|
SIGN-ON LETTER AND RESOLUTIONS APPROVED BY AFJN MEMBERS
Resolution on Liberia
To call upon
the US Government, the
United Nations and the international community to consolidate Liberia’s post-conflict
reconciliation and reconstruction efforts.
Whereas,
for nearly 25 years Liberia has been plagued with unrest, resulting in the
deaths of over 200,000 people, displacing one million others, and destroying
the economic infrastructure of the country;
Whereas,
the rebel Movement for Democracy in Liberia (MODEL) still controls three
counties in the southeast and LURD (Liberians United for Reconciliation and
Democracy) continues to move freely in Loffa county, the bread basket of
Liberia;
Whereas,
the economy is in shambles and unemployment is over 90 percent;
Whereas,
Monrovia is the
only capital city in the world without electricity and running water;
Whereas, over 500,000 Liberian citizens live in camps for
displaced people and over 100,000 others reside as refugees in neighboring West
African countries;
Whereas,
the peace accord of August 2003 led to power sharing among previous warring
parties;
Whereas,
at present 13,500 UN peace keepers are patrolling the main roads in major towns
and cities while remnants of the LURD and MODEL rebel forces continue to harass
people and pillage homes;
Whereas,
in February 2004 the international community pledged $520 million for
reconstruction but so far there is little evidence of it;
Whereas,
the Liberian situation threatens peace and stability in neighboring Cote d’Ivoire, Guinea
and Sierra Leone;
Now,
therefore, be it
Resolved by the Africa Faith and Justice Network, convened at their 2004
Annual General meeting, that AFJN:
1.
Urges the US and the international community to ensure Liberians’
access to adequate food, clean water, basic public utilities, shelter and
health care to meet immediate basic needs;
2.
Calls on the US and
the international community to work with present Liberian government structures
to help Liberia
with voter registration;
3.
Asks for continuing efforts to disarm and rehabilitate child soldiers;
4.
Advocates for retraining Liberia’s armed forces and law
enforcement personnel;
5.
Supports the employment of Liberians by the UN and international NGOs,
and the financing of economically sound, quick impact projects. US $6 million
per year will ensure paying teachers’ salaries and allow children to return to
tuition free schools;
6.
Recommends the improvement of rural roads to improve the transportation
system, the provision of seeds and hand-held farm tools to increase the food
supply, and appropriate water catchment systems for irrigation;
7.
Insists that women be mainstreamed into peace negotiations and
post-conflict reconstruction because they are the main victims of war and the
most resourceful agents of reconciliation and reconstruction.
Resolution on Sudan
To call upon
the US Government, the United Nations and the international community to exert
their full influence to halt categorically and immediately the genocidal killings,
rapes, and other forms of violence and abuse of fundamental human rights being
inflicted upon the peoples of sub-Saharan origin in the Darfur region of Sudan.
Whereas,
the peoples of sub-Saharan origin living in the Darfur region and other parts
of Sudan, such as Malakal district, are threatened by a reign of terror
characterized by genocide, rape, slavery, disease, hunger, expulsion from homes
and land, and destruction of property, including water sources;
Whereas, over one
million people are displaced in Sudan, 180,000 more have sought refuge in
eastern Chad, and tens of thousands of civilians have been killed since
February 2003;
Whereas, according to
USAID, even if the war were to stop immediately, as many as 100,000 people in
Darfur will likely die in the coming months due to the desperate humanitarian
situation;
Whereas,
repeated attacks on civilians by Government of Sudan military and its proxy forces, notably the Janjaweed militias, and the use of systematic and
indiscriminate aerial bombardments and ground attacks on unarmed civilians,
essentially targeting the Zaghawas, Masaalit, and Furs tribes, have led to
massive physical and emotional suffering, disease and starvation;
Whereas,
more than three million people have been affected by the violence in the
region;
Whereas,
women and children, who make up ninety percent or more of the populations in
the region’s refugee camps, continue to be attacked by government sponsored
militias;
Now,
therefore, be it
Resolved by the Africa Faith and Justice Network, convened at their 2004
Annual General Meeting, that AFJN :
1.
Calls on the Government of Sudan to ensure the security of the civilian
population of Darfur, disarm the militias and
grant freedom of movement to aid workers;
2.
Urges the Bush Administration to release immediately the $95 million
for Darfur and Chad
in urgent humanitarian aid approved by Congress;
3.
Calls on the United States government and the international
community to support the expansion of the mandate of the African Union in Darfur
to include protection of innocent civilians, those inside and those outside
refugee camps, by whatever means necessary within the framework of the U.N.
Chapter VII mandate;
4.
Calls on the United States and other nations to
provide logistical support for the distribution of humanitarian assistance and
airlifts to regions cut off from such assistance because of seasonal rains;
5.
Urges that only sanctions on Khartoum that might be focused with great
accuracy be considered, such as travel bans and the freezing of assets of
specific individuals. Sanctions that are much broader would likely hurt
the very people they are intended to help, as authoritarian governments are
very adept at foisting the costs of sanctions off on the poorest and most
vulnerable;
6.
Recommends that Sudan
be maintained on the list of terrorist states until otherwise certified by the
Department of State;
7.
Urges the US government to fully support the Inter-Governmental
Authority on Development’s (IGAD) peace process between the north and the south
and other marginalized areas (Nuba Mountains, South Blue Nile), following the
signing of a comprehensive framework for peace on 26 May 2004;
8.
Joins Catholic Relief Services in requesting the immediate appointment
of a new Presidential Envoy for Peace in Sudan
to act as a catalyst for peace in Darfur, as well as a final North-South accord
that addresses the conflict in Northern Uganda;
9.
Calls on the African Union to exclude Sudan from all African Union
organs, particularly its Human Rights Commission;
10.
Calls on the U.S.
government to formally petition the UN to exclude the Sudan from membership on the UN
Human Rights Commission.
SIGN-ON LETTER TO GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS CONCERNING SUDAN
·
President
Bush
·
Condolezza
Rice, National Security Council
·
Sen.
John C. Danforth, UN Ambassador
·
Sen.
Richard Lugar, Chair, Foreign Relations
·
Sen.
Joseph Biden, Ranking Member, Foreign Relations
·
Sen.
Lamar Alexander, Chair, Africa
Subcommittee/Foreign Relations
·
Sen.
Bill Frist
·
Colin
Powell, Secretary of State
·
Rep.
Henry Hyde, Chair, International Relations
·
Rep.
Tom Lantos, Ranking Member, International Relations
·
Rep.Ed
Royce, Chair, Africa Subcommittee/ International
Relations
·
Rep.
Frank Wolf
The Catholic
Task Force on Africa (CTFA) is a
coalition of Catholic religious communities, organizations and missionary
groups committed to promoting economic, political and social justice for Africa
within Catholic Faith Communities and U.S. government policies.
We and our
colleague organizations are writing to call upon you to exert the U.S. government’s full influence to halt
categorically and immediately the genocidal killings, rapes, and other forms of
violence and abuse of fundamental human rights being inflicted upon the peoples
of sub-Saharan origin in the Darfur region of Sudan.
As you
know, tens of thousands of civilians have been killed in Darfur, over one
million people are displaced and 180,000 more have sought refuge in eastern Chad
since February 2003. According to USAID,
even if the war were to stop immediately, as many as 100,000 people in Darfur will likely die in the coming months due to the
desperate humanitarian situation.
Continued
attacks on civilians by Government of Sudan military and its proxy forces,
notably the Janjaweed militias, and the use of systematic and indiscriminate
aerial bombardments and ground attacks on unarmed civilians, have led to
massive physical and emotional suffering, disease and starvation. Women and children, who make up ninety percent
or more of the populations in the region’s refugee camps, continue to be
attacked by government sponsored militias.
On 09 September 2004, Ken
Hackett, President of Catholic Relief Services, testified before a Senate
committee on the Darfur crisis. Among other things he recommended that the U.S. should support and pressure the Security
Council to authorize an expanded African Union force of at least 3,000 troops
with a firm mandate “to rein in the violence and help protect Darfur’s
vast population of internally displaced.”[*]
In order for this to happen, CRS requests that the U.S. contribute an additional $90
million to fund unmet UN appeals and provide for an expanded African Union
force. He also called for the U.S. to immediately name and dispatch a high-level
peace envoy to Sudan.
We greatly
appreciate the efforts taken to date at the UN and by governments, including
the U.S. government, to
sound the alarm about the Darfur crisis. We join our voices to those of the U.S.
Conference of Catholic Bishops, Catholic colleagues like CRS, the Conference of
Major Superiors of Men and numerous religious communities, international NGOs
and humanitarian groups, in urging you to strongly support the African Union in
fielding an expanded force with the clear aim of stopping the genocidal
killings and other crimes against humanity taking place in Darfur. To that end we ask Congress and the
administration to go beyond the Senate’s recent backing of $75 million for
African Union intervention and allocate the $90 million requested by CRS. Likewise we urge you to dispatch a special
envoy right away to advance a settlement of the Darfur
crisis and demand an end to the killing and horrific abuses there.
There is no
more time to waste. We must act on
stopping the violence now.
Respectfully,
[*]
3,000 troops is still a highly inadequate number
given the drastic situation. Nigeria
has suggested 5,000. In fact, the level
should be determined by the number of troops actually required to effectively
protect the civilian population.
|