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SUDAN UPDATE

 

April 04 - NEW YORK (UMNS) - The head of the United Methodist international 
mission agency is calling on the world's nations to mark the 10th anniversary 
of the genocide in Rwanda by acting to ward off a potential bloodbath 
in Sudan.

The Rev. R. Randy Day, top staff executive of the United Methodist 
Board of Global Ministries, made the appeal April 7, a decade after the 
Rwandan government, controlled by a faction of the majority Hutu tribe, 
killed 800,000 people in a three-month period. Most of the victims were 
members of the minority Tutsi tribe and moderate Hutus. The United 
Methodist Church provided extensive relief services to Rwandan refugees at 
the time.

Day criticized the United Nations and the governments of the United 
States and Western Europe for being "mute and cowardly" during the Rwandan 
atrocities. He said they had a chance to show their better faces in 
Sudan, where Arab militia, armed by the government, are pillaging and 
displacing African communities.

He noted that an international conference in Kigali, the Rwandan 
capital, is studying the events of a decade ago. 

"The most important lesson from the horror of the Rwandan genocide 
should be that of international vigilance to assure that another Rwanda 
cannot happen-anywhere on earth," Day said. "With regard to mass murder, 
the nations and humanitarian organizations, including churches, should 
adopt and put into practice the slogan of the victims of the Nazi 
Holocaust: 'Never again!'"

At the conference, Rwandan President Paul Kagame admonished the 
international community for failing to stop the genocide in his country. If 
mass killings were to occur elsewhere, Rwanda would be among the first to 
send in troops, he said, according to news reports.

Day's statement came the same day that U.N. Secretary-General Kofi 
Annan and U.S. President George Bush separately called for an end to the 
fighting in Sudan. Bush noted that Sudan's civil war has been 
"responsible for the deaths of 2 million people over two decades." Both leaders 
called on Sudan's government to allow humanitarian relief agencies into 
the troubled area.

The Sudanese government also announced that it was restarting direct 
talks with rebel forces, according to news reports.

North of Rwanda, Africans in southern Sudan are undergoing what Day 
called a "reign of terror" inflicted by Arab forces backed by the 
government. In 2001, United Methodist News Service reported that reports of 
genocide had emerged from parts of Sudan where mostly Christians and 
followers of traditional religions live. At the time, an estimated 4 million 
had been forced from their homes, according to aid officials.

The United Methodist Committee on Relief, a unit of the mission board, 
is caring for Sudanese refugees in the nation of Chad.

"The United Nations and the Western governments that failed so 
miserably in Rwanda have a chance in the Sudan to show their resolve to stop 
the germs of genocide before they fester and explode," Day said. "Let us 
pray that they will!"

UMCOR is closely monitoring the situation in Sudan, he said. The relief 
organization played a major role 10 years ago in responding to the 
needs of Rwandan refugees fleeing into what is today the Democratic 
Republic of Congo.

An appeal to United Methodists in 1994 resulted in more than $2 million 
for food relief, orphan care, medical supplies and shelter for the 
Rwandan emergency. Augmented by international funds, UMCOR reached out to 
many displaced people in the Democratic Republic of Congo and East 
Africa, leading to agricultural projects, education for girls, food security 
operations, microfinancing, income generation and community 
reintegration of former combatants.

"We pray for a peaceful solution to the discord in Sudan," Day said, 
"and, with the memory of Rwanda in our hearts, we recommit our programs 
and personnel to justice, freedom, and peace within and among nations, 
religions and ethnic groups."

Contributions to the Sudanese emergency work and the ongoing refugee 
work in the Democratic Republic of Congo can be made through the United 
Methodist Church's General Advance. Donations can be sent to the General 
Advance, 475 Riverside Drive, New York, NY 10115. Checks should be 
designated for fund No. 184385 for the Sudan or No. 198400 for the Congo.
# # #
*Wright is the information officer for the United Methodist Board of 
Global Ministries.


Day's full statement follows:

Statement on the Tenth Anniversary of Start of Rwanda Genocide


Ten years ago on April 7, 1994, an ethnically-defined political faction 
in Rwanda unleashed a murderous rampage that left 800,000 people dead over a three-month period. At the time, the world's nations, including the United Nations, and, to a large degree, the world's churches were deplorably silent and inactive.

The governments of Western Europe and the United States were, for the most part, mute and cowardly in the face of what was clearly genocide stirred by an extreme political wing of the Hutu tribe that controlled the government. Recently declassified documents show that the United States was initially reluctant to use the term "genocide" because it might have committed the Clinton Administration to "actually do something" about it.

This week, an international conference in Kigali, the Rwandan capital, paid tribute to the victims, mostly Tutsi tribespeople and moderate Hutus. A memorial was unveiled; participants visited cemeteries and sites of mass carnage, including churches where people seeking refuge were massacred. Discussions were held on causes, blame, and lessons learned.

The most important lesson from the horror of the Rwandan genocide 
should be that of international vigilance to assure that another Rwanda 
cannot happen-anywhere on earth. With regard to mass murder, the nations 
and humanitarian organizations, including churches, should adopt and put 
into practice the slogan of the victims of the Nazi Holocaust: "NEVER 
AGAIN!"

The General Board of Global Ministries of The United Methodist Church 
joins with the people of Rwanda in mourning the victims of the 
conflagration a decade ago. We have keen memories of the horror because of 
extensive work with survivors, especially refugees who fled into what is 
today the Democratic Republic of Congo. In 1994, our Church members gave 
more than $2 million for food relief, care of orphans, medical 
supplies, and shelter. That work, done by our United Methodist Committee on 
Relief (UMCOR), leveraged other funds and led to continuing ministries 
among displaced populations in the region.

An opportunity to show repentance for international inaction in Rwanda 
can be found in the current situation in Sudan, where government-armed 
militia are destroying non-Arab ethnic communities through a 
scorched-earth campaign. A reign of terror-including murder, rape, and looting of 
Africans-has already displaced one million civilians. The United 
Nations and the Western governments that failed so miserably in Rwanda have a 
chance in the Sudan to show their resolve to stop the germs of genocide 
before they fester and explode. Let us pray that they will!

The General Board through UMCOR is closely monitoring developments in 
the Sudan. We stand ready to assist refugees and victims of political 
abuse. UMCOR is already providing aid to refugees from the Sudan in 
Chad. 

We pray for a peaceful solution to the discord in Sudan and, with the 
memory of Rwanda in our hearts, we recommit our programs and personnel 
to justice, freedom, and peace within and among nations, religions, and 
ethnic groups.


 

 

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