Darfur

June 2007
Issue No. 401
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Sick of promises
Jess Worth encounters a Darfurian community that’s demanding answers.

Darfur – Facts and timeline
Facts, timeline and map

War against women
Femke van Zeijl on the devastation caused by rape.

Salaam Darfur
Moataz El Fegiery and Ridwan Ziyada challenge the Arab world’s silence.

An African struggle
African civil society is getting results, reports Dismas Nkunda.

Darfur – a history
A history of Darfur

Over a barrel
Leben Nelson Moro on the curse of oil.

Don't ignore Darfur
How to take action.

News, views, and & voices

SPECIAL FEATURE

What next?
The future for the world can look bleak, dominated by technological and corporate power. But what if resistance to it won through? Pat Mooney tells a story illustrating how things might unfold differently between now and 2035.

Currents

Eupocalypse
Scary booklist of the neocons

Earth summit
Thousands gather in Guatemala for the Third Continental Summit of Indigenous Peoples and Nationalities of Abya Yala

Green America Steps Up
Day of action across the US demanding carbon cuts

Healthy competition, anyone?
Logging company director charged with incitement to commit murder

I'm still alive
Palestinians breaking out

Supersize me cruising
Demand grows for mega-cruiseships holding 10,000 tourists

The African cinema lion roars!
Ten day festival of African cinema in Burkina Faso.

Seriously

Dog day afternoon
Dogs on drugs stay home alone

Big Bad World

Big Bad World
Extremism at large in Polyp's cartoon.

Making Waves

Mahboubeh Hossein Zadeh
A letter from inside prison by Iranian women’s rights campaigner Mahboubeh Hossein Zadeh.

Mixed Media

MUSIC: Amam Imam
by Tinariwen

MUSIC: Goza Pepillo
by Interactivo

BOOK: My Father's Notebook
by Kader Abdolah

FILM: Ten Canoes
directed by Rolf de Heer and Peter Djigirr

BOOK: The Taqwacores
by Michael Muhammad Knight

FILM: Water
written and directed by Deep Mehta

Southern Exposure

Helga Kohl
A ghost town of sand, as seen by Namibian photographer Helga Kohl.

View from Abu Dhabi

The landscape of the future
Urvashi Butalia on a cityscape of the future.

Essay

Myths of the Global Market
How the free market destroys life, by John McMurtry.

Country Profile

Antigua and Barbuda
When new Prime Minister Baldwin Spencer moved into Antigua’s government offices in 2004, his predecessors had bequeathed him a scene of desolation. Wilmoth Daniel, his deputy, explained that they found ‘the drawers open – all the files were removed like a thief in the night ... What a shame of those individuals in authority to [remove] all those files, the soul and heart of the country.’


 

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from
THIS MONTH'S EDITOR

‘God, how grim,’ is the most common reaction I’ve been getting when I tell people I’m doing a magazine on Darfur. Often followed by: ‘It’s just so awful – but there doesn’t seem to be anything we can do...’

This feeling of powerlessness in the face of extreme human suffering is unpleasant and upsetting; so we’re inclined to look away. The media’s portrayal of Darfur doesn’t help. Devoid of explanation and analysis, we are bombarded by harrowing images, left feeling shocked and confused.

I can’t deny that putting this magazine together has been disturbing. Eager to help, my search for a simple solution to Darfur’s problems has nonetheless drawn a blank. Most people I’ve spoken to – Darfurian refugees, activists, humanitarian workers – have been downbeat about Darfur’s prospects, ground down by four years of banging their heads against a brick wall.

But I’ve also found hope. Behind the horror stories lies a long history, a complex interplay between colonialism, injustice and the politics of the surrounding region. Understand this, and we can start to make sense of the current crisis.

And I’ve encountered some extraordinarily courageous individuals who will never give up. Thanks to their relentless work, campaigns for Darfur are now blossoming all over the world. We owe it to the people of Darfur to take a long, unflinching look at their situation – and the part our countries have had in creating and perpetuating it. Then perhaps we can finally start to play an effective supporting role in their quest for peace.

Jess Worth
Jess Worth

Jess Worth for the
New Internationalist Co-operative
jess@newint.org






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