Genocide by force of habit?By Alex De Waal Alex de Waal is a British writer and researcher on African issues. He is a fellow of the Global Equity Initiative at Harvard University, as well as program director at the Social Science Research Council in New York City. De Waal is also a co-director of Justice Africa, London. March 24, 2009 -- John Maynard Keynes Noun 1. John Maynard Keynes - English economist who advocated the use of government monetary and fiscal policy to maintain full employment without inflation (1883-1946) Keynes was once irritated by a half-witted half-wit n. Slang A foolish or stupid person. half -wit critic: "When the facts change, I change
my mind. What do you do, sir?" In 2004 I wrote in the London Review
of Books, "this is not the genocidal campaign of a government at
the height of its ideological hubris HubrisAn arrogance due to excessive pride and an insolence toward others. A classic character flaw of a trader or investor. , as occurred with the 1992 jihad against the Nuba, or coldly determined to secure natural resources, as occurred when the government sought to clear the oilfields of Southern Sudan Southern Sudan is a region of Sudan, comprising ten of that country's provinces. The Sudanese government agreed to give autonomy to the region in the Comprehensive Peace Agreement[1] of its troublesome inhabitants
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame. . This is the routine cruelty of a security cabal, its humanity withered by its years in power, it is genocide by force of habit force of habit n. Behavior that has become automatic through long practice or frequent repetition. ." During those horrific months I wrote that the atrocities in Darfur met the legal definition of genocide, as actions intended to destroy in part an ethnic group. Some enthusiasts of the charge in Darfur have suggested that this means that I subscribe to Verb 1. subscribe to - receive or obtain regularly; "We take the Times every day" subscribe, take buy, purchase - obtain by purchase; acquire by means of a financial transaction; "The family purchased a new car"; "The conglomerate acquired a new company"; the entirety of the genocide accusations made against the Sudan Government in general or President Bashir in particular, or even that I subscribe to the "genocide narrative" for Darfur. To those who make these charges, I say, examine what I wrote and examine the evidence for what is happening. What was I writing about genocide? First, I contrasted the Darfur counterinsurgency coun·ter·in·sur·gen·cy n. Political and military strategy or action intended to oppose and forcefully suppress insurgency. coun with other episodes in the Sudanese civil war The term Sudanese Civil War refers to at least two separate conflicts:
belief - any cognitive content held as true in Darfur to Libya and Chad, and from there to some elements in the Janjawiid. The Arabism of Khartoum was different. The report of the International Commission of Inquiry into Darfur, headed by Prof. Antonio Cassese Antonio Cassese was the first President of the International Criminal Tribunal For the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY), serving in this capacity from 1993 to 1997. In October of 2004, Cassese was appointed by United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan to be the Chairperson for the , came to a broadly similar conclusion. There was one significant difference: Cassese concluded that because the Sudan Government's objective was counterinsurgency, that precluded Governmental responsibility for genocidal atrocity. At the time I argued that this objective was not relevant to whether acts of genocide had been committed. The difference hinges on an interpretation of intent. Can one commit genocide while pursuing another objective--in passing--as it were. This would amount to perpetrating a massacre or forced removal--the actus reus [Latin, Guilty act.] As an element of criminal responsibility, the wrongful act or omission that comprises the physical components of a crime. Criminal statutes generally require proof of both actus reus and mens rea of genocide--with criminal intent but not with specifically genocidal intent. In 2004, I argued yes. Since then, lawyers have persuaded me that this would be stretching the law on genocide too far. An identification of genocide also requires a socio-political theory for how and why the crime was committed, and the genocide-as-ancillary-to-counterinsurgency theory of genocide is too contentious. (See my discussion on this issue on "Making Sense of Darfur".) I think this conclusion is still up for discussion and this question deserves ongoing debate. Eric Reeves This article is about the Sudan scholar. For the North Carolina state senator, see Eric Miller Reeves. Dr. Eric Reeves is professor of English Language and Literature at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts. , in The New Republic, writes that I contributed to the "genocide narrative." In fact, it should be clear, I was specifically trying to create an alternative genocide narrative. This narrative made genocidal acts subordinate to the objective and means of counterinsurgency. Two other elements to my alternative narrative are worthy of note. First, I argued against international military intervention The deliberate act of a nation or a group of nations to introduce its military forces into the course of an existing controversy. (though supportive of putting some international troops on the ground as peacekeepers). Second, I argued that we needed to rethink how genocides end. As it happens, I convened a seminar on this topic at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in January 2004. The overview paper for that seminar specifically challenges the conventional genocide narrative, arguing that most endings are determined by domestic national political processes, not international intervention, and that peace and reconciliation are possible afterwards. So, it is true that I shifted my position. First, because of the law. It was, perhaps, a minor shift but, a shift across a watershed. Second, because of the politics. Among the activists who called it genocide in those early days, some were doing so less because they had studied the facts and the law and mostly because they believed it was the best way to get a military intervention. This was intellectually, politically and ethically wrong. However, my efforts to establish an alternative genocide narrative, true to the realities of Sudan, and compatible with finding effective solutions, didn't get far--it was swamped by the powerful simplicities of the conventional story that presumed a genocidal plan and had international military intervention as its only acceptable outcome. This dominant genocide narrative became an obstacle to action. And third and most important, the facts changed. Scores of thousands of people were killed in 2003 and 2004 in violence. Most of them were killed by the Sudan government and its allies. A famine was unleashed that killed larger numbers. In 2005 this changed. Violence dropped by 90 percent or more and the humanitarian crisis was brought under control. The figures for this are pretty authoritative. Genocide Intervention Network The Genocide Intervention Network (or GI-Net) is a non-profit organization that "envisions a world in which the global community is willing and able to protect civilians from genocide and mass atrocities. , an organization with impeccable activist credentials, estimates that about 150 people were killed each month in violence from January to September last year. GI-Net used a variety of open access sources. UNAMID UNAMID United Nations - African Union Mission in Darfur monitoring data, which are not public, give almost exactly the same figure. These data are not exhaustive, but UNAMID has a 24/seven presence in Kalma and some other IDP camps. We are analyzing the data now. But, what would it mean for the genocide claims if it turned out that more Arabs were killed than non-Arabs? What would it mean if the armed movements were responsible for more killings than the Sudan Government? Some have questioned why I alerted Sudanese political leaders to the likelihood that the ICC ICC See: International Chamber of Commerce Prosecutor intended to demand an arrest warrant for President Bashir. The first I alerted was Salva Kiir, before I spoke with civil society and opposition leaders including Sadiq al Mahdi. They suggested that it would be advisable to let the President know as well, on the grounds that if he were caught by surprise, there was a danger that he would overreact o·ver·re·act v. To react with unnecessary or inappropriate force, emotional display, or violence. . I took that advice. I am told the President was angry, but by the time that the official announcement was made on 14 July last year, wiser counsel had prevailed and he responded coolly. He didn't expel aid agencies, for example. Why criticize the Prosecutor of the ICC for his genocide charge? Because he's doing a poor job. It's not that Bashir is innocent but that with an incompetent prosecution he might be acquitted. Given the wealth of good evidence about crimes committed, the Prosecutor put together an extremely poor case. It is precisely those who are most serious in their criticisms of the Sudan Government and most supportive of the pursuit of justice who should be toughest on the Prosecutor for these reasons. Imagine if President Bashir were arrested, prosecuted--and acquitted. Antonio Cassese also criticizes him, as do influential legal scholars, precisely because they see the risk of this kind of outcome. Sudanese ambassadors circulate all these critiques of the ICC--overlooking the fact that the discerning reader will see that they actually give the Prosecutor guidance for doing a much better job. Today, those who cry "ongoing genocide!" do so by force of habit and not force of evidence. Alex de Waal, a fellow of the Global Equity Initiative at Harvard University, worked on Darfur since 1985. He is the author of Famine that kills: Darfur sudan 1984-1985, co-author with Julir Flint of Darfur: A Short History of a Long War and the editor of War of Darfur. He was an advisor of the AU mediation team during Abuja peace process. Copyright 2003-2009 SudanTribune - All rights reserved. Provided by Syndigate.info an Albawaba.com company |
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