The attackers, as they have done so
often, rampaged through terrified people, shouting "kill the slaves".
They cried: "We have orders to kill all the blacks". Eight more
villages in Darfur were torched in a single day by armed men in a
concerted operation. No one knows how many were killed, but it is the
latest evidence that inaction by the international community has
emboldened the Janjaweed Arab militias and their backers in the
Islamist government in Khartoum. As arguments rage over who was to
blame for the attacks five days ago, the UN is deciding whether the
atrocities of the past two years amount to genocide. Human rights
organisations are using the occasion of Holocaust Day tomorrow to call
for international war trials to help stop the crimes still being
committed against the civilians of Darfur. Here are the facts. More
than 70,000 people have been killed. More than 1.6 million have been
forced from their homes in a conflict that has been described as "the
world's worst humanitarian crisis". The continuing violence has been so
intense that international aid agencies have been forced to suspend
their work after coming under attack. While the diplomats debate how to
respond, the survivors of the atrocities are left traumatised, many in
refugee camps. More than 60 per cent of refugees from Darfur have
witnessed the killing of a family member by the men on horseback. Four
out of every five people have witnessed the destruction of their
villages. Two-thirds saw government planes laden with bombs target
fleeing civilians. One-third heard racial abuse while they and their
relatives were being murdered or raped. [more]
Oil Profits Behind West’s Tears for Darfur [more]
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