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Darfur's tears.

In Darfur, it can be said that those caught in the crossfire of the current crisis lost their innocence a long time ago. But a new problem is coming to light - the systematic rape of women and children:

 

They say the situation has now become so bad that many women are now resigned to rape as a way of life and men are unwilling to accompany them because they fear that they will be killed if they try to defend them.

Although few aid workers dispute the extent of the attacks against women, they say survivors are unwilling to come forward. But the victims that do reveal shocking levels of abuse.

"She said they removed their scarves and used it to tie them up and were taking turns to rape them. One is 13 years old; the other one is 16 years," said Ajayi Funmi of the UNAMID police, who is trying to educate women, said after talking to two girls.


Workers like Funmi are working actively to combat the problem with education - but in the face of brute force, what are these women to do, really? Especially when the government says that "there is no rape in Darfur"? It pains me deeply that the world is standing idly by, relatively, while this transpires.

It's not just the children who are assaulted that are the victims. So are those conceived in these evil acts:


Making matters worse, aid workers say scores of babies conceived through rape are being dumped by their mothers.

"Abandoned babies are reported, but because of the stigma attached to it, there is no detailed report, because the women don't come forward," said Dr Naqib Safi of the U.N. children's body UNICEF.

As many as 20 babies a month are being dumped in one camp of 22,000 people.


When the Right claims they value life, remind them how little our current administration has done in Darfur. I applaud Mr. Bush's efforts to combat AIDS in Africa, but that is not enough.

I will be making the genocide a focus of what I write on my blog.  There, I use the alias "Invisible Man", a tribute to my favorite novel and to the concept of "invisibility" Ellison explores in it.

Today, there is no one more invisible right now than the women and children of Darfur. I know that I need to point my lightbulbs in their direction, so to speak, and I hope you all do the same.


Comments (6)

'commded. There's no other goods words for this.

rec.

When I read details like that, words fail me.

Perhaps Hillary Clinton could be persuaded to champion the anguished, unheard voices of the women and girls of Darfur rather than, or in addition to, the voices of her female supporters in America who want their voices to be heard?

Maybe she will.

I hope she'll turn her attention to some domestic issues first. She's headed back to the senate this week, just in time to lead some opposition to the FISA bill. Would be a good chance for her to show the party what real leadership looks like. Not holding my breath but I'd love to see her take this on.

I applaud Mr. Bush's efforts to combat AIDS in Africa, but that is not enough.

You might want to hold your applause. The money has had strings. A certain amount of it has had to be used for programs that promote abstinence.

Even the "looser" bill that Congress has come up with, in anticipation of the original bill's expiration in September, has these strings:

The new bill authorizes, for the first time, the expenditure of PEPFAR funds to provide HIV-AIDS testing and counseling services at family planning facilities, although it does stipulate that the funds cannot be used for contraception or abortion.

Conservatives have been concerned that having a link between PEPFAR and family planning agencies could allow AIDS funding to end up promoting abortion. Critics of that stance say the lifting of the restriction will ensure that many more women of reproductive age receive vital information related to the disease.


http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewForeignBureaus.asp?Page=/ForeignBureaus/archive/200803/FOR20080305b.html

I have never thought that the Right values life. In my mind, they value control. And they don't care about what they cannot control. So more and more people—and babies—keep dying in Africa.

Thank you for this post. Things are horrific in Darfur, but I also worry about Zimbabwe. It wouldn't take much for things to take a much more violent turn there, and no one in the world is willing to stand up to Mugabe.

Technical note:

I tried several times to go to your blog by using the "blog" link you have, but the site wouldn't come up properly. I had to force quit four times, because I couldn't back out of it either.

But the link directly to your Darfur entry works just fine.

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