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Stop the killing.


Byline: The Register-Guard

After weeks of dithering Simulating more colors and shades in a palette. In a monochrome system that displays or prints only black and white, shades of grays can be simulated by creating varying patterns of black dots. This is how halftones are created in a monochrome printer. , the United Nations approved a watered-down resolution last Friday that threatens unspecified diplomatic and economic "actions" against Sudan if its government doesn't stop the mass slaughter of civilians by Arab militias in the country's remote western Darfur region.

But it will take much more than a flaccid flaccid /flac·cid/ (flak´sid) (flas´id)
1. weak, lax, and soft.

2. atonic.


flac·cid
adj.
Lacking firmness, resilience, or muscle tone.
 U.N. resolution to stop what most international aid agencies now agree is genocide. On the same day that the Security Council approved the resolution, there were reports that government-supported "Janjaweed" militias raided the town of Suleia, where villagers were chained together and burned alive.

An estimated 1,000 people are dying every day from militia attacks and forced starvation. At least 30,000 people already have died, and more than a million more could perish if the world does not move swiftly and decisively to end the killing.

The U.N. Security Council approved the U.S.-sponsored resolution after the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  dropped language directly threatening sanctions, a move aimed to avoid triggering a veto by permanent members Russia and China. They argued that the Sudan needed more time to comply and that intervention could destabilize de·sta·bi·lize  
tr.v. de·sta·bi·lized, de·sta·bi·liz·ing, de·sta·bi·liz·es
1. To upset the stability or smooth functioning of:
 the government, which recently ended a 20-year-civil war.

The idea that the homicidal hom·i·cid·al  
adj.
1. Of or relating to homicide.

2. Capable of or conducive to homicide: a homicidal rage.
 regime in Khartoum will respond positively if given more time is a laughable delusion. The 17-month conflict already has laid waste to vast stretches of Darfur, forcing more than a million people into refugee camps and leaving 2.2 million others in dire need of food and medical attention.

The United Nations already has given Sudan too much time, and it has yet to comply with demands to stop the killing. The raids on villages are backed up by government troops and bombers.

The government will stop the killing only when it is forced to stop. That can be accomplished by imposing full and immediate economic sanctions Economic sanctions are economic penalties applied by one country (or group of countries) on another for a variety of reasons. Economic sanctions include, but are not limited to, tariffs, trade barriers, import duties, and import or export quotas.  and an arms embargo An arms embargo is an embargo that applies to weaponry. It may also include "dual use" items. An arms embargo may serve one or more purposes:
  1. to signal disapproval of behavior by a certain actor,
  2. to maintain neutral standing in an ongoing conflict, or
, and by deploying peacekeeping troops and massive humanitarian assistance into Darfur.

The African Union African Union (AU), international organization established in 2002 by the nations of the former Organization of African Unity (OAU). The AU is the successor organization to the OAU, with greater powers to promote African economic, social, and political integration,  already plans to send 300 troops and 150 unarmed observers into Sudan. With international funding and logistical assistance, it could send a larger force capable of protecting the remaining villages, as well as refugees and the aid workers eager to help them.

European nations - in particular France, which has military bases in nearby Djibouti and Chad - should lead the way. The United States, with its military already overextended overextended,
adj 1. the situation occurring when a prosthetic appliance is inadvertently constructed in such a way that part of the oral mucosa is injured by the appliance.
adj 2.
 in Iraq and Afghanistan, needn't carry the load on this mission, and U.S. officials already have committed $300 million in relief assistance.

The world must not stand by, as it stood by a decade ago when up to a million Rwandans were killed. The government of Sudan is committing murder on a massive scale, and the killing must be stopped.
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Title Annotation:Editorials; How many more must die in Sudan?
Publication:The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)
Article Type:Editorial
Date:Aug 2, 2004
Words:459
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