Thursday, January 3, 2008

Electoral Violence in Kenya

I have often been critical of the media’s propensity to paint African events with the blood, bullets, and violence that sells newspapers and magazines. Child soldiers, genocide, and refugees are deemed newsworthy, while stories about happy, educated, hard-working middle class Africans aren’t. Both of these faces, and many more, make up the mosaic of this diverse, emerging continent. I am guilty of what I criticize. I read, in fact seek, books that investigate the ugly sides of Africa more readily than success stories such as improved economic growth, success in dealing with AIDS, or higher literacy rates.

In an attempt to paint a more balanced picture of Africa, and my experiences here, I try to capture both the beauty and horror that mark this continent. I want you to know about the natural splendor, the sense of freedom and adventure, but I am also compelled to tell you about the forces that divide and set populations against each other. Over the last several years I have blogged about the Zimbabwe debacle, the Darfur quagmire, the Rwandan nightmare of 1994, the Somalia tragedy, and the associated refugee populations that go along with these occurrences. I get the most hits on my sites and the most comments and feedback when I delve into war, human suffering, and loss of life.

Passions are unleashed. People get outraged. They want to channel the uncomfortable feeling that accompanies reading about suffering. It feels good to write about it. It’s cathartic. That’s why I do this. And it feels good to hear back from you. It reassures me that other people know and care.

I have considered Kenya home for over 4 years. In many senses, I feel I’ve come of age while living in this East African Eden. It does things to me that no other place has. I have always felt Kenya was different than other African countries. I still feel that way. But the events of the last week have shown me an ugly face of this nation that I honestly never thought I’d see. Kenyans pride themselves on the diversity of their nation, and their ability to amicably coexist. Virtually every other nation in the East African region has been debilitated by war, conflict, misrule, poverty, and famine. Kenya emerged as a leading nation in the region with the strongest economy while avoiding war. I was proud of that.

The same can not be said about Kenya today, 6 days after the 2007 Presidential Election, in which this nation has become engulfed in a politically driven ethnic violence in which at least 200 people have been killed in riots and running battles between civilians and police. Now I’ve got your attention.

This is where I do what I hate doing: I report on this most unfortunate series of events at the risk of reinforcing western stereotypes of Africa as a continent of savage violence, hopelessly corrupt, and racked with poverty, starvation, and HIV. To see Africa exclusively through the lens of this popular portrayal is to fall victim to an inaccurate and oversimplified interpretation. The realities of Africa are driven by complex, overlapping, and interrelated factors that are not readily understood by even the most ardent analyst.

Background

For the last 6 months I have keenly followed political developments in Kenya in the run-up to the December 27th, 2007 general election. It was exciting to watch and participate in the political enthusiasm as Kenyans would go to the polls to elect their Members of Parliament and their President. The incumbent, Mwai Kibaki, was facing stiff competition from the leader of the opposition Orange Democratic Movement’s (ODM) Raila Odinga. Odinga led in most Steadman opinion polls in the weeks prior to the election.

To understand politics in Kenya, one must have a grasp on the ethnic makeup of this country. Because it appears, sadly, that ethnicity and political loyalty are intrinsically linked. The incumbent, Mwai Kibaki, is an ethnic Kikuyu who hails from Central Province, predominated by Kikuyus, Kenya’s largest tribe. They form the bulk of Kibaki’s support. The ODM party of Raila Odinga is mostly supported by the Luo people of the Lake Victoria region of Kenya. Odinga hails from this same region and is of the same ethnicity. It is also important to realize that the Luo people have for decades felt marginalized by the government, through assassinations of historical Luo leaders, disproportionate access to land, resources, and positions of political power, in relation to the Kikuyu. All of this is underscored by high levels of poverty (and the associated suffering) which leads people (often falsely) to the notion that if someone from their region and tribe becomes the President, they will miraculously be lifted to a higher standard of living, and greater socio-economic security. Though an oversimplified description, this outlines the ethno-political forces playing out.

Elections

December 27th, 2007 finally arrived. I had hurriedly rushed back to Nairobi to witness the democratic process in motion, and to see Kenyans choose their leaders. Election Day went smoothly. It was a beautiful sight to wander around my neighborhood polling station and see the huge crowd who had turned out to vote. People of all traditions, tribes, and cultures stood patiently in a line that stretched on for almost 2 kilometers. I walked most of it, envious since I couldn’t vote. I breathed in the spirit of multiparty democracy at work, while a politically charged populace waited in line for as much as 8 hours to cast their vote. I was abuzz with political optimism. I went to a coffee shop, ordered a cappuccino, and wrote flowery observations in my journal with a smattering of words like “unity”, “harmony”, “free and fair”, “democracy”, “cooperation”, and “patience.”

We expected the winner, either Kibaki or Odinga, to be pronounced by the Electoral Commission of Kenya’s (ECK) Chairman on December 28th. The results showed Odinga with a comfortable lead after the first two days of counting votes. However, on the morning of December 29th, results were released in which Kibaki had made huge gains while Odinga’s numbers had stagnated. Tension began to rear its ugly head. The nation’s patience was running out, and youth took to the streets demanding that final results be announced. The protests were carried out by young, rowdy youth supporters of ODM, who sensed that voter manipulation was taking place and that Kibaki was going to be pronounced the winner, while Odinga received more votes. I overheard a Kenyan say, “This is our Florida.”

On December 29th I was driving with a friend towards Uganda. We were going on a safari for a few days to celebrate the New Year. To get to Uganda from Kenya you must drive through Nyanza,Western, and Rift Valley provinces, all ODM strongholds. We started to get text messages that things were stirring up in Nairobi with large groups of demonstrators taking to the streets. Shortly after learning of this, we pulled into the town of Eldoret. There was a strange vibe in the air. At one end of town the road had been blocked by huge boulders pushed across the road. We drove around them, and cautiously proceeded into town. We saw smoke burning at one end of town. We headed north on the road to the Malaba border. The street was lined with men, standing shoulder to shoulder, two or three deep. It was noon, but all of the shops were eerily closed. The men looked pensive, the crowd was charged; they pumped clinched fists. The air felt combustible. We hurriedly proceeded through town, swerving around a tire burning in the street. We then came to our first roadblock. Rowdy youths were beginning to congregate and had blocked the road with stones. We rolled up the windows and drove around them as they cheered, waving machetes, clubs, and rocks in the air. My heart rate went up and I felt adrenaline surge through my body. The Uganda border was an hour away. We proceeded, not knowing what was ahead. In minutes we met another roadblock, a larger crowd blocked our vehicle. We continued, unsure what to do. Then we came to several youths lying across the road, some sharpening their machetes by scraping them across the tarmac. I rolled down the window to negotiate. They demanded money and stated we couldn’t continue. Looking down the road we saw a crowd of at least 1,000 people blocking the road. Traffic ground to a halt. We were pinned. My friend JP turned the Landcruiser around and we conversed in quick, sudden bursts, fear oozing through the vehicle’s interior. Several more young men surrounded our car. One raised a boulder and threatened to throw it at the windshield. Another knocked the rear glass with a club. They began yelling. JP lunged the Landcruiser at a guy standing in our path. He dove out of the way and we quickly accelerated back towards Eldoret, clearly shaken.

At the junction with the Kitale road, all transport trucks and cars had pulled off the side of the road. I chatted with several people. They said fighting had started in Eldoret, the town we’d passed through 30 minutes ago. We inquired about the Kitale road. We decided to give it a try. Within 10 minutes, just south of the village of Soy, we met another angry mob. They were shouting ODM party slogans and demanding that the ECK pronounce the winner. Most of the protestors were ethnic Luos and Kalenjins. They began to take out their political frustrations on ethnic Kikuyus. This is one of the reasons they were blocking the road. They were looking for supporters of PNU (Kibaki’s party), angered by fears that the votes were being manipulated. We couldn’t proceed and again turned around. The uncertainty of what was unfolding was most unsettling. We were trapped. We had been blocked and threatened in both directions. Civil unrest simmered, while political frustrations fueled ethnic conflict. Luckily, a few hundred meters back there was an army barracks. We pulled in and drove up to the heavily guarded gate to shelter with several other travelers who sought refuge from the uncertainty of the mob. A Kikuyu driver was hiding with his vehicle. He was clearly afraid. Fighting back tears, he said that he was forced to lock himself in his room and hide under his bed earlier in the day. Another group of Kikuyus fearing retribution from the frenzied mob, hid in a shelter near the barracks. I went and spoke to them. They were terrified. The soldiers guarding the base assured us protection.

No cars were moving. Then the mob went on a rampage, and started raiding shops and homes on the road a few hundred meters in front of us. One man ran for his life. I was sure I was about to witness him being beaten to death. I witnessed his beating, but he managed to get up and run. His attackers didn’t pursue. We stood there, with our ringside seats to this sick event, paralyzed by this sudden onslaught of violence. Now I know this was not an isolated incident. It was merely the start to a bloodletting that has been going on for three days. After several hours of remaining in the shadows of soldiers who had assured us protection, the crowd dispersed and cars started to move again. We waited a while and then also proceeded, wheeling back onto the road to Kitale.

I studied my Kenya map and found several rough roads that went east and south, avoiding towns and villages. It was the only way to get back to where we came from and away from the violence, without passing through Eldoret. The day was getting late and we needed to be off the road by nightfall. We were staying in touch with other friends and colleagues around the country who were also bracing for whatever was coming. Thankfully our cell phones continued to work. JP pushed the Landcruiser hard as we raced south towards Iten, and then into the Kerio Valley. We climbed up the eastern side of the valley and entered the town of Kabarnet. Things were quiet, but a clear tension was felt. The interactions on the street were not those of a typical day at dusk in a rural Kenyan town. Something was amiss, astir. We filled up with diesel and considered our options. Two other friends were already camping within the compound of a hotel next to Lake Bogoria. They were about an hour away and had reported no problems in their area. Deciding it was the best option, we blasted out of town and slipped down towards the village of Marigat in darkness. Within an hour we reached the Lake Bogoria Hotel where our friends were camping. We put up our tents and began swapping stories.

The results

On December 30th, 3 days after the election and the day after violent protests began spreading around the nation, rumors circulated that the ECK’s chairman was finally going to announce the presidential winner. We went inside the hotel and watched the news for hours with dozens of other concerned Kenyans staying at the hotel. No announcement came. Tension increased as ODM supporters became convinced that the delays were intentional, to give the ECK, in cahoots with Kibaki’s PNU, an opportunity to manipulate the votes. The day before, Odinga had been leading by over 1 million votes. Mid morning on the 30th, his lead had decreased to only 50,000 votes. Roughly 10 million votes were cast out of 14 million registered voters in a country of almost 40 million people. By mid afternoon the ECK held a press conference to announce the winner. In the course of doing it, opposition politicians (particularly ODM Pentagon member William Ruto) became incensed and stood up vociferously challenging the ECK’s results, stating that they didn’t match the official results from polling stations around the country. General Service Unit soldiers were forced to intervene to calm the situation and to escort the ECK chairman out of the press conference. The media were ordered out. ODM held an impromptu press conference. Odinga addressed the nation. A senior ECK official came forward, on live television, testifying to vote rigging and manipulation that he had witnessed. Then, conveniently, there was a power outage in the building where all this was unfolding. When it came back on, the ECK Chairman Kivuitu read from the results from a private room. Kibaki was announced the winner. Chaos erupted around the nation. Little villages and towns from each province went up in flames as a disillusioned populace protested what they perceived as a theft of the presidency. All indications suggest that the election was not free and fair. People have come forward and stated they saw corruption and rigging. Interestingly, the constituencies where there were delays were mostly from Central Province, Kibaki’s stronghold. ODM swept at least 12 senior PNU MPs and Ministers out of office and established a clear majority in Parliament.

Within 20 minutes the news cut to State House where a tiny audience of PNU MPs (most who had just been defeated) witnessed Kibaki’s swearing in. We watched in disbelief at the shameless manner in which a clique of people were clinging to power, living out their lives of luxury, while the shattered dreams of the nation sparked a violent fury and set longstanding friends and neighbors against one another. Ethnic groups splintered and sought protection from their communities. Shops were looted; riot police stormed onto the street, roads were blocked, and areas quickly became deserted ghost towns.

The death toll began to rise as reports came in from around the nation. Today estimates say at least 200 people have been killed. I am sure it is higher. Doctors have been unable to get to hospitals, medical supplies are limited, fuel has run out at most stations. Even Uganda is experiencing a fuel crisis, since all petrol is trucked overland to Uganda from Kenya. The trucks aren’t moving. In groceries stores around the country people are waiting in line for up to 4 hours to buy basic commodities if there is anything left.

On January 1st, a mob of angry youths surrounded a small church where 30 Kikuyus were seeking protection in the town of Eldoret. The church was set ablaze and everyone perished. The few who escaped were chased down and hacked to death. Thousands of Kenyans have fled over the border in Busia and Malaba (into Uganda) and into Tanzania at Namanga. As many as 80,000 Kenyans are internally displaced, having been forced to seek protection at army barracks or police stations fearing ethnic violence. The Kenyan military and the International Red Cross are mobilizing efforts to get food, water, and humanitarian aid to those who have fled the violence. This brutality is rooted in socioeconomics and history. There is nothing inherently “violent” or “aggressive” about one particular ethnic group, as I hear so many people saying. Identity and culture are strong factors that strengthen bonds within a tribe and cause a splintering among different tribes. When people are poor and have little to lose, the perceived prize – having a president of the same tribe – takes on a meaning that is not readily understood by those not born into a life of abject poverty and suffering. Thus, the violence is brutal, but it is not inexplicable. No society or person is above or beyond this grim forces that grip Kenya.

If we look to the United States, there are clear parallels to our ancestor’s treatment of the indigenous people that they met when settling the East Coast and moving west in the spirit of Manifest Destiny. Power differentials, access to technology and resources, and a dangerous sense of entitlement has almost exterminated the American Indian, in just a few hundred years. The civil rights movement saw violent protests, riots, looting, and ethnic cleansing. Those in power tried to forcefully maintain a system that legally separated and discriminated those from a certain ethnic community. There was ethnic cleansing as certain members of the white community specifically targeted, with the intention to terrorize and kill, members of the African American community. Look no further than the Rodney King riots in LA. A city suddenly exploded over ethnic lines. Viewed through this comparative lens, it is fair to say that Kenya’s history has been much more stable and less violent than that of the United States. I wish people would make this consideration when they read my observations and shake their heads thinking “Africa – when will they stop killing each other.” This is not about Africans. It’s about humans. It’s about our capacity for violence and what we do with it. It’s about cultivating circumstances where violent outbreaks are not conducive. It’s about governments allowing for freedom of expression and allowing citizens to voice their opinions through the ballot box. It’s about ethics. It’s about striving to recognize our differences and embracing them, not tearing each other apart over them.

The Aftermath

As the roads were blocked and violence continued in the towns we had to travel through to get back to Nairobi, we continued camping at the Lake Bogoria Hotel for the next 4 nights. We had access to a television inside the hotel, so we could monitor the situation. The ODM is calling for a rally today at Uhuru Park in Nairobi. Odinga hopes one million people turn up to protest the elections. If there is going to be a surge in violence it is going to be today. The government has banned the gathering and there will be a very heavy military and police presence in Nairobi. We saw a window of opportunity to travel yesterday, so packed up and got on the road by 7:00 a.m. for the 5 drive down the Rift Valley and back to Nairobi. The streets were empty. We saw a few convoys traveling with a police escort vehicle. We were in two cars and stayed close together, monitoring the roads and checking with local sources as we proceeded. We stopped to buy petrol and commodities on the way to Nairobi. Most shops were empty, and had no fuel. We found one shop that had petrol and diesel. We filled our tanks and several jerry cans and continued south. Just passed the old Naivasha road we saw cars turning around and flashing their lights. Roadbloack. Protests. Rowdy youths. Potential violence. We were only 20 minutes from Nairobi but couldn’t continue on the main road. We turned around before getting to the roadblock and used the Limuru Road, slipping in safely through the backdoor to Nairobi.

Strangely, as is often the case in situations such as this, a semblance of normalcy has returned to Nairobi. People have gone back to work. There are cars on the street. The sun is shining. Some stores are open. But there is a tension, an uncertainty, a feeling of anger and disappointment hangs in the air. While I walk down the street in Nairobi, I see street sweepers and vendors, taxi drivers and newspaper salesmen. But I also know, people are still hiding and suffering, people feel hunted, the displaced are in need of assistance. Business owners are picking up the pieces after major losses from looting. Riot police and soldiers are assembling at strategic roads into town and cordoning off Uhuru park. ODM has said the rally is on. The government has said it is illegal. I am not sure what the masses will do. Will they act in defiance? Will they be cowed by threats? Will they stay home? Will they assemble?

What I do know is this: Kenya has stumbled, but it has not fallen. This nation has proven its ability to lead, to peacefully coexist and to develop a vibrant economy. Developing a functioning, transparent democracy is a work in progress. It doesn’t happen overnight. No democracy is perfect, and democracy as a style of government is far from perfect. However it has proven to be the best we have. It allows the people to voice their desires. It holds leaders accountable. It ensures a more equitable distribution of wealth. It upholds human rights and sets off a force to counter autocratic, dictatorial tendencies that arise when leaders become addicted to the power of their positions.

The primary solution to Kenya’s current problem is this: The presidential results should be scrutinized at the highest level. The Kenyan people have no confidence in the transparency and legitimacy of the electoral process. This lack of confidence has led to severe anger and frustration that is manifesting itself through ethnic conflict. To blatantly shatter the will of the majority, to make a sham of democracy, and to ignore the standards for free and fair elections, is a recipe for disaster. That is what has happened. It is my hope that this ends as suddenly and shockingly as it started, so the people of Kenya can concentrate on developing their lives and their country, instead of tearing them apart.

Sunday, November 4, 2007

The Dark Side of Good

When viewing humanitarian work from the context of a non-humanitarian emergency, for example the suburbs of Atlanta, the English countryside – anywhere lacking conflict, combat, displacement, and famine - it is difficult to see the dark side of good. Michael Marren knows it well. He wrote a book about it called “The Road to Hell” – and you thought NGOs were all about saving the world. Read his book, albeit one journalist’s take on the aid industry, but a take that should be assessed. I state these things as one of the most bizarre news pieces became apparent this week in the central African nation of Chad:

Over a dozen aid workers from the French organization “Zoe’s Ark” – mostly French and Spanish – were arrested and are accused of attempting to smuggle 103 children (ranging in age from 2 to 9 years) to France. Their plane was stopped on the runway in Chad, minutes before it took off.

Let me not pass judgment on this one, for I’m not in a position to do so. I think a jury, judge, and court of law are more suited for that. What I can do is push the issue; and I will.

Here are the facts: The children are for the most part healthy, showing no signs of mistreatment, poor health, or need for medical attention. Zoe’s Ark claims that the children were being “rescued” and taken to France to be cared for and given education and medical attention. Zoe’s Ark claims they are “orphans from Darfur.” When journalists visited the children most were crying for “mommy” and “daddy.” Most of the children are Chadian. The parents of many of the children have been identified. They have been looking for their children. They claim that Chadian men came and asked to take their children to a nearby village where foreign aid workers would educate them.

This story highlights the very real potential for “doing good” to go awry. Greater mechanisms need to be put in place to ensure foreign NGOs are held accountable when operating in conflict zones. A little girl calling out for her mommy is not an orphan.

Let the court decide the fate of those involved, but let it set a precedent for regulating the renegade nature with which too many relief organizations operate.

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Free Burma

To the brave people of Burma:
The world is behind you as you collectively, courageously march closer to freedom and democracy. Justice will prevail. Stay the course. This week's rising popular pressure has already sent fissures splintering through the junta. It is my feeling that progressive political developments are imminent. No one should be subjected to the authoritarian regime that has ruled your nation with an iron fist for decades. We stand with you, shoulder to shoulder, anxiously observing the political drama unfold. Your safety and preservation of life is the priority, but through continued non-violent, popular demonstrations, the power of the people of Burma will prevail.

Sunday, July 29, 2007

Darfur, China, Olympic Games

In 12 months the Olympic Games will begin in China. This international event has a history of bringing together the world for a few weeks of solidarity, in which athletes become envoys for peace and our common humanity. Athletes stand shoulder to shoulder, under a kaleidoscope of colorful flags, national anthems play, winners and losers cry, and spectators breathe in an atmosphere of good-will and cooperation. This is the way it is supposed to be. But unless there are immediate Chinese foreign and economic policy changes, the 2008 Olympics will be more appropriately called the “Genocide Games.”

This all stems from China’s support of the Sudanese government through purchasing oil, providing weaponry and continually posturing on the UN’s Security Council (where China is a permanent member) to block any resolutions aiming to resolve the ongoing systematic extermination of non-Arabs in Darfur.

Here is a political summary of what is at play: China is an emerging economic and political giant with an insatiable need for natural resources and raw materials to sustain its growth. Sudan, with previous terror links to Al Qaeda and Osama, an abominable human rights record over the 20 year war against southern Sudan and 4 years of atrocities against non-Arabs of Darfur, has turned into pariah nation. Many foreign corporations refuse to do business with the Sudan government due to its human rights record. However, China and Sudan find common ground in their subjugation of vulnerable minorities. This, of course, is an unstated truth, for both countries are diplomatically savvy. (See: http://www.du.edu/gsis/cord/Homeless%20Initiative/opinions/murphy.html for the author’s 2002 assessment of China’s presence in Tibet with reference to winning the Olympic bid). China approaches Sudan like it approaches the rest of Africa: We are here to do business and will not intervene in your internal affairs or impose on your sovereignty as a nation. We do not have an imperial or colonial history in Africa like many western nations. We are your new best friend. This has come as a huge relief to many African nations, including Sudan, who are subject to economic sanctions, trade embargos and conditionality on IMF and World Bank loans. China then comes on the scene and essentially says, in sugar-coated diplomatic speak:

Fight your wars, take your cuts and kick-backs, run elections that are not free and fair – we don’t care, we are China and we respect your sovereignty to run your nation as you please... as long as... you sell us oil, timber, minerals and buy our cheap manufactured goods and guns.

And so China has become the defender of Sudan’s actions, while vetoing Chapter 7 of the UN Charter (which sanctions the “use of force”) for a “hybrid” peace-keeping force in Darfur. Sudan doesn’t want the hybrid force or Chapter 7, so, by political default, neither does China. (“I scratch your back, you scratch mind.”) Sudan has no weight on the UN Security Council. China is a permanent member with veto powers.

For China and Sudan, profits, access to oil and resources, construction contracts, and arms deals continue to take precedence over protecting human security. China can turn a blind-eye to Sudan’s atrocities in Darfur if oil continues to flow. This is exactly what has happened and continues to happen in Tibet - the subjugation of a people and culture for access to land and resources.

None of this, really, would be all that extraordinary, or out of line with the historical “ways of the world,” except that by some strange twist of global politics – Beijing was awarded the 2008 Olympics. Some argue that China got the Olympics as an incentive for the country to clean up its act. The world would be watching so, China, surely, would be on good behavior. Nope. Sorry. Maybe next time. Nice try. This hasn’t happened. This never would have happened. What has happened is that China continues to flout the 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, by subjugating its own people and systematically erasing all things Tibetan. Additionally, with its new money and political relevance, China has developed a “non-interference” diplomatic policy with Sudan, that, among other things, allows the carnage to continue in Darfur. China, if it wanted to, could quickly change the Sudan government’s actions in Darfur. With China’s urging, the Darfur genocide would end. The U.S. can’t do that. Neither can the UN, EU, or AU. China can, but China refuses.

As Darfur peace activist Eric Reeves (www.sudanreeves.org) says in regards to the Beijing Olympics, “The moment of truth is at hand.” Will China change its diplomatic course over Darfur in the 12 month run-up to an event that symbolizes peace and good-will? If it doesn’t, what will the world do and say? Will a rowdy group of shaggy peace activists line the streets of Beijing with placards? Or will we, like China, turn a blind-eye on the victims of Darfur as athletes smile, flags flutter, and anthems play?

The political relevance of the next 12 months can not be squandered or underestimated. This is, in a very real sense, a prime window of political opportunity. The world must know about these direct Chinese links to human atrocities. The world must not remain mum. Athletes, spectators, organizers, and governments must be frank about the fact that an Olympics is about to be hosted by a government with blood on its hands. There is time for China to address these issues. There is time for China to restore its tainted reputation. It won’t happen without immediate popular action and pressure from individuals around the world. Individuals like you.

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

Letter(s) to Congress

Use something of this nature to send to your elected officials:

You can get the addresses of your representatives by going to this website and entering your zip code: http://www.congress.org/congressorg/home.

...[T]he genocide has been going on for too long, and I am of the opinion that the world is suffering from “Darfur-fatigue.” We can not let this happen. Sadly, I think some leaders around the world are tired of hearing of the Darfur crisis and reason that if the situation hasn’t improved yet, then it’s not going to improve. This is a dangerous logic that we must avoid. Contrary to that, there is no time like the present to engage with the ruling National Party Congress (NPC), as well as the various rebel factions in Darfur that compose the major players in this conflict.

The United States, in particular, has an important role to play in working to end this civil war and protect the vulnerable people of Darfur. At this stage it is imperative that the U.S. and the European Union, in conjunction with the African Union and a multilateral United Nations delegation, immediately engage in high level negotiations with both the NPC and Darfur rebel groups. In order for this to be effective, unification of the various rebel groups is required, facilitated by a respected diplomatic team.

Intrinsic to this peace process, is the establishment of what might be called a “Road Map for Negotiations.” This document should have clear benchmarks and concrete steps for disarming rebel groups and Janjaweed militias, as well as the deployment of a robust African Union-led peace-keeping force of at least 20,000 troops.

The United States, in conjunction with other key players, greatly facilitated the negotiations between the government of Sudan and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) which ultimately resulted in the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) in January of 2005. This deal, for the most part, ended the north-south civil war that had been going on for over 2 decades. This successful peace-process should be replicated to similarly resolve the situation in Darfur.

The United States must lead the way in imposing targeted sanctions on the National Party Congress and Darfurian rebel leaders, who are uncooperative in negotiations. These sanctions should be through the U.N. Security Council and should target specific individuals and companies who are responsible for perpetrating war crimes. I strongly encourage you to urge President George W. Bush to push for these punitive measures.

Additionally, I ask you to support the Darfur Accountability and Divestment Act of 2007, which was introduced in January by Representative Barbara Lee of California. Also, I request that you support Senator Richard Durbin’s legislation known as the Sudan Divestment Authorization Act of 2007.

I appreciate all that you are doing and I look forward to your response on these important matters.

Saturday, June 30, 2007

A Long Way Gone



Ishmael Beah's new book - a hard-hitting account of child- soldiering in late 1990s Sierra Leone - is out; and apparently being sold in Starbucks (could someone with access to the coffee giant confirm…) Beah has a story that needed to be told, and I commend him for meticulously going back through the nightmare that was his youth and recounting, in lurid detail, his experiences fighting for a complex web of rebel alliances and counter alliances, vaguely understood even by the young combatants themselves. While Beah’s account is unique, I am sure it is not uncommon. Most, if not all of contemporary conflicts, particularly in Africa, are carried out by young boys (and girls) who have often been abducted, drugged, indoctrinated, and turned into killing machines. The suddenness with which Ishmael Beah regressed from a normal boy to a participant in Sierra Leone’s bloodletting is testimony to the impressionability of people in general, and young war victims in particular. The fortunate part of Ishmael’s story is that it basically has a happy ending; it is not without redemption. He was rehabilitated and settled in America, where he graduated from college and is doing momentous things. It remains to be seen if the others, the hundreds of thousands of other child soldiers, will have a happy ending or ever come to know redemption and deliverance from the forces that have abducted them. To Ishmael - well done, keep sharing your story. To Ann - thanks for the book.

An excerpt:

We walked into the arms of the forest, holding our guns as if they were the only thing that gave us strength. We exhaled quietly, afraid that our own breathing could cause our death. The lieutenant led the line that I was in. He raised his fist in the air and we stopped moving. Then he slowly brought it down and we sat on one heel, our eyes surveying the forest. I wanted to turn around to see my friends’ faces, but I couldn’t. We began to move swiftly among the bushes until we came to the edge of a swamp, where we formed an ambush, aiming our guns into the swamp. We lay flat on our stomachs and waited. I was lying next to Josiah. Then there was Sheku and an adult soldier between myself, Jumah, and Musa. I looked around to see if I could catch their eyes, but they were concentrated on the invisible target in the swamp. The top of my eyes began to ache and the pain slowly rose up to my head. My ears became warm and tears were running down my cheeks, even though I wasn’t crying. The veins on my arms stood out and I could feel them pulsating as if they had begun to breathe of their own accord. We waited in the quiet, as hunters do, our fingers gently caressing the triggers. The silence tormented me.

Also, please click here for Jeffery Gettleman's article in New York Times about child soldiers: The Perfect Weapon for the Meanest Wars.

Friday, June 29, 2007

Vanity Fair July '07

The July 2007 Vanity Fair is out, and you should buy it. The magazine has teamed up with the likes of, you guessed it, Bono, Desmond Tutu, Jefferey Sachs, Binyavanaga Wainaina, Annie Leibovitz (20 different covers for edition), and countless others to present a fabulous magazine, dedicated exclusively to Africa. Click here for more.

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

"Silence was Killing"

The words of new French President Nicolas Sarkozy, speaking at an international conference in France this week on ending the violence in Darfur. Just 5 weeks into his Presidency, Sarkozy's government seems to be spear-heading a new push to resolve the ongoing conflict. Go Sark! Interestingly, the Sudan government was absent from the talks - they weren't invited; and African Union (AU) delegates, boycotted stating the French efforts were counter to their own. Condoleeza Rice was in attendance, and stated, "The world had failed the people of Darfur." Indeed. This "failure" that Rice speaks of should be our challenge, our drive, our reason for action. Laudably, last week the government of Sudan agreed to a joint UN-AU peacekeeping force, but, true to form, the actualization of these measures is dragging. The government of Sudan's Foreign Minister, Lam Akol, states, "Actually, the ball is in the UN's court [referencing the implementation of a peacekeeping force]". My reactions:

1. Well done France (and the other 18 nations and delegations in attendance).
2. Prove Condoleeza wrong; take up the challenge
3. AU - give me a break, stop politicking and engage in peacekeeping. Do your job.
4. The various players (western nations, gov of Sudan, AU, UN, Darfur rebel groups)
must coordinate efforts to cut through the paralysis of policy.

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Summary of letter(s) sent to Congress:

Use something of this nature to send to your elected officials as well

You can get the addresses of your representatives by going to this website and entering your zip code: http://www.congress.org/congressorg/home.

I write to you to make an appeal for your support of U.S. policy to protect the people of Darfur. As you know, this is one of the world’s most entrenched conflicts and approximately 400,000 people have been killed. In 2004, Colin Powell and President George W. Bush declared the crisis in Darfur to be “genocide.” However, despite this designation, too little has been done to respond to the crisis

The United States has enormous leverage in the global political arena, and I ask you to lobby and vote for a stronger international peacekeeping force. Currently, the paltry 7,000 African Union troops do not have the ability to control the conflict or protect the millions of displaced Darfurians. Also, the United States must play a much larger role in helping broker a political solution to the conflict, as was done for the civil war in Southern Sudan. It is clear that the Janjaweed attacks on the mostly non-Arab Darfurians are not random. They are calculated, systematic and funded / coordinated by Sudan’s ruling National Congress Party (NCP). This is not acceptable. It is imperative that the U.S. government target the NCP with economic sanctions. The perpetrators of this genocide must be held accountable.

Furthermore, I urge you to encourage President Bush to cooperate with the International Criminal Court as they investigate war crimes in Darfur. Though not party to the ICC, the U.S.Darfur. should, at a minimum, provide information and support to the ICC to bring accountability for the atrocities in

In conclusion, I ask that the important global alliances forged in the name of the War on Terrorism (ie. U.S.Sudan ties) do not interfere with what is required to stem the violence in Darfur. It is not acceptable to turn a blind-eye on the National Congress Party of Sudan, since they have cooperated with the U.S. in the War on Terrorism. Thank you very much for your time and I look forward to your response. Together we can stop the genocide in Darfur.

Monday, June 25, 2007

On Darfur




Yesterday I was heading home from a short visit to the United States. I was at 36,000 feet over Sudan, and reading a new book: Not on Our Watch – The Mission to End Genocide in Darfur and Beyond , by actor Don Cheadle (Hotel Rwanda, Crash) and John Prendergast.

As I became more and more absorbed in the pages of the book, I reached for my in-flight computer screen and discovered that I was right over Darfur, soaring south along the Chad / Sudan border. The horrors I was reading about on the pages in my lap were unfolding on the ground, just 36,000 feet below me. What had I done about it? Really, not much. What was I going to do about it? Well, that’s where this blog comes in…

While I was home, a friend asked me about Darfur. “So what is going on there? Why all the killing? And why for so long?” Naturally, I should know, right? I live here in East Africa. I work with Sudanese people. Well, the truth is I stumbled and stuttered and backpedaled and was unable to answer the questions. I tried, but didn’t do justice to the sort of answers that are required. I dodged the issue saying “We don’t work with Darfurian refugees. The conflict is too recent. We resettle more entrenched problems, where refugees have been displaced for a much longer period.” All that was true, but I was uncomfortable with my explanation.

I have been living in Kenya for three years, and during that time I have been involved in refugee resettlement, mostly of Somalia, Ethiopian, Sudanese, and most recently Burundian refugees. This was how I personally got involved in things going on in Africa that outraged me. Now, however, having finished the book, I realize that my efforts are too little, too late, and that I am capable of much more. And so I write. I bring these uncomfortable truths to you. And I ask you to listen, and more importantly I ask you to act.

When I came out to Kenya I was fresh out of university and filled with optimism and hope. My actions and expectations were marked with a naiveté bordering on the Pollyannaish. Initially, I wrote op/ed pieces to newspapers back home. Several editors never responded. Two pieces were published – one on Darfur, one on Rwanda. Several people commented on the pieces. It felt good. I was doing something. Soon, as the months turned into years and my visits to refugee camps became routine, and wars raged in the countries surrounding me, my optimism began to fade. It crumbled. It washed away. My advocacy went into hibernation. I put my head down, ostrich-like, and hammered away, bit by bit, at the problem of displacement. At times it felt good – it still does – but I was haunted by headlines of fires burning in Darfur, northern Uganda, Somalia, and Congo – to name but a few. The body counts kept climbing. In August 2004 (see my blogs: http://craigmurphy.easyjournal.com/entry.aspx?eid=2268974 and http://craigmurphy.easyjournal.com/entry.aspx?eid=2276413) the Darfur death toll was 30,000. Now some put estimates as high as 400,000. That is almost half a million people – mostly women and children – who have been slaughtered with impunity. And now frankly I feel guilty at how little I’ve done.

Not On Our Watch is, among other things, a how-to guide. It takes you, step by step, through what has happened in Darfur and what we, as concerned citizens, can do. It puts forth several useful points, such as the “Three Ps”, “Four Horsemen enabling the Apolcalypse,” and “Six Strategies for Effective Change.” I summarize:

The Three Ps:
1) Protecting the People
2) Punishing the Perpetrators
3) Promoting the Peace

The Four Horsemen Enabling the Apolcalypse:
1) Ignorance
2) Indifference
2) Policy inertia
3) Apathy

Six Strategies for Effective Change:
1) Raise Awareness
2) Raise Funds
3) Write a letter
4) Call for Divestment
5) Join an Organization
6) Lobby the government

I don’t like telling you these things. It makes me uncomfortable. I don’t want to be the bearer of bad news. I don’t want you to see my name in your inbox and think “Oh, Craig is at it again, going on about Africa’s woes.” I often avoid those kinds of advocates. When in the U.S. and people ask me about Africa, I habitually downplay my responses. Everything is vague and glossed-over and roundabout. The adjective “fine” features prominently. When maybe I should be saying, “Well, I’m good, but almost half a million people in Darfur have been killed in 3 years, there is combat in Mogadishu, Robert Mugabe still is single handedly responsible for famine in southern Africa, militias are on the move in Congo, and Joseph Kony continues to abduct children, drug them, brand them, torture them and turn them into child soldiers in northern Uganda.” Who wants to hear those sorts of responses? Nobody. And I certainly don’t want to be the guy giving those sorts of retorts to the “How’s Africa?” question. Further, I don’t want to contribute to the already extremely negative image that the West has of Africa. I try to tell and write about the success stories. To capture the beauty of this place, and some of the interesting people. By being the random guy living in Africa, I don’t want to, by default, be the purveyor of a continent’s horrors. I don’t want to be that guy. But, maybe I am. Maybe I should be. I feel it necessary to be that guy, though I don’t want to be. So, I give you the opportunity now, by all means, if you don’t want your inbox rocked with the horrors of Darfur and beyond, DO LET ME KNOW. I would be happy to remove you from my blog list.

Living out here and interviewing refugees on a daily basis, does take its toll. It takes its toll in ways that I wasn’t initially aware of. Now that I reflect, one of the things I did was withdraw from involvement in some of the conflicts. I stopped routinely checking BBC and UN websites for updates on Darfur and Somalia. I stopped blogging about Darfur. I stopped forwarding news articles to like-minded friends. I didn’t want to know. There was nothing more I could do. I was doing my part. I was out here. I was doing enough. BULLSHIT.

I think effective advocacy is concise, coherent, and often blunt. So let me try to be these things. I am writing you for the following reasons:

1) To let you know that I am declaring my own little war on the Darfur crisis. (I will move on to other conflicts later…stay tuned).

2) To encourage you to educate yourself about what is happening in Darfur (see the following websites: www.enoughproject.org/, International Crisis Group, IRIN News Africa, Not on Our Watch Project, Save Darfur, Genocide Intervention Network, Darfur Scores, Eric Reeves Site)After you get a sense of what is going on in Darfur, get on the Internet and get the postal addresses of your Representatives and your Senators, and put the pen to paper. You can get the addresses of your representatives by going to this website and entering your zip code: http://www.congress.org/congressorg/home. Write. Lobby. Advocate. Beg. Plead. Let your voice be heard. Send snail mail. Don’t email, unless you must. Because, hell, who even uses the postal system anymore. Shock your leaders and support the U.S. postal service (Though I hear stamps are 41 cents these days – yikes!) Inform those in positions of power. Let them know that you are informed and that inaction is no longer an option. And most importantly let them know that if they don’t listen to you, they may not be re-elected (I recommend diplomacy with the latter!). I have only written to my elected officials once or twice. This is all new to me. But I am starting now. I hope you join me.

3) Forward this email / blog link to others. Or write your own. Just spread the word. Click on everyone in your address book and ask them to write to their elected officials. The letters don’t have to be long – remember: concise, coherent, blunt – just let them know that you know what is going on and then ask them to support policies and pressure that will affect positive change for the people of Darfur. Just write, tell, blog, speak, spread the word, break the silence, rock the inertia that has a strangle hold on the world as the Darfur crisis enters its 4th year. Mailing one letter is not sufficient. You’re not off the hook yet. The effort has to be long-term, widespread, and SUSTAINED. That is how support will be mobilized to put pressure on the situation. If we are quiet. If we are complacent. The air strikes will continue to obliterate villages. The Janjaweed will continue to wreak havoc. Women will continue to be systematically raped. Darfurian non-Arabs will continue to be exterminated with impunity.

4) Buy Not On Our Watch. Read it. Talk about it. Spread the word. Pass the book to others and encourage them to read it and pass the message. Hopefully, your advocacy will be reignited like it has for me. When I put the book down, I didn’t have a choice. I turned on my computer and started typing. It was a slap in the face. A necessary kick in the ass. I have broken my silence and it feels good. For all of my attempts at waxing poetic about Africa and her glories, the reality is that there is also an ugly side to this continent, and I can no longer remain mum.

There is so much going on in the world that you may wonder why I’ve chosen to advocate for Darfur. At least that’s the question I ask myself. Why not something else? Why not poverty or street children, child soldiers, trafficking of women and girls. I can walk out of my house, cross the street and see ten street children sitting on the curb sniffing glue. At night they are in the drains, curled up in the underworld of my neighborhood. Why not them? There are a lot of reasons, namely because poverty is a more global, widespread, long-term, economic situation, that has to do with differential development and access to resources and technology on a historical level. (For more on this read Jeffery Sach’s The End of Poverty , Jared Diamond’s Guns, Germs, and Steel and see my 2005 blog: http://craigmurphy.easyjournal.com/entry.aspx?eid=2612360 ) It is more difficult, but not impossible, to pin the blame on why there is so much poverty (and thus street children) in the world. It is not something that Congress can set a policy on, implement, and quickly eradicate. This can, however, be done in Darfur. People are to blame. It is all documented and recorded. The architects of the Darfur Genocide are known and roam freely. In fact many are courted by U.S. officials, because Sudan is a “friend of the U.S.” who is “assisting” in the so-called “War on Terror.” Remember “You are either with us, or you are against us.” Well, the Khartoum clique is “with us.”

Let’s do this thing.