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U.N. can’t see the problem in Sudan. 70,000 dead is peanuts!

70,000 people slaughtered.  Millions displaced by militants.  The U.S. has called it a “genocide”.  So what does the United Nations report call it?  Why, NOT a genocide, of course. 

You see, declaring it a genocide would compel Kofi Annan and the corrupt U.N. to act, under international law.  The U.N. didn’t act in Rwanda in the mid 90’s when liberal Bill Clinton was President in the U.S. and liberal Jean Chretien was Prime Minister in Canada, and 800,000 people were slaughtered.  The U.N. didn’t declare it a genocide (nor did Chretien or Clinton).  The U.S. has been trying to convince the U.N. to act in Sudan.  That seems to be a recipe for U.N. deafness if history is any predictor. 

The U.S. tried to get the United Nations to act against Saddam Hussein years ago too, when Hussein was slaughtering countless hundreds of thousands of innocent people using weapons of mass destruction (he never did explain to the U.N. where all those weapons went, not that the U.N. cares), and raping women and children and torturing millions, with the help of his sons and lieutenants.

Now the U.N. workers are themselves sexually exploiting in Congo to Congolese citizens including children

The United Nations seems inclined to wait for another mass slaughter to happen again.

A keenly awaited United Nations investigation into human rights abuse in Sudan’s Darfur region does not describe violence against villagers there as “genocide,” the Sudanese government said Monday.

Pro-government militia are accused of a two-year campaign of raping civilians and pillaging villages in the desert region where tens of thousands of people have died and 1.8 million have been driven from their homes.

The United Nations report is currently in the hands of Secretary-General Kofi Annan and the Sudanese government, and is expected to be made public this week after being presented to the Security Council.

“We have a copy of that report and they didn’t say there is a genocide,” Sudanese Foreign Minister Mustafa Osman Ismail told reporters on the sidelines of an African Union summit in the Nigerian capital.

Joel Johannesen
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