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Sudan: Canada continues to dither as 70,000 now dead in Sudan

While the U.S. continues to fight the U.N. and get them to admit there’s a genocide going on, Liberal Canada continues to dither, waiting for their precious U.N. to act, as 70,000 are now dead in Sudan, up from 50,000 just weeks ago.

Liberals in Ottawa continue to dither and deny their negligence.  Perhaps the Sudanese population in Canada doesn’t warrant any vote-buying.

However, pot smokers can rest assured their needs are being taken care of, as the Liberals tabled legislation in Parliament this week decriminalizing marijuana. 

Oh thank God.

According to Liberal PM Paul Martin during the election campaign, Canada is “the world leader in peacekeeping”.  (This despite Nigeria and Bangladesh each sending more troops to U.N. peacekeeping missions).  My guess is that the liberal-left aims to make Canada the world leader in pot-smoking.  Such nation-builders, the liberal-left.  So wonderfully “progressive”.

But not to worry, the U.N. waited until 800,000 Rwandans were murder in a mass genocide in the mid 90’s while Canada under Chretien—and the Clinton White House—waited for Kofi Annan and the U.N. to do something, which mercifully they didn’t have to do because the region basically ran out of people to kill.

Perhaps that’s what the liberals are waiting for.

Darfur Death Toll Reaches 70,000 – U.N. Agency
Fri Oct 15, 2004 12:40 PM ET

By Richard Waddington
GENEVA (Reuters) – A total of 70,000 people are estimated to have died as a result of a conflict in Sudan’s western Darfur region, with hundreds still dying every day, a top U.N. official said on Friday.

David Nabarro, who heads the World Health Organization’s (WHO) health crisis action group, gave the new overall figure, saying malnutrition and disease meant the monthly fatality rate was about 10,000. The previous overall death toll had stood at 50,000.

People were dying despite the aid effort and the world continued to underestimate the crisis in Darfur, Nabarro said.

“There are 70,000 that have died as a result of the conditions in which they are living. The humanitarian environment is still unsatisfactory in Darfur,” Nabarro told a news conference.

Joel Johannesen
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