV transmissions room that beams the station's programmes out to the world first noticed that raid was taking place on when two armed men burst into the control room. 

One of them, Mr Peter Njuguna, was taken away by the police who also seized  mobile phones belonging to the staff who had earlier been forced to lie down. 

Desktop computers containing  hard disks which store all the information in the  KTN newsroom on the 14th floor were also seized, as was  a Newsdesk fax machine. 

The Standard's printing press staff examine the damaged printing machine after the raid. Photo by Joseph Mathenge

"This is repression. It is an outrageous assault on media freedom," said Standard managing editor Pamela Sittoni, speaking from the sealed off offices. Across the city in Industrial Area around 20 hooded policemen brandishing weapons raided the Standard printing press in Likoni Road. 

They arrived at the plant at 1am in seven vehicles, parking one across the street while the rest parked just outside the gate. The policemen — all wearing luminous orange jackets with the words QRU for Quick Rescue Unit —fired three times at the gate to burst open the padlock before pushing their way inside the printing press compound. 

"Laleni chini, sisi ni polisi!" (Lie down! We are the police)  one of the men shouted before he and the others ran in, shouting orders at the guards, the drivers and packers. 

The policemen grabbed cellphones from all those present before herding the workers into a large hall next to the printing press where newspapers are packed. 

Anyone who resisted was pistol-whipped  before being forced to the floor. While the press workers were being beaten into submission, another group of policemen broke into offices where they disconnected computers, telephones and faxes. 

Yet another group of officers was systematically walking through the printing press where they dismantled several parts, disabling the equipment. An assistant police commissioner in charge of operations at the provincial police headquarters, Mr James Njiru, apparently led the raid. 

He was the one issuing orders to the others to collect all the newspapers stacked ready for loading into the vans for delivery to different parts of the country. 

"I can smoke you! I can waste you," shouted one hooded man all dressed in black who shouted swear words as he walked up and down in front of the group of terrified workers. 

Police then herded the workers outside the building and ordered them to stay across the street as they continued to burn bundles of papers at the parking lot. 
Each time a new pile of freshly printed papers was added, a policeman poured paraffin onto the blazing heap. 

The newspaper had as its main headline "Champions speak", accompanied by pictures of the best students in the KCSE examinations whose resultswere released on Tuesday. 

The back-page headlines announced, "Magari knew of Anglo  Leasing," and "Saitoti grilled over Goldenberg." Daily Nation reporters who rushed to the scene were manhandled and threatened with shooting when they insisted on taking pictures and asking questions. 

One Standard photojournalist, Mr Jacob Otieno, was beaten up when he insisted on doing his job and said he had a right to be present because he was a Standard employee. 

A member of staff with copies of the newspaper. Photo by Joseph Mathenge
Nation photojournalist Joseph Mathenge escaped a beating only by hiding his camera and pretending to be a despatch driver. Contacted early today, Nairobi area police boss Mwangi King'ori said he knew nothing of the raids. "You have just woken me up. I was asleep. I am not aware of what is going on. I have nothing to do with that matter," he said. 

The raids came just three days after Information minister Mutahi Kagwe - himself a former commercial manager of the Standard Group and son-in-law of the current National Security minister John Michuki - warned the media of stern Government action if they persisted in what he called misreporting and misrepresentation. 

He said the Government would not be dissuaded from action even though it knew the media would gang up to defend one of their own. A Standard Board statement issued after three of the paper's journalists were arrested over the Kalonzo Musyoka report, read in part: "The Board wishes to reassure the readers and public that the Standard Group has codified in its editorial policy the supremacy of impartiality, accuracy and ethical reporting. It also recognizes that newspapers will make mistakes occasionally. 

When this has happened, and confirmed to have happened, corrections and clarifications have been issued. But we also recognize and respect the rights of offended individuals to seek redress through established channels like the Media Council or the courts," the board said in a statement. 

Board members said they were deeply alarmed by the sequence of events which followed publication of the story, culminating in the arrest and "illegal detention in police custody of our editors and journalist for the past two days." 

"The vitriolic letter from Government spokesman, Dr Alfred Mutua, on Monday over the same issue adopted the same threatening vein and in our view exhibited a clear agenda to punish this media house without recognising the need for internal investigations to establish the facts. Media houses do have clear verification systems in place and these must be allowed to run their course and an appropriate decision taken. This is what was and still is going on," said the statement. 

Last month, the police raided the Citizen Weekly offices and arrested editors, reporters and workers, while last year, two Kenya Times reporters were also arrested and later charged in court. 

 

It's an attack on press freedom, says Standard directors


Publication Date: 3/2/2006

The following is a statement from the Standard Group Board of Directors 

In the early morning hours of Thursday, around 1am, two groups of hooded, armed people staged simultaneous raids on the editorial offices of the KTN Television and the Group’s printing press on Likoni Rd in the Industrial Area of Nairobi.  At both premises, they roughed up security officers on duty and managed to get access into the building. 

In the I&M building on Kenyatta Avenue, one of the men in the group identified themselves as police officers and demanded access, which was granted.

The team herded our security men into a corner and demanded access into the editorial floors and the transmission room. In the transmission room, they took away a computer, some power units and affected the cables. That action effectively disabled our transmission and we have been off air since that time.

They did go into the KTN floor, where they took away several central processing units for computers used by the station’s journalists. They also took away CPUs from the commercial floors and did extensive damage to the surveillance camera units.

In the printing press plant, they vandalised the press, broke glasses and disabled the unit that at that point was printing. They took away computers from the circulation offices and burnt tens of thousands of copies of newspapers that were ready for dispatch. We are therefore unable to serve some of these markets this morning. 

We take a very dim view of these raids, which, on the basis of existing information, were carried out by police. We believe that this is a direct and blatant attempt to undermine the freedom of the press in this country as guaranteed by the Constitution. It is also intended to paralyze our business. We believe that the extra-judicial settling of scores has no place in any country, which believes in the rule of Law. It is our believe that our Country is still respecting its constitution and that immediate and necessary action will be to take those responsible to account for their actions.

We have taken our civic duty as responsible citizens of Kenya to report these acts to the Police with the hope that it is not too late to redeem our image as a country. In spite of great difficulties we are facing, are determined to marshal all our resources to ensure that our readers and viewers are kept informed.

We recognize, of course that these attacks come at a time when our journalists are being detained over alleged publication of alleged untrue story.

Considering the astonishingly hostile response of the Government to what would amount to a civil misdemeanour, if it indeed is confirmed to be such, we take judicial note of the unlikely coincidence.

Finally, we reassure our readers and viewers that everything is being done to bring back your favourite newspaper and television station, as soon as possible.


 

We thought they were thugs, say printing plant staff

Story by DOMINIC WABALA
Publication Date: 3/2/2006

Charles Cherono, The Standard night pre-press supervisor told how the security agents stormed into the Likoni road offices and roughly herded all employees into one hall, frisked them, beat up others and took away all their  mobile phones.

"We thought they were thugs. They arrived in many vehicles and ordered us to lie down as they frisked us and took away our mobile phones. They demanded the keys to the printing press from the guards and when they couldn't get them they fired some shots and gained entry," a shaken Mr Cherono said.

Another supervisor, Mr James Muiruri, said the hooded security men from the 'Kanga squad' were heard communicating to their seniors who instructed them to destroy the printing press.

Mr Muiruri said  the officers stormed in like gangsters and beat everyone while demanding mobile phones.  "They demanded to be shown where the printing press was. We didn't know their intentions. They talked in a coded  language and all I could hear were instructions by someone to dismantle the printing press. A light-skinned man who was very abusive demanded that we show him a chain in the printing press," Muiruri said.

A First Force security guard said that the officers arrived in seven cars and blocked the Likoni road at 12.38 am.

"One armed officer jumped out of the vehicle and ran towards us. He identified himself as a policeman and ordered us to lie down as his colleagues rushed towards us and ordered us to surrender our guns. The staff members who were sleeping were hit on the heads with gun butts and hearded to one side of the production hall," the guard said.

A driver whose newspaper circulation van was being loaded said his mobile phone was snatched.


BREAKING NEWS
State owns up to raid


Standard Team

 

Internal Security Minister John Michuki has admitted that the Government organised the simultaneous raids at the Standard Media Group’s editorial offices and printing plant.

 

“When you rattle a snake you must be ready to be bitten,” he emphatically stated after attending a State function presided over by President Mwai Kibaki at the Kenyatta International Conference Centre.

 

 “The on goings (at the Standard) since last week involved state security,” he said.

 

The minister’s remarks left no doubt that the attack was planned and executed with his full knowledge. He was responding to questions from journalists who turned to him after desperate efforts to get President Kibaki to comment on the matter were thwarted by security officers.

 

Michuki, who was bombarded with questions by local and international journalists, quickly sought assistance from his bodyguards and was quickly escorted to his car.

 

President Kibaki, who presided over the official launch of the National Anti-Corruption Steering Committee, skirted the matter despite prodding by the committee’s chairman Mutava Musyimi.

 

In his speech, Musyimi said while press freedom must be exercised with responsibility and restraint, the Government must equally strive to protect the freedom.

 

He it was better that the Government be seen to be on the side of restraint that be seen as the aggressors.

 

“It should review its position over the journalists still being held in police custody,” he said.

 

Justice and Constitutional Affairs Minister Martha Karua declined to comment on the attack and said Information Minister, Mutahi Kagwe, would issue a statement over the matter.

Meanwhile, KTN television is now back on air, 13 hours after security officers raided the station's premises and disabled equipment.

The station started its normal transmission at 2.00pm, with live streaming of the assault on the Standard Group.


 

"If you rattle a snake, you must be prepared to be bitten by it," said Kenyan Internal Security Minister John Michuki

 
Kenya admits armed raids on paper
A woman holds the charred remains of a copy of The Standard
Thousands of copies of the Standard were burnt
Kenya's government has confirmed it ordered masked gunmen to storm a media group, disabling printing presses and briefly shutting its TV station.

Internal Security Minister John Michuki said the raids on the Standard group in Nairobi were to protect state security.

"If you rattle a snake, you must be prepared to be bitten by it," he said, amid protests by opposition MPs.

Three Standard journalists are still being held without charge following a story about President Mwai Kibaki.

Both the president and senior opposition figure Kalonzo Musyoka deny a report in the Standard last week that they had been holding secret meetings.

Energy and resources being used to crack down on the media need to be channelled toward the fight against corruption
Eddie Mandhry, New York

Initially, the information minister denied any knowledge of the raids while opposition leader Uhuru Kenyatta called the action a "dark day".

The BBC's Karen Allen in Nairobi says the raids are being seen as an indicator of growing political tension in an administration facing charges of corruption.

Three ministers have resigned this year after details of a corruption investigation were leaked to several newspapers.

The US embassy in Nairobi has condemned the raids as "acts of thuggery [that] have no place in an open democratic society".

In a statement, it said: "We note that these attacks were preceded by threats directed against the Standard from representatives of the Kenyan government."

It urged the government to stop its "campaign of vilification and harassment of selected media".

Police accused

Police Commissioner Jasper Ombati said he had evidence that journalists were being paid to incite ethnic hatred.

He said that police officers routinely wore masks to hide their identities in sensitive cases.

Standard editors Dennis Onyango (left) and Chaacha Mwita (right) and reporter Ayub Savula at the Central Police Station (Copyright: East African Standard)
Three Standard journalists are still being held
Hooded men carrying AK-47 assault rifles raided the headquarters of the Standard group just after midnight.

Staff were kicked and beaten and forced to lie on the floors as offices were searched and equipment taken away, the Standard newspaper said on its website.

"They kicked us as we went down, they frisked our pockets and took our belongings," one member of staff said.

A similar raid was carried out about an hour later at the group's newspaper presses in the capital's industrial area.

Thousands of copies of Thursday's edition of the newspaper were dragged out into the yard and set on fire.

Meanwhile, another group of masked men went to the offices of the independent Kenya Television Network (KTN), a sister to the Standard.

The station was off air until 1100GMT, and men carried away computers and transmission equipment, and detained four staff members.

Investigation

Opposition MPs joined by more than 100 demonstrators marched from parliament to outside the Standard's offices in protest at the raids, which Standard group Chief Executive Tom Mshindi had condemned earlier.

"If it is confirmed the action was sanctioned by the government, it would reflect badly on our country's claims to democracy and freedom of the media," he said.

Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki during the swearing in ceremony
President Kibaki's government has been rocked by graft allegations

Information Minister Mutahi Kagwe, a former Standard editor, initially denied any knowledge of the raid, saying he first learnt about it on television news reports.

Kalonzo Musyoka, the former environment minister who was sacked after opposing a proposed new constitution and is named in the now controversial newspaper report, condemned the raids.

"This is a very very dark morning for this beautiful country," he said.

The newspaper has been critical of President Kibaki's handling of recent corruption scandals.

The three Standard journalists, Chaacha Mwita, Dennis Onyango and Ayub Savula were arrested on Tuesday following the publication of the most recent article.

The government has repeatedly accused the Standard of fabricating stories.

Thursday, February 09, 2006

Mumbai is getting boring - is the stock market next?

 

India's morality police send bored city to sleep

By Krittivas MukherjeeThu Feb 9, 7:34 AM ET

Nightlife in India's entertainment capital has become deadly dull, youngsters in Mumbai complain, as the authorities continue a crackdown on discos and bars that they accuse of corrupting impressionable young minds.

The city's nightlife -- not so long ago pulsating, risque and never-ending -- has become a non-event, they say, ever since officials declared a war on adult fun in August, forcing hundreds of popular dance bars to shut their doors saying they bred crime and prostitution.

After the ban, thousands of dancers found themselves out of work, with many moving to other states to earn a living. Others are reported to have become prostitutes.

As if that was not bad enough for Mumbai's party set, police are now reining in the city's ordinary watering holes, asking them to obtain a dozen licences, pull down the shutters at midnight, and make their guests behave.

"This is moral policing at its best and we don't need any of this," said Sebastian Ambrose, a computer professional and a regular pub-goer. "They say this city never sleeps. Now Mumbai sleeps by 12. This is boring."

More than 30 pubs have closed in the last two weeks, with the police often kicking out drinkers as they relaxed after work, and many more look set to follow unless the authorities relent.

Anyone hoping to serve alcohol needs to spend more time in government offices than pouring drinks, with permits for parking, pest control, the playing of music (one each for live or recorded sets) and many others needed before opening time.

"A pub owner here has to go from table to table seeking more than a dozen licences that may take more than a year to obtain," said Kamlesh Barot, secretary of a hotels and restaurants association.

While only four of the permits have been introduced recently, in the past many licences were more often than not overlooked.

But not any more.

Bar owners say the crackdown is just an excuse for government officials and the police to collect bribes.

"We don't mind licences but the wait for getting them should not be endless. Files don't move till officers' palms are greased," said Jehani Farhang, the director of a south Mumbai pub.

NO FUN, PLEASE

It is not just the bar owners who are coming under pressure. Police are stepping up patrols outside popular nightspots.

"We feel like criminals with police watching over outside the pubs and nightclubs. They have to stop being a bully," said Sanjay Khadas, a young advertising executive.

"The dance bars are gone. Now they are after the bars to ensure there is no entertainment in Mumbai," said Paritosh Sehgal, a college student.

For pub owners, the early hours of the morning are when they do their best business, and early closures are hitting them hard.

The police are unapologetic. "We are targetting only those that don't comply with rules. All of them have to get licences," said Ashutosh Dumbre, deputy police commissioner.

Local newspapers have gone to town protesting police "excesses", saying officers were spending more time watching over pub and nightclubs than solving murders or catching rapists and fraudsters.

"For cops, public is public enemy No.1," said a headline in Times of India on Thursday. "Moral policing is easy to do and gets policemen and politicians a lot of cheap publicity. Never mind that the public enemy number one becomes the public itself," the newspaper said.

Monday, January 30, 2006

Darfur - The New York Review of Books: Genocide in Slow Motion

 
 
 

Volume 53, Number 2 · February 9, 2006

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Review

Genocide in Slow Motion

By Nicholas D. Kristof

Darfur: A Short History of a Long War
by Julie Flint and Alex de Waal

London: Zed Books, 176 pp., £12.00 (to be published in the US in March)

Darfur: The Ambiguous Genocide
by Gérard Prunier

Cornell University Press, 212 pp., $24.00

1.

During the Holocaust, the world looked the other way. Allied leaders turned down repeated pleas to bomb the Nazi extermination camps or the rail lines leading to them, and the slaughter attracted little attention. My newspaper, The New York Times, provided meticulous coverage of World War II, but of 24,000 front-page stories published in that period only six referred on page one directly to the Nazi assault on the Jewish population of Europe. Only afterward did many people mourn the death of Anne Frank, construct Holocaust museums, and vow: Never Again.



The same paralysis occurred as Rwandans were being slaughtered in 1994. Officials from Europe to the US to the UN headquarters all responded by temporizing and then, at most, by holding meetings. The only thing President Clinton did for Rwandan genocide victims was issue a magnificent apology after they were dead.

Much the same has been true of the Western response to the Armenian genocide of 1915, the Cambodian genocide of the 1970s, and the Bosnian massacres of the 1990s. In each case, we have wrung our hands afterward and offered the lame excuse that it all happened too fast, or that we didn't fully comprehend the carnage when it was still under way.

And now the same tragedy is unfolding in Darfur, but this time we don't even have any sort of excuse. In Darfur genocide is taking place in slow motion, and there is vast documentary proof of the atrocities. Some of the evidence can be seen in the photo reproduced with this essay, which was leaked from an African Union archive containing thousands of other such photos. And now, the latest proof comes in the form of two new books that tell the sorry tale of Darfur: it's appalling that the publishing industry manages to respond more quickly to genocide than the UN and world leaders do.

In my years as a journalist, I thought I had seen a full kaleidoscope of horrors, from babies dying of malaria to Chinese troops shooting students to Indonesian mobs beheading people. But nothing prepared me for Darfur, where systematic murder, rape, and mutilation are taking place on a vast scale, based simply on the tribe of the victim. What I saw reminded me why people say that genocide is the worst evil of which human beings are capable.

On one of the first of my five visits to Darfur, I came across an oasis along the Chad border where several tens of thousands of people were sheltering under trees after being driven from their home villages by the Arab Janjaweed militia, which has been supported by the Sudan government in Khartoum. Under the first tree, I found a man who had been shot in the neck and the jaw; his brother, shot only in the foot, had carried him for forty-nine days to get to this oasis. Under the next tree was a widow whose parents had been killed and stuffed in the village well to poison the local water supply; then the Janjaweed had tracked down the rest of her family and killed her husband. Under the third tree was a four-year-old orphan girl carrying her one-year-old baby sister on her back; their parents had been killed. Under the fourth tree was a woman whose husband and children had been killed in front of her, and then she was gang-raped and left naked and mutilated in the desert.

Those were the people I met under just four adjacent trees. And in every direction, as far as I could see, were more trees and more victims—all with similar stories.


There is no space in most newspaper articles to explain how this came to pass, and that is why the recent books under review are invaluable. The best introduction is Darfur: A Short History of a Long War, by Julie Flint and Alex de Waal. Both writers are intimately familiar with Darfur—Ms. Flint reportedly came close to getting herself killed there when traveling with rebels in 2004—and their accounts are as readable as they are tragic.

The killing in Darfur, a vast region in western Sudan, is not a case of religious persecution, since the killers as well as the victims of this genocide are Muslim. But, like the Christian and animist parts of southern Sudan, Darfur has traditionally been neglected by the Arabs (and before them, the British) who held power in Khartoum, the Sudanese capital. Flint and de Waal write that the British colonial rulers deliberately restricted education in Darfur to the sons of chiefs, so as not to produce rabble-rousers who might challenge their authority. As a result, in 1935, all of Darfur had only one full-fledged elementary school. There was no maternity clinic until the 1940s, and at independence in 1956 Darfur had fewer hospital beds than any other part of Sudan. After independence, Sudan's own leaders nationalized this policy of malign neglect.

One result was the terrible Darfur famine of 1984 and 1985, which de Waal earlier made the subject of a powerful case study, Famine That Kills.[1] That book has been reissued with a new preface because of the interest in Darfur, and it makes the point that, in places like Sudan, "'to starve' is transitive; it is something people do to each other." The Darfur famine was the result not just of drought, but also of reckless mismanagement and indifference in the Sudanese government. It was transitive starvation.

During the 1980s and 1990s, ethnic antagonisms were also rising in Darfur. The civil war in neighboring Chad spilled over into Darfur and led some Arab tribes to adopt a supremacist ideology. Meanwhile, the spread of the Sahara desert intensified the competition between Arab and non-Arab tribes for water and forage.


The other book under review, Gérard Prunier's Darfur: The Ambiguous Genocide, makes the point that the shorthand descriptions from Darfur of Arabs killing black Africans are oversimplified. He's right—there has been intermarriage between tribes, and it's hardly accurate to talk about Arabs killing Africans when they're all Africans. The racial element is confusing, because to Western eyes, although not to local people, almost everyone looks black. And of course the very concept of an Arab is a loose one; with no consistent racial or ethnic meaning, it normally refers to a person whose mother tongue is Arabic.

But while shorthand descriptions are simplistic, they're also essentially right. In Darfur, the cleavages between the Janjaweed and their victims tend to be threefold. First, the Janjaweed and Sudanese government leaders are Arabs and their victims in Darfur are members of several non-Arab African tribes, particularly the Zaghawa, Fur, and Masalit. Second, the killers are frequently lighter-skinned, and they routinely use racial epithets about the "blacks" they are killing and raping. Third, the Janjaweed are often nomadic herdsmen, and the tribes they attack are usually settled farmers, so the conflict also reflects the age-old tension between herders and farmers.

The leader of the Janjaweed, whom the Sudanese government entrusted with the initial waves of slaughter in Darfur, is usually said to be Musa Hilal, the chief of an Arab nomadic tribe. His own hostility to non-Arabs long predates the present genocide. Flint and de Waal quote a former governor of Darfur as saying that Musa Hilal was recorded back in 1988 as expressing gratitude for "the necessary weapons and ammunition to exterminate the African tribes in Darfur." In the mid-1990s, the early version of the Janjaweed (with the connivance of Sudan's leaders) was responsible for the slaughter of at least two thousand members of the Masalit tribe. In 2001 and 2002, there were brutal attacks on villages belonging to the Fur and Zaghawa tribes.

The upshot was increasing alarm and unrest, particularly among the three major non-Arab tribes in Darfur. Their militants began to organize an armed movement against the Sudanese government, and in June 2002 they attacked a police station. The beginning of their rebellion is usually dated to early in 2003, when they burned government garrisons and destroyed military aircraft at an air base.

That's when the Sudanese government, led by President Omar el-Bashir, decided to launch a scorched-earth counterinsurgency campaign, involving the slaughter of large numbers of people in Darfur. It was difficult to use the army for this, though, partly because many soldiers in the regular army were members of African tribes from Darfur—and so it wasn't clear that they would be willing to wipe out civilians from their own tribes. The Sudanese leadership therefore decided to adopt the same strategy it had successfully employed elsewhere in Sudan, using irregular militias to slaughter tribes that had shown signs of resistance.


This wasn't a surprise decision. As Prunier writes: "The whole of GoS [Government of Sudan] policy and political philosophy since it came to power in 1989 has kept verging on genocide in its general treatment of the national question in Sudan." Flint and de Waal call this "counterinsurgency on the cheap" and note:

In Bahr el Ghazal in 1986–88, in the Nuba Mountains in 1992–95, in Upper Nile in 1998–2003, and elsewhere on just a slightly smaller scale, militias supported by military intelligence and aerial bombardment attacked with unremitting brutality. Scorched earth, massacre, pillage and rape were the norm.

In other words, when Sudan's leaders were faced with unrest in Darfur, their instinctive response was to start massacring civilians. It had worked before, and it had aroused relatively little international reaction. Among the few who vociferously protested the brutal Sudanese policies in southern Sudan in the 1990s were American evangelical Christians, partly because many of the victims then were Christians; some American evangelicals have complained to me that the American press and television are now calling attention to Muslim victims in Sudan after years of ignoring similar massacres of Christians in southern Sudan in the past. The comparison they make does not seem to me entirely convincing, but they have a point. It's probably true that if there had been more reaction to Sudanese brutality in the southern part of the country during the 1990s, the government might not have been so quick to launch genocidal attacks in Darfur.

After it had decided to crush the incipient rebellion in Darfur, Sudan's government released Arab criminals from prison and turned them over to the custody of Musa Hilal so that they could join the Janjaweed. The government set up training camps for the Janjaweed, gave them assault rifles, truck-mounted machine guns, and artillery. Recruits received $79 a month if they were on foot, or $117 if they had a horse or camel. They also received Sudanese army uniforms with a special badge depicting an armed horseman. Prunier quotes a survivor from one of the attacks that quickly followed:

The Janjaweed were accompanied by soldiers. They attacked the people, saying: "You are opponents to the regime, we must crush you. As you are Black, you are like slaves. Then the entire Darfur region will be in the hands of the Arabs. The government is on our side. The government plane is on our side, it gives us food and ammunition."

Flint and de Waal quote a young man who hid under a dead mule and was the only survivor in his family:

[The attackers] took a knife and cut my mother's throat and threw her into the well. Then they took my oldest sister and began to rape her, one by one. My father was kneeling, crying and begging them for mercy. After that they killed my brother and finally my father. They threw all the bodies in the well.

2.

Initially, the Sudanese government didn't even try hard to hide what was happening. President Omar el-Bashir went on television after a massacre in which 225 peasants were killed to declare: "We will use all available means, the Army, the police, the mujahideen, the horsemen, to get rid of the rebellion." Later, Sudan would pretend that the killings were the result of tribal conflicts and banditry, and deny that it had any control over the Janjaweed. That is false. Today, the Janjaweed and the Sudanese army work hand in hand as they have in the past.

On my last visit to Darfur, in November, while I was driving back from a massacre site where thirty-seven villagers had been slaughtered, I saw a convoy of Janjaweed. This was on a main road with soldiers staffing checkpoints, and in fact I had in my car a soldier who had demanded a ride. None of the soldiers paid any attention to the Janjaweed.

Maybe the authorities had no time to stop the Janjaweed because they were so busy trying to prevent journalists and aid workers from seeing what was happening. At one checkpoint, the secret police tried to arrest my local interpreter. They told me to drive on and leave him behind; I refused, fearing that that might be the end of him. So they detained me as well (they eventually summoned a higher commander who freed us both). It's clear that if the Sudanese government simply applied the current restrictions on foreign journalists to the Janjaweed, the genocide would quickly come to an end.

There has been some debate over whether what is unfolding is genocide, and that's the reason Gérard Prunier in his subtitle refers to it as an "ambiguous genocide." The debate arises principally because Sudan has not tried to exterminate every last member of the Fur, Masalit, and Zaghawa tribes. Typically, most young men are killed but many others are allowed to flee.

Some people think that genocide means an attempt to exterminate an entire ethnic group, but that was not the meaning intended by Rafael Lemkin, who coined the word; nor is it the definition used in the 1948 Genocide Convention. The convention defines genocide as "acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group, as such." The acts can include killings, or injuries or psychological distress, or simply restrictions on births; indeed, arguably the Genocide Convention provides too lax a definition. But in any case there is no doubt that in rural Darfur there has been a systematic effort to kill people and wipe out specific tribes and that the killing amounts to genocide by any accepted definition.


There has also been a growing appreciation in recent decades that crimes against humanity often include sexual violence, and that has been a central fact about the terror in Darfur. Indeed, the mass rapes in Darfur have been among the most effective means for the government to terrorize tribal populations, break their will, and drive them away. Rape is feared all the more in Darfur for two reasons. Most important, a woman who has been raped is ruined; in some cases, she is evicted by her family and forced to build her own hut and live there on her own. And not only is the woman shamed for life, but so is her entire extended family. The second reason is that the people in the region practice an extreme form of female genital cutting, called infibulation, in which a girl's vagina is sewn shut until marriage. Thus when an unmarried girl is raped, the act leads to additional painful physical injuries; and the risk of HIV transmission increases.

From the government's point of view, rape is a successful method of control because it sows terror among the victimized population, and yet it initially attracted relatively little attention from foreign observers, because women are too ashamed to complain. As a result, mass rape has been a routine feature of village attacks in every part of Darfur, and it hasn't yet gotten the attention it deserves.

Moreover, rape and killings are not just a one-time event when the Janjaweed attack and burn villages. Two million people have fled the villages, and most have taken refuge in shantytown camps on the edge of cities. The Janjaweed surround the camps and routinely attack people when they go outside to gather firewood or plant vegetables. In order to survive the victims must get firewood; but each time they do so they risk being raped or killed.

After a day last year of interviewing a series of women and girls who had been gang-raped outside Kalma camp, near Nyala, I asked the families why they were sending women to gather firewood, when women are more vulnerable to rape. The answer was simple. As one person explained to me: "When the men go out, they're killed. The women are only raped."

The Sudanese authorities initially denied that rapes were occurring, and it repeatedly imprisoned women who became pregnant by rape—saying that they were guilty of adultery. Last year, a student who was gang-raped sought treatment from a French aid organization in Kalma camp, but an informer alerted the police, who rushed to the clinic, burst inside, and arrested the girl. Two aid workers tried heroically to protect her, but the police forcibly took her away—to a police hospital where she was chained to a cot by one arm and one leg. The government also made it difficult for aid groups to bring in post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) kits, which reduce the risk of HIV in rape victims when administered promptly.

Sexual violence is also sometimes directed at men, with castrations not uncommon. At one roadblock, a mother named Mariam Ahmad was forced to watch as the Janjaweed emasculated her three-week-old son, who then died in her arms. But it is not clear that this is centrally directed policy.

Since mid-2005, Western pressure has forced the Sudan government to relent to some degree on sexual violence. It appears to have stopped arresting rape victims, and it is allowing the use of PEP kits. But as far as I can tell, rapes are continuing at the same pace as before.

3.

As dispiriting as the genocide itself is the way most other nations have acquiesced in it. You expect that from time to time, a government may attack some part of its own people, but you might hope that by the twenty-first century the world would react. Alas, that hasn't happened. Indeed, the Armenian genocide of 1915 arguably provoked greater popular outrage in America at the time than the Darfur genocide does today.

As the killings began, the Bush administration was in a good position to take the lead. President Bush had given high priority to ending the war in southern Sudan (which is entirely separate from the war in Darfur), and he achieved a tentative peace agreement to resolve the north–south war after twenty years and the loss of two million lives. That is one of Bush's most important foreign policy achievements, and this means that his administration —and the conservative Christians in his base—were particularly aware of events in Sudan. They were among the first to make strong statements about Darfur, and it was conservatives in Bush's own Agency for International Development who led the way in trying to stop Darfur's violence when it first erupted.

Yet as it turned out, the White House couldn't be bothered with Darfur. The Democrats couldn't either for a long time, until finally John Kerry made strong statements about the situation there in the summer of 2004. Then, perhaps worrying about his legacy, Colin Powell began taking a personal interest in Darfur. Finally, in early 2005, the Bush administration declared that genocide was unfolding in Darfur and sent large amounts of aid —but it refused to do anything more. In effect, the US had provided abundant band-aids—so that when children were slashed with machetes, we could treat their wounds. But we did nothing about the attacks themselves.

Prunier captures the situation well:

President Bush tried to be all things to all men on the Sudan/ Darfur question. Never mind that the result was predictably confused. What mattered was that attractive promises could be handed around without any sort of firm commitment being made. Predictably, the interest level of US diplomacy on the Sudan question dropped sharply as soon as President Bush was reelected....
In its usual way of treating diplomatic matters, the European Union presented a spectacle of complete lack of resolve and coordination over the Sudan problem in general and the Darfur question in particular. The French only cared about protecting Idris Deby's regime in Chad from possible destabilization; the British blindly followed Washington's lead, only finding this somewhat difficult since Washington was not very clear about which direction it wished to take; the Scandinavian countries and the Netherlands gave large sums of money and remained silent; Germany made anti-GoS noises which it never backed up with any sort of action and gave only limited cash; and the Italians remained bewildered.

The UN has been similarly ineffectual. At one level, UN agencies have been very effective in providing humanitarian aid; at another, they have been wholly ineffective in challenging the genocide itself. That is partly because Sudan is protected on the Security Council by Russia and especially by China, a major importer of Sudanese oil. China seems determined to underwrite some of the costs of the Darfur genocide just as it did the Cambodian genocide of the 1970s. But the UN's main problem is that it is too insistent on being diplomatic. One of the heroes of Darfur is Mukesh Kapila, the former UN humanitarian coordinator for Sudan, who almost two years ago warned: "The only difference between Rwanda and Darfur now are the numbers involved." But UN officials were disapproving of Kapila's outspokenness, which they saw as a breach of etiquette. And Kofi Annan, while trying to help Darfur, has been trapped in his innate politeness. He should be using his position to express outrage about the slaughter, but he seems incapable of the necessary degree of fury.

News organizations have largely failed Darfur as well—particularly the television networks. A couple of decades ago, television provided genuine news about the world; today, it mostly settles for brief and superficial impressions, or for breathless blondes reporting on missing blondes.


As a result of this collective failure, the situation in the region has been getting much worse since about September 2005. The African Union has lost some of the first troops it stationed there, a growing portion of Darfur is becoming too dangerous as a place to distribute food, and the rebels have been collapsing into fratricide. The UN has estimated that if Darfur collapses completely then the death toll there will reach 100,000 a month. Just as worrying, the instability in Darfur has crossed over into neighboring Chad. There is a real possibility that civil war will again break out there in the next year or two, and that could be a cataclysm that would dwarf Darfur.

The sad thing is that much of the suffering of Darfur seems unnecessary. The conflict there could probably be resolved. The rebels are not seeking independence but simply greater autonomy and a larger share of national resources. Neither of the books under review concentrates on how to bring the disaster to an end, but we have some good clues based in part on the peace settlement between the Sudan government and the rebels in the south. The basic lesson from that long negotiation is that Sudan's leaders will brazenly lie about their repressive use of power, and you will get nowhere in dealings with them unless you apply heavy pressure—and you have to be perceptive about what kind of pressure will work.

In the case of Darfur, the solution is not to send American ground troops; in my judgment, that would make things worse by allowing Khartoum to rally nationalistic support against the American infidel crusaders. But greater security is essential, and the African Union troops that have been sent to Darfur are inadequate to the task of providing it. The most feasible option is to convert them into a "blue-hat" UN force and add to them UN and NATO forces. The US could easily enforce a no-fly zone in Darfur by using the nearby Chadian air base in Abeché. Then it could make a strong effort to arrange for tribal conferences—the traditional method of conflict settlement in Darfur—and there is reason to hope that such conferences could work to achieve peace. The Arab tribes have been hurt by the war as well, and the tribal elders are much more willing to negotiate than the Sudan government and the rebel leaders who are the parties to the current peace negotiations.

Flint and de Waal give a telling account of the chief of the Baggara Rizeigat Arabs, a seventy-year-old hereditary leader who has kept his huge tribe out of the war and who is quietly advocating peace—as well as protecting non-Arabs in his territory. It would help enormously if President Bush and Kofi Annan would jointly choose a prominent envoy, like Colin Powell or James Baker, who would work with chieftains like the head of the Baggara Rizeigat to achieve peace in Darfur. Such an initiative is the best hope we have for peace.


The most obvious response to genocide—strong and widely broadcast expressions of outrage—would also be one of the most effective. Sudan's leaders are not Taliban-style extremists. They are ruthless opportunists, and they adopted a strategy of genocide because it seemed to be the simplest method available. If the US and the UN raise the cost of genocide, they will adopt an alternative response, such as negotiating a peace settlement. Indeed, whenever the international community has mustered some outrage about Darfur, then the level of killings and rapes subsides.

But outrage at genocide is tragi-cally difficult to sustain. There are only a few groups that are trying to do so: university students who have led the anti-genocide campaign and formed groups like the Genocide Intervention Network; Jewish humanitarian organizations, for whom the word "genocide" has intense meaning; the Smith College professor Eric Reeves, who has helped lead the campaign to protest the genocide; some US churches; and aid workers who daily brave the dangers of Dar-fur (like the one who chronicles her experiences in the blog "Sleepless in Sudan"[2] ). Some organizations, like Human Rights Watch and the International Crisis Group, have also produced a series of excellent reports on Darfur—underscoring that this time the nations of the world know exactly what they are turning away from and cannot claim ignorance.

Sad to say, one of the best books for understanding the lame international response is Samantha Power's superb "A Problem from Hell": America and the Age of Genocide[3]even though it was written too early even to mention Darfur. But when you read Power's account of international dithering as Armenians, Jews, Bosnians, and others were being slaughtered, you realize that the pattern today is almost exactly the same. Once again, the international response has been to debate whether the word "genocide" is really appropriate, to point out that the situation is immensely complex, to shrug that it's horrifying but that there's nothing much we can do. The slogan "Never Again" is being transformed into "One More Time."

Notes

[1] Oxford University Press, 1989; revised 2005.

[2] See sleeplessinsudan.blogspot.com.

[3] Basic Books, 2002.