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The aid workers maintain that the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Darfur similar to that in other African regions
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CAIRO,
October 3 (IslamOnline.net) – The US administration is making too
much fuss about the humanitarian crisis in Darfur as it tirelessly
seeks a regime change in Khartoum, international aid workers have told
Britain’s The Observer.
Speaking
on condition of anonymity, the aid workers, citing their hands-on
experience in the troubled Sudanese region, concluded there was no
genocide in Darfur but only diseases and malnutrition, which are daily
occurrences in Africa.
The
United States has often called the situation in Darfur
"genocide" and accused the Sudanese government of backing
the Arab militias Janjaweed in their alleged attacks on African
Darfuris.
The
US House Of Representatives unanimously passed a resolution in July,
condemning the "genocide"
taking place in the oil-rich province.
However,
the charge, The Observer said, was rejected by officials of
both the European and African Unions and also privately by British
officials.
Dr.
Hussein Gezairy, Regional Director of World Health Organization’s
Eastern Mediterranean Region, had told IslamOnline.net that the
situation in the area did
not amount to genocide or ethnic cleansing.
Africa-like
Many
aid workers interviewed by the British paper were puzzled that Darfur
had become the focus of such hyperbolic American warnings when there
were crises of similar magnitude in both northern Uganda and eastern
Congo.
"I've
been to a number of camps during my time here," one aid worker
said, "and if you want to find death, you have to go looking for
it. It's easy to find very sick and under-nourished children at the
therapeutic feeding centers, but that's the same wherever you go in
Africa."
Another
aid worker told the paper: "It suited various governments to talk
it all up, but they don't seem to have thought about the consequences.
I have no idea what (US Secretary of State) Colin Powell's game is,
but to call it genocide and then effectively say, ‘Oh, shucks, but
we are not going to do anything about that genocide’ undermines the
very word ‘genocide’."
The
aid worker was referring to a September 9 testimony by Powell before
the Congressional Foreign Relations Committee in which he had accused
Sudan of committing "genocide".
The
UN Security Council late on September 18 passed a
US-drafted resolution threatening to
"envisage" sanctions against Sudan's oil industry unless the
government meets its commitment to restore security to Darfur.
"Not
Disastrous"
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The Observer says USAID has become politicized under the Bush administration
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The
United Nations World Food Program (WFP) said in a recent nutritional
survey of Darfur that the crisis is being brought under control, The
Observer said.
"It's
not disastrous," one of those involved in the survey told the
British newspaper.
"Although
it was certainly a disaster earlier this year, and if humanitarian
assistance declines, this will have very serious negative
consequences."
The
WFP said last month it had delivered food for nearly one million
people in the restive region.
The
United Nations labeled the Darfur conflict, erupted in February 2003,
as the world's worst current humanitarian crisis, putting the number
of people killed at 10,000 to 50,000 and over one million reportedly
forced to flee their homes.
Politicized
Aid
The
British paper said that US aid organizations, chiefly the US Agency
for International Development, risk losing credibility as they have
become increasingly "politicized" under the administration
of George W. Bush.
It
said two senior USAID officials have long held strong personal views
over Sudan.
Both
its current chairman Andrew Natsios, a former vice-president of the
Christian charity World Vision, and Assistant Administrator Roger
Winter have long been hostile to the Sudanese government, The
Observer said.
US
officials, in effect, kept fueling the warmongering rhetoric on
Darfur.
Influential
leaders of the US evangelical organizations had signed a letter asking
Bush to consider a
military action against Sudan.
The
Guardian reported on August 2 that British Prime Minister Tony
Blair was making the case for a "colonial
war " against Sudan because of its growing oil
reserves, as there are no signs of highly-touted claims of genocide in
the Arab country.