Tuesday, March 03, 2009

From Soldier of Africa blog: "The Relaxation Response'' book by Dr Herbert Benson

Here is another must-read post today by Werner at Soldier of Africa blog. Please pass it on to anyone who may be feeling stressed or under pressure right now.  It won't cost you (or anyone else!) a penny and may help to make a huge difference to their situation right now.  

This post is dedicated to all military related personnel around the world, especially peacekeepers, and humanitarian workers in Sudan, Chad, CAR, Uganda and DR Congo. 
How to Relax - Dr Herbert Benson

We live in a world where all people are under stress and we are constantly looking for quick fixes to these stress-related problems. Soldiers especially are under incredible amounts of stress. I stumbled upon this article from Turning Point Now and thought it important enough to post here.

Dr Herbert Benson
Photo: Dr Herbert Benson (Credit: Soldier of Africa blog 3 March 2009)

By Linda Matchan
Globe Staff - February 5, 2009

Nearly 35 years ago, Herbert Benson wrote the book on how to battle stress. Today, he says, it's as relevant as ever. Benson, author of the ''The Relaxation Response,'' has made stress - and the relieving of it - his life's work.

By the time they're 73, most doctors are thinking about hanging up their stethoscopes, if they haven't already. Not Dr. Herbert Benson, though, whose medical specialty - stress - is a growth industry these days.

Benson is the guru of relaxation and busier than ever. Nearly 35 years ago the Harvard cardiologist became a kind of medical rock star with his best-selling book "The Relaxation Response." It outlined a pioneering and irresistibly simple approach to relieving stress and a host of medical conditions related to it. Breathe deeply, repeat a word or phrase, and keep it up for 10-20 minutes, twice a day.

The book leaped to the top of the New York Times bestseller list and earned Benson international acclaim as one of the first Western physicians to bring spirituality and healing into medicine. He was interviewed by Barbara Walters. He met a dozen times with the Dalai Lama. He testified before Congress about the relationship between body and mind.

His book came out during a tumultuous time in this country, though the kind of anxiety he was addressing in 1975 seems quaintly low-voltage today. Women faced "conflicting expectations and suppositions." Men were adjusting to a new role "that may mean more responsibility for family and household."

But that was long before the pace of life accelerated thanks to e-mail, BlackBerries, and multi-tasking. Long before banks tanked, retirement funds evaporated, and thousands lost jobs every day.

You wanna talk stress? Benson wants to talk stress. It's his work, his passion, his "hobby," he said. The way he sees it, stresses are piling up around all of us. People feel helpless, and it's hurting their health. Adults are getting high blood pressure. Kids are turning to drugs and alcohol. But Benson has an answer. And it's easy! And it doesn't cost anything! And it's been around for millennia!

You can almost feel his sense of urgency. "These are trying times," Benson tells a dozen doctors, nurses, and other health care workers. He's leading a lunchtime session for Massachusetts General Hospital employees to teach them the relaxation response. "People do not have faith it will get better."

He reassures them that it will get better if they do his focusing techniques once or twice a day. One caveat, though: It won't eliminate stress, only "change our reaction to stress," Benson said.

He is director emeritus of the Benson-Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital, which offers courses, services, and therapy, and conducts research. It's a busy time: The institute has been inundated with calls from schools across the country looking for ways to help students reduce anxiety in their lives. It has heard from the Department of Defense, which is interested in helping wounded soldiers deal with stress. Twice a week, Benson and his colleagues conduct anti-stress workshops at MGH. Lately, the hospital has been offering information sessions about retirement planning during times of financial turmoil. The sessions include the relaxation response.

"It is nothing new," Benson tells the hospital staff, reassuringly. "People usually bring it out by repeating a word, a sound, or a prayer. It can be secular or religious. Your choice. It could be 'love,' 'peace,' 'calm.' If you're Catholic, you have it made. You can say 'Ave Maria,' or 'Hail Mary, full of grace.' "

Benson believes the relaxation response is more relevant than ever today. He elicits it himself every morning (not disclosing his word), and it seems to work pretty well, judging by how calmly he responds when he accidentally spills a glass of water on his desk, soaking some papers and trickling down on his pants. "It doesn't matter!" he said cheerfully, mopping up the mess. "It will dry!"

He is a compact, dapper man in a blazer and tie emblazoned with little elephants; he has the affable, avuncular manner of a television doctor. His professional path has been anything but traditional though, taking him down a road where, three decades ago, self-respecting physicians dared not go, namely the interface of medicine and the mind.

His clinical vocabulary is sprinkled with terms that would still cause the blood pressure of some doctors to spike, like "self-healing" and "the power of belief." He likens his approach to medicine to a "three-legged stool," balanced equally by traditional interventions like medication and surgery, and by "self-care" approaches like the relaxation response.

Benson was first drawn to this field in the late 1960s when he was a cardiologist and instructor at Harvard Medical School. He was curious about why so many people's blood pressure was higher in their doctors' offices than it was when they measured it themselves at home. He speculated it was because they were nervous, and that there might be a relationship between stress and high blood pressure.

His theory might not seem radical now, but his colleagues thought he was "bizarre," said Benson, who still sounds a bit miffed. "It was a different world then, a time when the phrase 'it's all in your head' was a pejorative in medicine."

He decided to do a research fellowship at Harvard Medical School's physiology department to investigate the link between stress and high blood pressure. His theory took a big leap forward when he did experiments with practitioners of transcendental meditation. "The facts were incontrovertible," Benson wrote in his book. "With meditation alone, the T.M. practitioners brought about striking physiologic changes - a drop in heart rate, metabolic rate, and breathing rate - that I would subsequently label 'the Relaxation Response.' "

He defines this as "an inducible, physiologic state of quietude," a way to become focused, keep the mind from racing, and decrease the heart rate, breathing rate, and blood pressure, and ultimately relieve a host of stress-related conditions from migraines to asthma to depression.

It was a hard sell among medical academics, and so for years Benson had two parallel careers - cardiology and teaching "to maintain respectability," and mind-body research to satisfy his passion. "They thought he was nuts," said Ann Webster, a health psychologist at the Benson-Henry Institute, who has worked with Benson for 22 years. "I'd give talks about [the mind/body effect] and I had people in the audience - mostly medical people - almost shout at me. Or they would get up and walk out."

Not anymore. "I don't think you could say that the entire house of medicine is completely on board with [the mind/body connection]," says Dr. Bruce Auerbach, president of the Massachusetts Medical Society. "But I think people generally accept there is a relationship."

Benson, however, is always looking for converts to his approach, of "slowly, inexorably spreading it through the hospital." He interrupted an interview in his office to make his case. "Let me show you how I teach the experiential component," he said, without preamble.

Declining doesn't seem to be an option. He tells me to pick a word, short phrase, or prayer to repeat silently. "Close your eyes," Benson continues, in the same practiced way he addresses the hospital personnel. "Relax your feet, your calves, your thighs. Shrug your shoulders, roll your head around and sit at ease, without movement, and breathe slowly."

On each "out" breath, I am to silently repeat my focus word. "You will find other thoughts coming to mind," he predicted correctly. He's right. Like how I managed to lose control of this interview. "They are normal, they are natural, and should be expected. Just say, 'Oh well,' and return to your repetition."
I started eliciting the response, but thoughts intruded again. I don't have time for this, I was thinking. Oh well.

I tried again, repeating my focus word. What's he doing while I'm doing all this breathing? Oh well. I got my answer 10 minutes later when the exercise was over: Benson had been counting my breaths. He reported they were down from 14 per minute when I began the exercise to 10 per minute at the end.

"This should be done once or twice daily for 10 to 20 minutes," Benson prescribed. "I predict you'll have more clarity of mind, be calmer, and feel more in control."

My mind was clearer, and so I posed the question that I'd been thinking about since I read his book. Who has time to close their eyes for 20 minutes, once or twice a day?

"Those minutes will pay off in efficiency," Benson said, deftly sidestepping the question. "Isn't that worth 10 to 20 minutes?
- - -

Thanks to Werner, I have just ordered via Amazon (and qualified for free delivery) these two books by Dr Benson:

"The Relaxation Response'' book by Dr Herbert Benson

The Wellness book

Note, as a South African soldier, Werner has served in Darfur and DR Congo and was the first peacekeeper to blog from the war zone in Darfur.

Working in my

This photo is of Werner working in his "office" in Darfur, which was a tent with air conditioning. (Werner K, Darfur Nov 2006)

AA2.jpg

Photo: South African Air Assault Badge developed by Werner and Capt Gibson (Ret) of 1 Parachute Battalion, 44 Parachute Regiment is on the verge of being approved. Soon they will wear it with pride on their uniforms after waiting more than two years. In the comments at his post featuring the bade, Werner explains: "The Oryx Helicopter depicts the use of aircraft and the Laurel Wreath depicts Excellence. There is no wing since we are not air-droppable. Our mission is either heli-assault or air-landed assault. In Heli-Assault we use the Oryx, Rooivalk and Agusta A 109 and in Air Landed we use the Airbus A400M Loadmaster, C 130 and can use other smaller cargo planes for smaller missions."
- - -

Here is a copy of a memorable 'round robin' email that I received from Werner a few years ago (while, I think, he was in Darfur)

----- The Daffodil Principle

Several times my daughter had telephoned to say, "Mother, you must come to see the daffodils before they are over."

I wanted to go, but it was a two-hour drive from Laguna to Lake Arrowhead . "I will come next Tuesday", I promised a little reluctantly on her third call.

Next Tuesday dawned cold and rainy. Still, I had promised, and reluctantly I drove there. When I finally walked into Carolyn's house I was welcomed by the joyful sounds of happy children. I delightedly hugged and greeted my grandchildren.

"Forget the daffodils, Carolyn! The road is invisible in these clouds and fog, and there is nothing in the world except you and these children that I want to see badly enough to drive another inch!"

My daughter smiled calmly and said, "We drive in this all the time, Mother."

"Well, you won't get me back on the road until it clears, and then I'm heading for home!" I assured her.

"But first we're going to see the daffodils. It's just a few blocks," Carolyn said. "I'll drive. I'm used to this."

"Carolyn," I said sternly, "Please turn around."

"It's all right, Mother, I promise. You will never forgive yourself if you miss this experience."

After about twenty minutes, we turned onto a small gravel road and I saw a small church. On the far side of the church, I saw a hand lettered sign with an arrow that read, " Daffodil Garden ." We got out of the car, each took a child's hand, and I followed Carolyn down the path. Then, as we turned a corner, I looked up and gasped. Before me lay the most glorious sight.

The Daffodil Principle

It looked as though someone had taken a great vat of gold and poured it over the mountain and its surrounding slopes. The flowers were planted in majestic, swirling patterns, great ribbons and swaths of deep orange, creamy white, lemon yellow, salmon pink, and saffron and butter yellow. Each different colored variety was planted in large groups so that it swirled and flowed like its own river with its own unique hue. There were five acres of flowers.

The Daffodil Principle

"Who did this?" I asked Carolyn. "Just one woman," Carolyn answered. "She lives on the property. That's her home." Carolyn pointed to a well-kept A-frame house, small and modestly sitting in the midst of all that glory. We walked up to the house.

On the patio, we saw a poster. "Answers to the Questions I Know You Are Asking", was the headline. The first answer was a simple one. "50,000 bulbs," it read. The second answer was, "One at a time, by one woman. Two hands, two feet, and one brain." The third answer was, "Began in 1958."

For me, that moment was a life-changing experience. I thought of this woman whom I had never met, who, more than forty years before, had begun, one bulb at a time, to bring her vision of beauty and joy to an obscure mountaintop. Planting one bulb at a time, year after year, this unknown woman had forever changed the world in which she lived. One day at a time, she had created something of extraordinary magnificence, beauty, and inspiration. The principle her daffodil garden taught is one of the greatest principles of celebration.

The Daffodil Principle

That is, learning to move toward our goals and desires one step at a time--often just one baby-step at time--and learning to love the doing, learning to use the accumulation of time. When we multiply tiny pieces of time with small increments of daily effort, we too will find we can accomplish magnificent things. We can change the world .

"It makes me sad in a way," I admitted to Carolyn. "What might I have accomplished if I had thought of a wonderful goal thirty-five or forty years ago and had worked away at it 'one bulb at a time' through all those years? Just think what I might have been able to achieve!"

My daughter summed up the message of the day in her usual direct way. "Start tomorrow," she said.

She was right. It's so pointless to think of the lost hours of yesterdays. The way to make learning a lesson of celebration instead of a cause for regret is to only ask, "How can I put this to use today?"

Use the Daffodil Principle. Stop waiting.....

Until your car or home is paid off

Until you get a new car or home

Until your kids leave the house

Until you go back to school

Until you finish school

Until you clean the house

Until you organize the garage

Until you clean off your desk

Until you lose 10 lbs

Until you gain 10 lbs

Until you get married

Until you get a divorce

Until you have kids

Until the kids go to school

Until you retire

Until summer

Until spring

Until winter

Until fall

Until you die...

There is no better time than right now to be happy.
Happiness is a journey, not a destination.
So work like you don't need money.
Love like you've never been hurt, and,

Dance like no one's watching.

Wishing you a beautiful, daffodil day!

Don't be afraid that your life will end, be afraid that it will never begin.

Kuwaiti Daily Reports Secret U.S.-Sudan Deal

Sudanese sources said that recently a secret deal has been hammered out between the Sudan government and the new American administration, under which the U.S. will intervene to freeze the International Criminal Court's decision to issue an arrest warrant for Sudanese President Omar Al-Bashir.

In exchange, Sudan will commit to cutting back its relations with Iran to the bare minimum.

Source: Al-Jarida, Kuwait, March 3, 2009 via The Memri Blog

Bashir indictment would be more of a victory for activists than for the poor people stuck in Darfur war

Some more great reporting by Rob Crilly in Darfur.

The View From The Camps
By Rob Crilly in Darfur March 3, 2009
We're all set. My email inbox is filling up with contact details of Darfur activists available for interview, NGOs are being booted out of camps and I have stocked up on provisions (Maryland cookies, Laughing Cow cheese triangles, and water, since you asked). All we need now is tomorrow's decision from the International Criminal Court judges on whether President Omar al-Bashir should indeed face trial for his government's actions in Darfur.

It's could be a rocky day here in El Fasher, capital of North Darfur. Government officials have warned us that they will be putting on a show from 9-30 tomorrow morning. Expect helicopters overhead and demos in the streets. All of which makes for quite a tense feeling around the place.

The Save Darfur movement and human rights campaigners will tell you that it's all worth it. There need be no conflict between peace and justice, according to John Prendergast and Omer Ismail in today's San Diego Tribune...
During our eight trips to Darfur since the genocide began in 2003, we have found that displaced and war-affected Darfuris don't see a tension between justice and peace, and rightly note that one will be very hard without the other. The refugees and displaced put the problem in the clearest of terms: How can you have peace when the president of Sudan has tried to exterminate us, stealing our land, killing our men and raping our women? How can you have peace without justice?
Good point (here's my rather pompous take and Steve Bloomfield on why it's not a genocide). But I can't help feeling that they've been speaking to different people from the ones I have met in five camps across North and South Darfur this past week. Few have time for this debate. Few have heard of the International Criminal Court. Those that have are worried the government will come down hard on anyone celebrating Bashir's indictment. And most seem to think that going home is more important than anything else.

Forgive me for putting words in their mouths, but I'm interpreting that as putting peace ahead of justice.

Today I met families who fled the fighting in Muhajiriya (incidentally they may not actually have fled - but that's a post for another day). Some 50,000 are on the move. About 26,000 have arrived in Zam Zam camp. (A smaller number have made their way down to the camps around Nyala. I met some of them in Otash.)

One of them was Mariam Ahmed Abu, who reckoned she was 60 but looked more like 80 and whose daughter had been shot by her side during the fighting for Muhajiriya. She had survived six years of war but left when she realised she no longer had any children left to care for her. She made the journey with a dozen or so other elderly women who had all run out of children. This is how she summed it all up when I asked her about seeking justice for the misery inflicted on her:
This is what happened and now we have to live and to forget it.
She hadn't heard of the ICC until I asked her about it and I'm starting to think that taking Bashir to the Hague will be more of a victory for activists far away from Sudan than for the people stuck in this miserable war.
- - -

Cartoon In Sudanese Paper

Sudanese cartoon

Cartoon In Sudanese Paper: 'International Criminal Court' Ruling On Sudanese President's Arrest. Source: Al-Rai Al-'Aam, Sudan, March 1, 2009 (hat tip Memri blog via NYT blogrunner)

Sudanese President Bashir inaugurated two-billion-dollar Chinese-engineered Merowe Dam in northern Sudan

r364100579.jpg

Photo: A member of a disaster management team secures the Merowe Dam as it is inaugurated by Sudan's President Omar Hassan al-Bashir in northern Sudan, about 350 km (220 miles) north of the capital Khartoum, March 3, 2009. REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra (SUDAN)

Report from AFP 3 March 2009:
Sudan inaugurates massive Nile dam
(MEROWE, Sudan) — Sudanese President Omar al-Beshir inaugurated a massive hydroelectric project on Tuesday that has displaced tens of thousands of people and is the largest to be built on the Nile in 40 years.

The more than two-billion-dollar (1.590-billion-euro) Chinese-engineered Merowe Dam will eventually double Sudan's power capacity to about 1,250 megawatts. Two of its 10 turbines, which were built by French group Alstom, began operations on Tuesday and Beshir has promised cuts in utility bills of 25-30 percent.

It is the biggest such project since the construction of the Aswan High Dam in Egypt in the 1950s and was developed by China's CCMD consortium under the supervision of German group Lahmeyer.

In 2006, violent protests by villagers opposed to the dam broke out. Three people were killed and dozens injured. More than 40,000 people were forced to leave their homes to make way for the dam and the vast reservoir that will be formed behind it, 400 kilometres (250 miles) north of the capital Khartoum.

The government built new villages for the displaced people in the desert, but many of those expelled from their homes refused to move into them.

"There are people who lost everything," said Ali Askuri, a spokesman for the displaced people. "They live like homeless near the reservoir, and do not want to be resettled in the desert."

The dam's inauguration comes on the eve of an announcement by the International Criminal Court on whether it will issue a warrant for Beshir's arrest over alleged war crimes in Darfur.

And thousand of people gathered for the ceremony in an apparent show of support for the president.

Many of them held up posters of Beshir scribbled with the message: "We are with you."

Pictures of ICC prosecutor general Luis Moreno-Ocampo, who recommended last July that the court issue the arrest warrant, were strewn on the ground to be trampled on by the crowd.

"The Western world is targeting Sudan in order to stop... its development projects but we don't absolutely care," Beshir said. "We will respond to all these decisions with new development projects."

In his remarks, Beshir also said that "any decision by the International Criminal Court has no value for us. It will not be worth the ink it is written in."

Despite the six-year-old war in Darfur, China has maintained close relations with Beshir's regime, drawing criticism from international human rights groups.
Sudan's President Bashir inaugurated two-billion-dollar Chinese-engineered Merowe Dam

Photo: Supporters of Sudan's President Omar Hassan al-Bashir stand below an effigy of International Criminal Court (ICC) prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo during the inauguration of the Merowe Dam by Bashir in northern Sudan, March 3, 2009. REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra (SUDAN)
- - -

Sudan Hails World's Longest Dam
From Xinhua by Editor Ma Ting 3 March 2009:
Squinting amid the dazzling sunshine on the brink of the Sahara Desert, Asem Khalil Idris tried to get a clear view of President Omar al-Bahir, who was addressing a crowd at the inauguration ceremony for Merowe Dam, the country's largest hydropower project.

"The power from the dam will create a lot of work opportunities," Asem, 39, a local resident coming from the Wadi Halfa town, said on Wednesday morning.

"Before today, We had to rely on diesel-fueled generators, which is noisy and very inconvenient," he said, adding that "we will have a more colorful life with less blackouts thanks to the president and the dam's builders, and the fruit trees and vegetable planted in my town will get the badly-needed irrigation."

As Bashir signed a takeover paper at noon, siren resounded over the huge dam and the vast artificial lake that has moistened the local air over the arid desert, marking the official start of power generation of the project.

The 9.7-km dam is the longest one in the world with a total capacity of 1.25 million kilowatt, twice as much as Sudan's existing power supply.

Wielding his stick, encircled by entourages, Bashir danced to the rhythm of a 30-minute folk song on a table on a improvised platform. The president's trademark style was applauded by a crowd, who raised a forest of arms and chanted religious slogans.

"It's an important day and we got it finally," said Rashid in the crowd, who clapped his hands jubilantly in the crowd as the voluble president made statements and danced. "But I have not decided where to go after the dam."

Rashid, in his forties, a veteran driver, who has worked for CCMD JV, a Chinese joint venture that built the dam, for some five years.

"I hope it's not my last drive to Merowe," Rashid said with a little blue earlier on our way to the remote dam, some 450-km north of the capital city Khartoum.

The SUV took a U-turn at an intersection, where scores of people were standing on the roadside of a small town with various banners in their hands.

"This town is a local tourist attraction," Rashid said, "they are advertising for their town and the banner reads 'great place, good price' in Arabic."

"CCMD (JV) rebuilt the desert road to Merowe for material transportation, and those people want to make more money because it saves a lot of time of the tourists coming from the capital," he said while flooring the accelerator pedal of the vehicle, which rustled through the strong north wind.

"It's a state-of-the-art project," said Wu Xiguo, chief engineer and deputy manager of the dam. "We won the contract at a much reasonable price and finished it on time."

"The biggest challenge is the climate of Merowe," said Wu, who has got a good tan at the dam in the past six years. "The average temperature is about 40 degrees and some of my friends got malaria in the mosquito-ridden area."

"Another problem is the lack of resources," he added, "We came here in July 2003 and found nothing except the river and the infertile Sahara, so we have to import nearly everything, including toothpaste."

He said that the dam's eight 350-ton super cranes, dubbed "Gate Machine" in their jargon, were all shipped from China.

"But it pays, it will stand on the river for at least 100 years and some 4 million Sudanese people, or more than one-tenth of the total population, will benefit from the dam's irrigation system and power supply," he said.

Sudanese peace campaign T-Shirt: Peace for Sudan and Security for Darfur

T-Shirt:  Peace for Sudan and Security for Darfur

A T-shirt specially printed for a peace campaign is seen at the workshop of textile designer Thuraya Salah Ali, 37, a Sudanese from Darfur, in Khartoum February 26,2009. The T-shirt reads "Peace for Sudan and Security for Darfur". REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra (SUDAN)

Libyan minister: AU countries will leave ICC

From Radio Netherlands Tuesday 03 March 2009:
Libyan minister: AU countries will leave ICC
Libya's African Affairs Minister Abdul Salam al-Tereyki has told reporters in the Sudanese capital Khartoum that the members of the African Union (AU) would withdraw from the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague if it issues an arrest warrant against Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir. Mr al-Tereyki is also the AU envoy for Sudan.

However, the newspaper Sudan Tribune also reports that "Last month the head of the State Parties to the Rome Statute of the ICC, Liechtenstein's Christian Wenaweser, said he was not aware of any move by African countries to revoke their membership at the ICC."

The Chief Prosecutor of the ICC, Luis Moreno Ocampo, wants to prosecute the Sudanese president for genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur. On Wednesday, it will be announced whether an arrest warrant for Mr al-Bashir will be issued.

More than 50,000 people have fled government and rebel attacks in Darfur in recent weeks

Rob Crilly's report from Otash Camp, Darfur, western Sudan, for The Christian Science Monitor 3 March 2009:
Otash aid camp, Darfur

Photo: Forced to flee: Umsinin Abdullai Adam reached the Otash aid camp last week after surviving a government attack on the town of Muhajiriya, Sudan. (ROB CRILLY)

Darfuris flee on eve of Bashir case

Six years after the start of Darfur's messy conflict and days before Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir is expected to be charged with war crimes, the steady stream of people arriving at the region's aid camps is a reminder of the scale of humanitarian crisis in Darfur.

A United Nations-led military force is on the ground. Government officials are subject to international sanctions and the world is demanding action.

Yet people like Yacoub Suleiman Hari are still staring death in the face, forced to flee their homes after recent attacks by the notorious government-backed Arab janjaweed militia.

He is one of 50,000 people displaced from the town of Muhajiriya in South Darfur after a rebel advance followed up by government and janjaweed reprisals in February.

More than 23,000 have trudged and trucked their way to the capital of North Darfur, filling already overstretched aid camps to the breaking point.

Thousands more have been arriving in Otash, on the outskirts of Nyala, the capital of South Darfur.

"We knew something like this was going to happen. We had been afraid for a long time," said Mr. Suleiman, as he put the finishing touches on his new home, a simple hut built from sticks covered with reed mats – a gift from his brother.

"Things had been very difficult with lots of small fighting," he says. "Then the janjaweed came and attacked our home."

More than 300,000 people have died and more than 2.5 million people have been displaced since the conflict in Sudan's troubled Darfur region broke out after rebels took up arms against the government in 2003.

The town of Muhajiriya had been under the control of guerrillas loyal to Minni Minnawi, the only rebel leader to sign a 2006 peace deal with the government. However, a spate of defections and fighting saw the town switch to another rebel group, the Justice and Equality Movement in January amid weeks of deadly clashes.

That was the signal for the government forces to retake the town, which they did with the help of air support.

Suleiman, a father of 30, gathered up the seven children he still had living at home as gunmen on camels and horses swept through the town just as dawn was breaking.

They walked for two hours to a neighboring village before venturing back the next day to salvage what they could.

"There was nothing left. All my animals were gone, my goats, everything," he said.

His home had been torched.

The family's remaining possessions – a battered suitcase and a sack of dirty clothes – were sitting in the new shelter.

All around, other families are trying to make their homes in the sprawling camp, already home to more than 70,000 people.

They face a constant battle against the dust that swirls through the air and the uncertainty of life in the camps. Many of the alleys become no-go areas at night. Gunshots and robberies are a daily hazard.

Suleiman arrived on Friday, a reminder that all the world's efforts to resolve Darfur's multilayered conflict have made little difference to more than 2 million people forced into camps for their own protection.

Once again aid agencies are faced with a fresh emergency.

Toby Lanzer, the UN's deputy humanitarian coordinator in northern Sudan, says the UN is now desperately trying to reach all the people displaced from Muhajiriya and surrounding towns.

"It's a bad time to be on the move because the land is bone dry," Mr. Lanzer says. "It's very difficult to reach people in rural areas, and we know there are places where there are thousands of people in dire straits."

On Wednesday, judges at the International Criminal Court at The Hague will announce whether President Bashir will face charges for his government's actions in Darfur. The court's chief prosecutor has presented them with evidence of war crimes, murder, and – most contentious of all – genocide.

They are expected to issue a warrant for Bashir's arrest, their first for a sitting head of state.

All eyes are now on how Khartoum reacts. Officials and government-controlled newspapers have gradually stepped up their rhetoric in recent days, preparing the ground for pro-Bashir rallies planned for immediately after the ICC judges announce their decision.

Bashir himself spoke at a mass gathering during the weekend.

"Where was international justice during the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan, the bombing of Gaza, and the crimes committed in the prisons of Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib?" he said on Sunday.

Most diplomats and observers in Khartoum say the Sudanese government will avoid a knee-jerk response and take its time responding. But no one knows for sure.

Aid workers in Sudan fear a backlash that could prevent them from reaching people in need.

"We are the ones on the ground, and while we will try to keep operating as normal, it is very difficult with all of this hanging over us, knowing that the government could easily expel some of us just to make a point that it is still in control," said an aid worker, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Abdallah Adam Khatir, an independent analyst in Khartoum, said the government was preparing to maintain the illusion of business as usual.

"We have heard propaganda from officials and the president himself," he says, "but they are all trying to play down the ICC and make it seem as if it is irrelevant."
- - -

Some of Rob Crilly's tweets on Twitter, from Darfur, as of 3 March 2009:

Big show of strength expected tomorrow here in El Fasher. Flights overhead and military on streets for ICC
43 minutes ago from web

Now to stock up on dried goods and bottles of water in case it all kicks off
about 1 hour ago from web

Exclusive just filed to The Times
about 1 hour ago from web

http://zi.ma/270021 so here's my Monitor piece
about 4 hours ago from web

Finishing off Irish Times piece for ICC tomorrow. Tried to explain some of the complexities of Darfur, but think it gets too complicated
about 5 hours ago from web

In and out of Zam Zam. Got cracking story on Sudan govt causing probs, but think it may get out before tomorrow morning
about 6 hours ago from web

Only one day to go before indictment. Exhausted. Off to Zam Zam camp this morning
about 12 hours ago from web

Dinner plans ruined
about 23 hours ago from web

Firefight in market
about 24 hours ago from txt

Tired and dusty. Time to actually start doing some writing
11:52 PM Mar 1st from web

Dinner is a packet of Maryland chocolate chip cookies
11:43 AM Mar 1st from web

off out on a night patrol with Unamid around the town of el Fasher
5:25 AM Mar 1st from web

just arrived el fasher, north darfur
3:27 AM Mar 1st from web
- - -
Postscript from Sudan Watch

Note that many news reports are saying all eyes are on Khartoum's reaction to ICC's announcement tomorrow. I seem to be the only one thinking the complete opposite: that all eyes should be on the rebels reactions!  The savedarfurcrowd (what's so great about living in the deserts of Darfur? there's nothing there except oil) and many reporters are copying each other obsessing over the arrest warrant for Sudan's president without showing the slightest interest in ICC charges against rebel commanders responsible for the horrific slaying of Darfur peacekeepers at Haskanita. Sheep. Baa.

Darfur, western Sudan

Darfur photo courtesy  Beliefnet.com

Sudan's Bashir: "Where did Khalil [Ibrahim, JEM leader] get 200 Landcruisers loaded with heavy artillery, anti-tank and anti-aircraft weapons?"

Today's news from Sudan Radio Service:

3 March - (Merowe) - The President of the Republic, Omar al-Bashir, says that whatever the announcement made by the International Criminal Court on Wednesday, it will not affect the development of Sudan.

Addressing an inauguration ceremony at the Merowe dam on Tuesday, President al-Bashir said that the prospect of the ICC decision does not worry his government.

[Omar al-Bashir]:”They want to make us busy with their own issues and their accusations, and we will not care about these, they will announce their decision tomorrow, let them issue a second, a third - or ten decisions… This is not the first resolution against Sudan from the UN Security Council. The last one was Resolution 1706. Where is it now? We told them to soak it in water and drink the juice.”

Al-Bashir also accused the western countries of supplying the Darfur anti-government groups with weapons.

He claimed the best example of this was the support received by the Justice and Equality Movement which attacked Omdurman last May.

[Omar al-Bashir]:”We signed the Abuja agreement and they [JEM] organized it with us and they said it was a final agreement and the non-signatories will be punished. In the end, they supported all the non-signatory movements with money, weapons and vehicles. Where did Khalil [Ibrahim, JEM leader] get 200 Landcruisers loaded with heavy artillery, anti-tank and anti-aircraft weapons? Were did he get them?

Last month, the Government of National Unity and JEM signed a goodwill and confidence-building agreement in Doha, Qatar.
- - -

3 March - (The Hague) - A decision is expected by the International Criminal Court on whether or not to issue an arrest warrant for President Omar Hassan al-Bashir on Wednesday.

Sudan Radio Service spoke to ICC spokesperson Sonia Robla on Tuesday in The Hague.

Sudan Radio Service producer David Sanango asked her for a reaction to a threat from Libya that 37 African countries could withdraw from the ICC if al-Bashir is issued with an arrest warrant.

[Sonia Robla]: “We can not answer this question because it is too hypothetical. First of all, we don’t have a warrant of arrest yet. I don’t know if we will get it tomorrow, secondly we don’t answer hypothetical situations which will not, I mean I don’t think it will happen, you know so I am afraid that the judicial institution at this stage is not ready to answer that one.”

[Sudan Radio Service]: What is the possibility that the ICC will issue an arrest warrant for President Omar al-Bashir tomorrow?

[Sonia Robla]: “We don’t discuss possibilities or again we don’t respond to hypothetical questions. It is not for me to estimate the chances of the judges of the court issuing an warrant of arrest or not. What do you want to say? Fifty per cent? Twenty per cent? Sixty per cent? Do you think I’m crazy?”

That was Sonia Robla, the ICC spokesperson speaking to Sudan Radio Service from The Hague.
- - -

3 March - (Khartoum) - The SPLM chairman in Khartoum state, Bol Ring, told Sudan Radio Service on Wednesday, that the SPLM in Khartoum state has formed a committee to deal with the consequences of the ICC decision.

[Bol Ring]: “Truly, the SPLM in Khartoum state has put in place administrative and political arrangements. This committee functions at the SPLM northern sector level. And we are now coordinating with other sectors in Khartoum state so that we can act in case there is a security breach. We will control ourselves and we hope the NCP will be wise and responsible.”

Ring said that the two parties will coordinate with each other to ensure the safety and security of all the civilians in the Khartoum area.
- - -

3 March - (Yambio) - The Governor of Western Equatoria state is urging the people of Tambura and Nagero counties to cooperate and live together in peace.

The people of Tambura and Nagero counties have disagreed about county border demarcations after Nagero county was formed after the signing of the CPA.

The governor, Jemma Nunu Kumba, speaking to Sudan Radio Service on Tuesday by phone from Yambio, explains why there has been a dispute between the two communities:

[Jemma Nunu Kumba]: “The mistake was right from the beginning when the new county was created. The border was not specified, secondly even the number of payams that constitute the county was not clearly specified but later on people try to create their own border and now brought misunderstanding between the two communities. Efforts were done previously by the late governor to solve the problem but did not succeed, the neutral committee which was formed was made up of members from different counties. They made their recommendations and the former governor based the negotiations, but the discussions were rejected by the people of Nagero.”

Kumba said that the problem will be solved by the results of the fifth population census that will determine the boundaries of the border.

In a press statement, the Nagero county commissioner, Joseph Natale Sabuni, said that the county authorities will organize a reconciliation conference to settle the land dispute between the two counties.

UNAMID: Security situation in Darfur relatively calm

Report from UNAMID communication and public information division:
UNAMID / Security situation in Darfur

EL FASHER (DARFUR), Sudan, March 3, 2009/African Press Organization (APO)/ — The security situation in Darfur has been reported to be relatively calm; UNAMID forces are conducting their normal activities, including robust patrolling, and they are closely monitoring the situation throughout the region.

UNAMID was informed by Government authorities in El Fasher that a military show of force would be conducted in El Fasher tomorrow between 0930 and 1600 hours.

Force Commander visits Egyptian engineering company

UNAMID Force Commander, General Martin Luther Agwai, today visited the Egyptian engineering company that is based in El Fasher and commended them for their efforts in constructing and expanding several UNAMID camps in Darfur and upgrading the El Fasher Airport since their arrival in the middle of last year.

Lieutenant Colonel Mohammed Radewan, commander of the engineering company, briefed General Agwai on recent developments. The company has a total strength of 335 peacekeepers, including one road platoon, one construction platoon, one water supply platoon, a combat engineering platoon, an administrative and medical section and a protection force platoon.

Meanwhile, the final batch of additions to the Egyptian infantry battalion, consisting of 93 personnel, arrived in El Fasher today. They will join the rest of the battalion, which is deployed in the North Darfur town of Umm Kaddada.

Shooting incident in El Fasher, North Darfur

Further to yesterday’s report about a shooting incident at the Manawashi Market in El Fasher, North Darfur, UNAMID was advised that a group of militiamen were firing in the market and had attempted to loot shops, allegedly due to their discontent with not having received salaries. One person was killed and six wounded in the incident.

Upon his return from Khartoum to El Fasher later in the day, the Wali of North Darfur visited the wounded in the local hospital. An outraged crowd demonstrating against the looting reportedly began throwing stones at his vehicle, prompting the Wali’s close protection team to begin shooting in the air. No injuries were reported.

Sudan president tells court to "eat" expected warrant

Heh.  The Sudanese have a great way with words.  See Reuters report by Aziz El-Kaissouni today 3 March 2009 - excerpt:
Sudan president tells court to ''eat'' expected warrant:

KHARTOUM (Reuters) - Sudan's President Omar Hassan al-Bashir was defiant towards the International Criminal Court Tuesday, telling it to "eat" an expected warrant for his arrest for alleged war crimes in Darfur.

"They will issue their decision tomorrow ... this coming decision, they can prepare right now: they can eat it (the warrant)," Bashir told a crowd of cheering supporters who lit and stamped on an effigy of ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo.

Bashir's comments were made at the opening of a hydroelectric dam in Merowe, northern Sudan, a day before ICC judges were due to respond to a request by Ocampo for an arrest warrant for Bashir on charges of war crimes in the Darfur region of western Sundan.

The opening of the dam took place in a carnival atmosphere with confetti and music, and Bashir sought to dismiss the importance of the Hague-based court's decision.

"They want us preoccupied with their issues, their accusations ... we want to say to people, don't be too concerned with these decisions. We want the answer," Bashir said.

The answer, Bashir said, is Sudanese development, and he announced a raft of projects in the works, including more dams, highways and more cultivation of wheat.

"This is a proud people, a people that do not accept insults, do not accept humiliation," Bashir said. Challenges like the ICC are "added motivation for more achievements."

The opening of the dam, billed by Bashir as "the beginning of the end of poverty in Sudan," was attended by dignitaries from Arab states, as well as Chinese officials, and executives from European and Chinese companies involved in the project.

Bashir used the occasion to announce cuts in electricity prices, for the poor and for industry and agriculture, ranging between 25-30 percent.

Tensions have risen in Sudan as it awaits the decision by the ICC, which China, the African Union and the Arab League have warned could destabilise the region, worsen the Darfur conflict and threaten an already troubled peace deal between north Sudan and the semi-autonomous south.

Some Western embassies have warned their citizens of the potential for violent protests if Bashir is charged.

Sudanese officials have sought to reassure foreign missions that while there would be "popular expressions" if the ICC issued a warrant, authorities would not allow diplomats, their missions or foreigners to be targeted. [...]
Sudan president

Photo: Sudanese President Omar Hassan al- Bachir addresses an assembly of politicians, religious leaders, artists and students from Sudan's eastern provinces in Khartoum, March 1, 2009. (REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra)

ICC's Ocampo says if judges do not issue a warrant against Sudan's President Bashir, he would appeal

This is a curious snippet of news emerging from the ICC's prosecutor at the eleventh hour. Maybe the judges need more evidence (if it exists) to prove Darfur case as genocide. After five years of tracking news on Sudan very closely, I shall be most surprised if the judges rule Darfur as genocide but not at all surprised if they do not (and rightly so in my view) issue an arrest warrant against Sudanese President Al-Bashir. 

BBC report Tuesday, 3 March 2009 - excerpt:
'Strong evidence' for Bashir case

The war crimes court's chief prosecutor says there is strong evidence in favour of his Darfur genocide case against Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir.

Luis Moreno Ocampo said he had more than 30 witnesses prepared to testify against Mr Bashir at The Hague.

On Wednesday International Criminal Court (ICC) judges will announce if they will indict Sudan's leader.

Mr Bashir, who denies the charges, said any move by the ICC to seek his arrest would be worthless.

Sudan does not accept ICC's jurisdiction.

"Any decision by the International Criminal Court has no value for us," Sudan's leader said at the inauguration of a dam on the Nile north of Khartoum, according to AFP news agency.

"It will not be worth the ink it is written on."

Appeal

Prosecutors sought the warrants for Mr Bashir last July on 10 charges of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes.

They allege that the president mobilised Sudan's military and Arab militias in a campaign of murder, rape and forced displacement.

Mr Moreno Ocampo told a small group of reporters at the court's headquarters in The Hague: "The intention was to exterminate three ethnic groups and that is why it is genocide according to our view."

The Argentine prosecutor said if judges decided against issuing a warrant, he would appeal.

The decision of the judges is set to be announced at 1300 GMT on Wednesday at a press conference in The Hague.
- - -

AFP report Tuesday, 3 March 2009 - excerpt:
World Court has 'strong evidence' against Sudan's Beshir: prosecutor
THE HAGUE (AFP) — Sudan's president was warned by prosecutors Tuesday that strong evidence has been compiled of his involvement in war crimes in Darfur, on the eve of a decision by judges over whether to seek his arrest.

While President Omar al-Beshir said he would regard any decision by the International Criminal Court as worthless, the ICC's chief prosecutor said he had dozens of witnesses ready to prove the veteran leader's guilt.

If the warrant is granted and an arrest carried out, the 65-year-old would become the first sitting head of state to be hauled before the ICC since the UN court opened in 2002.

"We have strong evidence against Beshir," chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo told reporters in The Hague, the seat of the court.

"We have more than 30 different witnesses who will present how he managed and controlled everything," Moreno-Ocampo added.

In July last year, Moreno-Ocampo asked a pre-trial chamber to issue a warrant for Beshir's arrest on 10 counts of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide in a decision that triggered outrage in Khartoum.

Moreno-Ocampo reiterated his allegation Tuesday that genocide was being committed in camps for people displaced from their villages in Darfur where a six-year conflict has cost several hundred thousand lives.

"The weapons in the camps are rape and hunger. Five thousand people are dying each month."

As for witnesses, Moreno-Ocampo said some were being protected "because we foresaw what is happening now: they are attacking people who they believe could be our witness."

The decision of the judges is set to be announced at 1300 GMT on Wednesday.

However Beshir said on Tuesday he regarded any decision by the ICC on whether to seek his arrest would be disregarded.

"Any decision by the International Criminal Court has no value for us," Beshir said at the inauguration of a dam on the Nile north of Khartoum.

"It will not be worth the ink it is written on."

"The Western world is targeting Sudan in order to stop... its development projects but we absolutely don't care," Beshir said.

"We will respond to all these decision with new development projects."

Thousand of Sudanese gathered for the opening ceremony in an apparent show of support for the president who seized power in a coup 20 years ago, with many holding up posters of Beshir with the message: "We are with you."

Pictures of Ocampo were strewn on the ground to be trampled on by the crowd.

The prosecutor meanwhile said he had been sleeping "very well", and was prepared for any outcome.

If the judges dismissed his application for an arrest warrant in its entirety, he would appeal. If they approved the application only partly, he would analyse the reasoning before deciding how to proceed, he said.

While the United States has slapped sanctions on Beshir's regime, he has received diplomatic backing from the African Union which has called on the UN Security Council to suspend the court's proceedings.

Eritrea rejects ICC issue and stands alongside the Sudanese people

Eritrea's President Isaias assured a Sudanese government delegation headed by Dr. Nafie Ali Nafie that as the move being taken by the International Criminal Court (ICC) against President Omar Hassan Al-Beshir not only targets the Sudanese leader and the Sudan itself but also the entire countries of the region, Eritrea would not accept it and would stand alongside the Sudanese people.

Source: The State of Eritrea's Ministry of Information at shabait.com (hat tip AllAfrica) by Staff March 2, 2009:
President Isaias holds talks with Sudanese government delegation

Eritrea in talks with Sudan

Asmara, 2 March 2009 - President Isaias Afwerki today received and held talks at the State Palace with a Sudanese government delegation headed by Dr. Nafie Ali Nafie, Sudanese Presidential Assistant and Head of Political and Organizational Affairs of the ruling National Congress Party.

President Isaias assured the delegation that as the move being taken by the International Criminal Court (ICC) against President Omar Hassan Al-Beshir not only targets the Sudanese leader and the Sudan itself but also the entire countries of the region, Eritrea would not accept it and would stand alongside the Sudanese people.

Dr. Nafie Ali Nafie on his part lauded the firm stance of President Isaias, as well as the people and Government of Eritrea in rejecting the ICC issue and the efforts they are exerting towards promoting a comprehensive peace and justice in the Sudan. In this respect, he described such a stance as “correct and courageous.”

Stating that the interference of the International Criminal Court would only aggravate the Sudanese issue in general and that of Darfur in particular rather than bring about solution, Dr. Nafie underlined that the ICC issue would undermine regional peace and prompt neo-colonialism in Africa.

Moreover, the two sides reached understanding on continuing the already launched joint efforts aimed at promoting peace and stability in the Sudan.

Meanwhile, the first official meeting of the Joint Eritrean-Sudanese Committee towards strengthening relations between the two countries has been conducted at the Denden Hall here in Asmara.

Eritrea in talks with Sudan

In the meeting, an understanding was reached on the speedy launching of development and economic cooperation between Eritrea and Sudan, besides undertaking joint strategic programs. Discussion was also conducted on ways of extending the necessary support so as to provide impetus to the positive steps taken so far taking into consideration that enhanced bilateral ties benefits both countries and the region as a whole.

Eritrea in talks with Sudan

The high-level Sudanese delegation headed by Dr. Nafie Ali Nafie returned home in the afternoon hours today concluding a one-day working visit.

It is to be recalled that President Isaias received and held talks on February 28 with SPLM delegation headed by Dr. Deng Alor, Sudanese Foreign Minister and Member of the Movement’s Executive Council.

UN peacekeepers deeply worried about military build-up along Sudan-Chad border

Sudanese ministers have said they will ignore any warrant, and UN peacekeeping chief Le Roy said UN peacekeepers have no mandate and will not move to arrest al-Bashir.

He said the UN has contingency plans to react to events on the ground, which he would not disclose. "It is our task to try to control as much as possible any crowd movement, to make sure they will not harm anyone, local or international," Le Roy said.

The undersecretary-general for peacekeeping said the UN has been "rather reassured" by its discussions with Sudanese government officials in recent months on the need to protect UN peacekeepers, "but at the same time we are deeply worried by what we see in some areas, mostly along the Chad-Sudan borders.

"There are increasing tensions, more military forces from the Chadian side on the Sudanese border ... probably Chadian rebels," he said.

Source: Associated Press report March 3, 2009:
UN in Sudan ready for ruling on Sudan's leader

UNITED NATIONS (AP) - U.N. peacekeepers in Sudan are prepared for violence if the International Criminal Court issues an arrest warrant for President Omar al-Bashir and are worried by a military build-up along the Sudan-Chad border, a top official said Monday.

U.N. peacekeeping chief Alain Le Roy welcomed government that they will protect peacekeepers in southern Sudan and the joint U.N.-African Union mission in Darfur against "any negative impact" from a possible court decision.

Le Roy told a news conference that peacekeepers will not scale back activities on Wednesday when judges at the court in The Hague, Netherlands, said they will announce whether they will order al-Bashir's arrest for his role in the six-year Darfur conflict.

Prosecutors at the ICC - the world's first permanent war crimes tribunal - asked last July that the Sudanese leader be arrested for genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity for masterminding a campaign of murder, torture and rape by government troops and Arab militias in the Darfur region.

Sudanese ministers have said they will ignore any warrant, and Le Roy said U.N. peacekeepers have no mandate and will not move to arrest al-Bashir.

But if the court orders the president's arrest, there could be public protests and possible attacks against the nearly 13,000 U.N. and African Union peacekeepers in Darfur, and the more than 13,000-strong U.N. peacekeeping mission in semiautonomous southern Sudan to enforce a 2005 agreement which ended Africa's longest civil war.

"We don't fear that the U.N. mission will be specifically targeted by any group," Le Roy said. "I'm sure there will be some crowd movements. There will be some violence here and there. What we don't know is the level of violence, and we hope the government of Sudan will act responsibly to make sure that all beginning of violence will be stopped in due time."

He said the U.N. has contingency plans to react to events on the ground, which he would not disclose.

"It is our task to try to control as much as possible any crowd movement, to make sure they will not harm anyone, local or international," Le Roy said.

The undersecretary-general for peacekeeping said the U.N. has been "rather reassured" by its discussions with Sudanese government officials in recent months on the need to protect U.N. peacekeepers, "but at the same time we are deeply worried by what we see in some areas, mostly along the Chad-Sudan borders.

"There are increasing tensions, more military forces from the Chadian side on the Sudanese border ... probably Chadian rebels," he said.

While the U.N. has no proof that the "drastically increased" build-up on the border with the Darfur region is linked to the ruling by the court, Le Roy said the timing was probably "in the head" of those involved in beefing up the force.

"We are worried because we see this tension coming at the same time the ICC decision is coming," he said. "We know that many people have arms and weapons in the region and we see some buildup. And that's why - through statements and through various diplomatic channels - we try to (urge) all governments and rebels to exercise maximum restraint and not to use that difficult period to take any violent initiative.

The war in Darfur began in 2003 when rebel groups took up arms against the government complaining of discrimination and neglect. U.N. officials say up to 300,000 people have died and 2.7 million have fled their homes. A 26,000-strong U.N.-AU force is being deployed in Darfur to help protect civilians, and as of Tuesday over 12,900 - about 66 percent - will be on the ground, U.N. officials said.

Will Africa Let Sudan Off the Hook? (Desmond Tutu)

It’s worth remembering that more than 20 African countries were among the founders of the International Criminal Court, and of the 108 nations that joined the court, 30 are in Africa. That the court’s four active investigations are all in Africa is not because of prosecutorial prejudice — it is because three of the countries involved (Central African Republic, Congo and Uganda) themselves requested that the prosecutor intervene. Only the Darfur case was referred to the prosecutor by the Security Council. The prosecutor on his own initiative is considering investigations in Afghanistan, Colombia and Georgia.

Source: New York Times opinion piece by Desmond Tutu March 2, 2009:
Will Africa Let Sudan Off the Hook?

(Cape Town) The expected issuance of an arrest warrant for President Omar Hassan al-Bashir of Sudan by the International Criminal Court tomorrow presents a stark choice for African leaders — are they on the side of justice or on the side of injustice? Are they on the side of the victim or the oppressor? The choice is clear but the answer so far from many African leaders has been shameful.

Because the victims in Sudan are African, African leaders should be the staunchest supporters of efforts to see perpetrators brought to account. Yet rather than stand by those who have suffered in Darfur, African leaders have so far rallied behind the man responsible for turning that corner of Africa into a graveyard.

In response to news last July that Luis Moreno-Ocampo, the court’s chief prosecutor, was seeking an arrest warrant for President Bashir for genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes, the African Union issued a communiqué to the United Nations Security Council asking it to suspend the court’s proceedings. Rather than condemn the genocide in Darfur, the organization chose to underscore its concern that African leaders are being unfairly singled out and to support President Bashir’s effort to delay court proceedings.

More recently, the Group of 77, an influential organization at the United Nations consisting of 130 developing states and including nearly every African country, gave Sudan its chairmanship. The victory came after African members endorsed Sudan’s candidacy in spite of the imminent criminal charges against its president.

I regret that the charges against President Bashir are being used to stir up the sentiment that the justice system — and in particular, the international court — is biased against Africa. Justice is in the interest of victims, and the victims of these crimes are African. To imply that the prosecution is a plot by the West is demeaning to Africans and understates the commitment to justice we have seen across the continent.

It’s worth remembering that more than 20 African countries were among the founders of the International Criminal Court, and of the 108 nations that joined the court, 30 are in Africa. That the court’s four active investigations are all in Africa is not because of prosecutorial prejudice — it is because three of the countries involved (Central African Republic, Congo and Uganda) themselves requested that the prosecutor intervene. Only the Darfur case was referred to the prosecutor by the Security Council. The prosecutor on his own initiative is considering investigations in Afghanistan, Colombia and Georgia.

African leaders argue that the court’s action will impede efforts to promote peace in Darfur. However, there can be no real peace and security until justice is enjoyed by the inhabitants of the land. There is no peace precisely because there has been no justice. As painful and inconvenient as justice may be, we have seen that the alternative — allowing accountability to fall by the wayside — is worse.

The issuance of an arrest warrant for President Bashir would be an extraordinary moment for the people of Sudan — and for those around the world who have come to doubt that powerful people and governments can be called to account for inhumane acts. African leaders should support this historic occasion, not work to subvert it.

Desmond Tutu, the former Anglican archbishop of Cape Town, received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984.

Reflections on Sudan, Bashir and the ICC - Sudan needs a Sudanese solution

The international and diplomatic community is acutely divided over whether Bashir should be arrested and tried, or alternatively, whether the United Nations Security Council should use its powers under Article 16 to defer the ICC prosecution in the hope of encouraging peace negotiations.

Only the Sudanese truly understand the unique realities and challenges of living in their environment and are qualified to offer the solutions for lasting peace.

Sudan needs a Sudanese solution.

Source: Africa Live opinion piece by Kristen on Tuesday, March 3 2009:
Reflections on Sudan, Bashir and the ICC

The International Criminal Court ("ICC") is due to decide this week whether it will issue a warrant for the arrest and prosecution of Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in Darfur. Bashir is accused as being leader of the government responsible for arming and training the janjaweed militia and ordering them to attack members of the Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa tribes in Darfur. Bashir’s pretext for the attacks has always been ‘counterinsurgency’: he claims that the measures are part of a campaign to defend the country against Darfuri rebel groups who took up arms against the Sudanese government in 2003. The Prosecutor of the ICC, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, calls it genocide.

In the six months since the Prosecutor first made his Public Application for issue of the warrant the level of political and media attention surrounding the decision has reached colossal levels. The international and diplomatic community is acutely divided over whether Bashir should be arrested and tried, or alternatively, whether the United Nations Security Council should use its powers under Article 16 to defer the ICC prosecution in the hope of encouraging peace negotiations.

DEBATING THE INDICTMENT

The decision is undoubtedly one of great consequence and significance. If as expected the ICC authorizes the indictment, it will be the first such action taken by the court (or any similar legal entity) against a serving head of state. Arguments in support of the warrant and the proceedings against Bashir include:

(1) his leading role in coordinating the attacks against civilians: according to Human Rights Watch, Bashir played a pivotal role in mobilizing the janjaweed, has most likely ordered all major aerial bombardments, and is the driving force behind the government’s overall "ethnic cleansing" policy. According to the Prosecutor of the ICC, he is the master of the government’s genocidal plan and is using the entire state apparatus to put it into effect.

(2) the unlikely success of current peace negotiations: opponents of the ICC proceedings protest that the issue of the arrest warrant will likely shatter the fragile peace process, which had some limited success recently with a declaration of intent being signed between the government and the main rebel group. Supporters respond that neither Bashir nor his government have ever been serious about settlement talks and have broken agreements many times in the past.

(3) a deferral would set a dangerous precedent: deferring the proceedings on the pretext of encouraging a peace deal would send a message to other would-be targets of the ICC that justice can be bargained and criminal prosecution avoided through political manipulation.

Britain, France and the US support the ICC process and are against a deferral of the proceedings. The African Union (AU), Arab League, Organisation of the Islamic Conference, and the Group of 77 developing countries and China, support deferral of the proceedings, claiming that:

(1) an indictment would destroy chances of peace: in addition to the recent declaration of intent, the Sudanese and the international community are in the process of implementing the Comprehensive Peace Agreement ("CPA") signed in January 2005 which ended the second civil war. Although frustrated by the government’s obstinacy and in need of renewed international support, it represents Sudan’s best chance for enduring peace. The indictment could lead the government to suspend implementation of the CPA and abandon the current Darfur negotiations. The government has indicated that the security of the UN peacekeeping force in Sudan could also be threatened.

(2) Western double standards: amongst developing nations and especially in Africa, the ICC is increasingly being seen as a post-colonial tool used by rich Western nations to pass judgment upon their poor third-world cousins. This perception is based mostly on the ICC’s case-load, which is currently focused entirely on Africa. It is not helped by the fact that the USA, one of the indictment’s most ardent supporters, has not even ratified the Rome Statute.

(3) the indictment cannot be fulfilled: even if authorized, there is very little chance that Bashir will be handed over to the court in the near future, as such an act would require the cooperation of the government of Sudan. This would leave the ICC with another outstanding arrest warrant (the warrant against Joseph Kony in Uganda being also unfulfilled) damaging its credibility and its capacity to effectively carry out its mission.

DEBATING THE ISSUES

Notwithstanding all this very worthy academic debate, indicting Bashir alone will not solve Darfur’s problems. It is not a substitute for a comprehensive political and military solution to the current crisis, and does not liberate the Sudanese and international community from the much more difficult task of understanding the factors driving the conflict and seeking an effective strategy for managing them. These factors include:

(1) allocation of scarce resources: although the conflict began as response to a rebel insurgency, it has continued as an extension of a complex dispute over resources in a land which, due to desertification and other factors, has increasingly little. The lack of resources has been exacerbated by inefficient and corrupt government agricultural policies favouring commercial elites and dispossessing small rural farmers. Any long-term solution will require an understanding of how Darfuris use their limited resources and finding ways to use them more efficiently and equitably.

(2) reforming the Sudanese government: in the unlikely event that Bashir is arrested, it is most likely that he would be replaced by another hardliner, such as the second vice-president Ali Osman Taha or presidential adviser Nafie Ali Nafie. Both of these men have been as, if not more, responsible for the government’s genocidal policies. Enduring peace will require a thorough purging of all such ideologues from the Sudanese government and a dismantling of the entire war apparatus.

(3) disarming the rebels: a workable ceasefire will require the comprehensive disarming of rebel groups on both sides of the dispute. Attacks on civilians are now frequently committed by random gangs of janjaweed outside the government’s control. There are also significant divisions among the various rebel groups fighting Khartoum, and so far only one such group (the Justice and Equality Movement) has been brought into the current peace deal. A settlement will need to embrace all the different rebel movements and provide a timetable for disarmament. According to British researcher and author of the blog "Making Sense of Darfur", Alex de Waal, such a process could take between six and nine months.

These issues will remain at the heart of the conflict whether or not the ICC authorizes the indictment. Its decision in this regard is certainly important, but it should not be allowed to overshadow resolution of these matters. In the current debate, it seems that is the case.

Nor should the current debate obscure the fact that the Sudanese, with appropriate assistance from the international community, must be at the forefront of any resolution of the conflict. Only the Sudanese truly understand the unique realities and challenges of living in their environment and are qualified to offer the solutions for lasting peace. To quote de Waal:

"What I am looking for—and not finding—is a political strategy for solving Sudan’s political problems... Putting faith in international salvation is never a strategy and is always a mistake… Sudan needs a Sudanese solution… I don’t believe that Sudanese can afford to spend 2009 focusing on anything other than finding a consensus on the future of the nation."

On its own, the ICC is an inadequate response to this complex and urgent situation. In addition to dealing with Bashir, efforts should be urgently focused on dealing with the war apparatus and economy he has helped create and understanding the real issues driving the conflict. The people of Darfur do not have time to wait.

ICC: Put Peace Before Justice in Sudan

New York Times opinion piece by Franklin Graham, president and chief executive of Samaritan’s Purse and the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, March 2, 2009:
Put Peace Before Justice

(Nyala, Sudan) In 2001 a hospital operated by my relief organization in the southern Sudanese town of Lui was bombed nine times by forces of President Omar Hassan al-Bashir. Two years later, I had what would be my first of three meetings with Mr. Bashir, now one of the most wanted men on the planet. When I confronted him about these attacks he was fully aware of them. After our meeting they stopped. Mr. Bashir is rightly accused of great cruelty and destruction. But I have been able to deal with him.

It now looks as if the International Criminal Court will finally bring Mr. Bashir to his knees. Tomorrow the court is expected to announce its decision to issue an arrest warrant for the president, the first time it has sought the detention of a sitting head of state. Yet arresting Mr. Bashir now will likely only create further chaos in Sudan, which in recent years has been convulsed by separate conflicts in the south and in the Darfur region in the west.

The court may have good intentions. After all, any civilized person would condemn Mr. Bashir for his behavior. I have done so to his face.

In 16 years of relief work in Sudan, I have witnessed much of the violence that his government has inflicted. An estimated 300,000 people in Darfur have died and 2.5 million people have fled their homes in the wake of fighting among rebels, government forces and their allied Janjaweed militias. Nor does the destruction stop there: Our organization has identified nearly 500 churches that were destroyed by Mr. Bashir’s forces.

But arresting Mr. Bashir now threatens to undo the progress his country has made. In 2005, Sudan’s government and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement signed an accord ending the civil war in the south. The agreement paved the way for elections in the south later this year, as well as for a referendum on southern independence scheduled for 2011. The accord has brought benefits to Sudan, but it isn’t clear that they will last. Mr. Bashir, who fought members of his own party to approve the deal, is critical to the peace process.

I want to see justice served, but my desire for peace in Sudan is stronger. Mr. Bashir, accused of genocide and crimes against humanity, is hardly an ideal peacemaker. But given all the warring factions in Sudan, there is no guarantee that his replacement would be better.

For all his faults, Mr. Bashir has demonstrated that he is able to cooperate. On several occasions he has complied with my requests. When a hospital we operated in eastern Sudan was seized by government forces, Mr. Bashir granted us limited access. Mr. Bashir also made television time available for us to broadcast a Christian program at Christmas and Easter.

More important, Mr. Bashir helped make the peace agreement a reality. Now, his arrest could threaten the south’s elections and referendum, and hurl the country back into civil war. His removal could also spur retaliation by Bashir loyalists and other forces against civilians, United Nations peacekeepers or international aid workers.

We do have other options. The statute that established the court allows for the United Nations Security Council to postpone the court’s proceedings for 12 months, giving Sudan the time it will need to achieve peace. In that period President Bashir should do everything he can to ensure that the provisions of the agreement go fully into effect, and to cooperate with the United Nations and the United States to bring about political stability in Darfur.

President Obama can also do his part. He should move quickly to appoint a special envoy to Sudan, as he has wisely done in other hot spots of the world. Economic problems at home should not distract America’s president from exerting leadership to avert a crisis that threatens the future of Africa’s largest nation.

The removal of Mr. Bashir will make it harder to negotiate an end to the crisis in Sudan. Ultimately, justice will be served by a power higher than the International Criminal Court. In the meantime, justice without peace would be a hollow victory.

Monday, March 02, 2009

Darfur: The Road to Peace, by Dr David Hoile

Press Release received today from European Sudanese Public Affairs Council:
Darfur The Road to Peace book

In 2003 and 2004, Darfur became the epicentre of an international crisis. The three Darfur states, the size of Texas, lie in the largest African state - Sudan. Darfur itself has a complex tribal, ethnic and linguistic composition, and the complexities of the conflict have been magnified by international and regional events. But this is no excuse for the disinformation and confusion about Darfur. This book analyses the causes and course of the war as well as the obstacles to peace. In so doing, it challenges accusations of genocide and racism made against the government of Sudan. It is also critical of both the simplistic and often inaccurate media coverage of the war and of the role played by western governments and "advocacy" groups such as "Save Darfur" in artificially prolonging the conflict. Most important of all, the book examines the road map to peace in Darfur.

Darfur The Road to Peace book

The Book is available on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Darfur-Road-Peace-David-Hoile/dp/1903545412

About the Author

David Hoile is a public affairs consultant specialising in African affairs. He has studied Sudanese affairs for over ten years and is the author of Darfur in Perspective (2005), Images of Sudan: Case Studies in Propaganda and Misinformation (2003) and Farce Majeure: The Clinton Administration’s Sudan Policy 1993-2000 (2000) and editor of The Search for Peace in the Sudan: A Chronology of the Sudanese Peace Process 1989-2001 (2002). He is the author or editor of a number of other publications on African affairs, including Mozambique: A Nation in Crisis (1989) and Mozambique, Resistance and Freedom: A Case for Reassessment (1994). Dr Hoile is also a Research Professor at the Sudan University of Science and Technology and has been a Visiting Professor at the Institute of African-Asian Studies and the Department of Political Science at the University of Khartoum.

Director
European Sudanese Public Affairs Council
1 Northumberland Avenue
LONDON
WC2N 5BW

Telephone 020 7872 5434
E-mail directorespac@aol.com

Sunday, March 01, 2009

UNMIS calls upon Al-Raed to correct flagrant misreporting

From UN.org 1 March 2009:
Media report about UN envoy in Sudan 'complete fabrication,' declares mission
The United Nations Mission in Sudan (UNMIS) has strongly protested a report in today's Al-Raed newspaper alleging that Special Representative Ashraf Qazi admitted that the Mission provided information about the country to the International Criminal Court.

Ashraf Qazi

Photo: Ashraf Qazi

“The report is a complete fabrication,” the Mission said in a statement issued in Khartoum, referring to the report headlined 'Qazi admits UNMIS provided information to the ICC about Sudan.'

According to UNMIS, the Al-Raed report is a distortion of a recently published Egyptian magazine article, entitled 'I did not provide the ICC with reports on Al-Bashir-SRSG.'

The Mission questioned Al-Raed's motive in misrepresenting Mr. Qazi, the Secretary-General's Special Representative for Sudan and head of UNMIS, on so sensitive an issue at this particular time.

The International Criminal Court is due to announce its decision on the application for an arrest warrant against Sudanese President Omar Al-Bashir on charges of war crimes in Darfur on 4 March.

“UNMIS calls upon Al-Raed to correct this flagrant example of misreporting which, in the Mission's view, verges on disinformation,” the statement said.

The Mission added that it has repeatedly urged media to uphold standard journalistic practices and to check with the UNMIS Spokesperson's Office when reporting on UNMIS-related matters.

AU wants UN Security Council to suspend ICC charges against Sudan's Bashir while it seeks another solution to the problem

Report from IOL by Peter Fabricius Sunday March 01 2009:
UN fears violence if el-Bashir is charged
The United Nations is bracing itself for the reaction of Sudan's President Omar el-Bashir if the International Criminal Court (ICC) indicts him for war crimes in Darfur this week, as is widely expected.

The ICC said it will announce on Wednesday, whether to go ahead and press charges against el-Bashir for orchestrating the killing of thousands of civilians in Darfur.

The ICC prosecutor last year requested the court's judges to indict el-Bashir for genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity, alleging that, as the head of state, he bears responsibility for government violence against civilians in Darfur, including support for janjaweed militias who have murdered thousands.

In UN circles it is being said that the judges have already decided to press charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity but not genocide.

The UN fears that, because the ICC is a sister body, Sudanese forces will wreak revenge against UN peacekeepers in Darfur as well as humanitarian aid workers and that el-Bashir will also upset the fragile Comprehen-sive Peace Agreement with South Sudan.

UN gecretary-general Ban Ki-moon has repeatedly said throughout his present five-nation African safari - to South Africa, Tanzania, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda and Egypt - that he has met el-Bashir several times to urge him to "behave responsibly" if he is indicted.

Ban said this again yesterday at a press conference in Nairobi after meeting President Jakaya Kikwete and travelling to Arusha to see the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda.

He acknowledged that the implementation of the peace agreement between Khartoum and South Sudan could "face serious difficulty" if the ICC indicted el-Bashir. But he stressed that the Sudanese leaders should do nothing to upset the agreement or harm aid workers of peace-keeping troops of the joint UN-African Union peacekeeping mission Unamid.

Some UN officials believe el-Bashir will do nothing if indicted, but others fear his officials and militia allies might take an indictment as an insult to their leader and wreak revenge on peace-keepers and aid workers.

The indictment confronts Ban with a serious dilemma as he is committed to supporting the ICC, as an organisation within the UN family, and also the principle of international justice for violations of human rights.

But his first priority is to seek peace in Darfur and he fears these efforts could be upset by an indictment. He has acknowledged several times on this trip that there is a "delicate balance" between peace and justice.

However, on Friday he put much more stress on justice when he visited the Inter-national Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda in Arusha, Tanzania, which has been trying the perpetrators of the 1994 genocide in Rwanda for nearly 15 years.

Ban said after meeting the judges and commending them for their work that there was "no peace without justice".

He said the work of the tribunal was crucial in sending the message to perpetrators and potential perpetrators of human rights offences that they would never enjoy impunity for their crimes.

The tribunal has indicted 79 leaders of the genocide and has, or is, trying 55 of them. But 13 are still fugitives and Ban said he suspects that they are at large mainly in central and eastern Africa. He urged the governments and people of countries in these regions to hand them over to the ICC.

In South Africa on Wednesday, Ban met former president Thabo Mbeki, who has been appointed by the AU to deal with the el-Bashir indictment. The AU wants the UN Security Council to suspend the indictment while it seeks another solution to the problem.

This could mean handing over a Sudanese minister and another official who have already been indicted by the ICC for war crimes in Darfur. Mbeki said after meeting Ban that he was seeking a balance between peace and justice and that Ban was in agreement with those goals.

EUFOR commander says ICC's issuance of arrest warrant against Sudan president could worsen Chad crisis

From Irish Herald Sunday March 01 2009:
Chad crisis could worsen, warns army chief
The Irish commander of the EU peace enforcement mission to Chad today warned the troubled African region could face a worsening humanitarian situation.

EUfor's Lieutenant General Pat Nash said the decision on issuing an arrest warrant for the President of neighbouring Sudan, expected this week, could have serious repercussions.

There are fears indicting Omar Hassan al-Bashir for war crimes could spark fresh violence in the volatile Sudanese Darfur area, spilling over into eastern Chad.
- - -

Up to 5,000 rebels are congregating on the Sudan side of the Chad border, being closely monitored by EEUFOR. To save more lives and give peace a chance, the UN Security Council must suspend any arrest warrant that may be issued against Sudan's President Al-Bashir.

U.S. officials might allow ICC's Darfur case against Sudan president to be deferred by the U.N. Security Council?

From Los Angeles Times by Edmund Sanders March 1, 2009
reporting from Khartoum, Sudan
Uncertainty as Sudan awaits president's arrest  - excerpt:
If Sudan were to replace Bashir or agree to reforms, U.S. officials are prepared to allow the ICC case to be deferred by the U.N. Security Council.

"They are going to use the arrest warrant like a loaded gun, but not fire it," said one U.S. government official who was not authorized to speak publicly. "It's a way to say, 'Here is your last chance.' "

Others warn such a strategy is fraught with risk. Former U.S. envoy to Sudan Andrew Natsios questioned whether Sudan's ruling clique would respond to outside pressure.

"We are assuming that they will become more rational," he said. "But they become more inflexible, more confrontational and more brutal the more they are cornered."

Natsios warned that the ICC arrest warrant might trigger the collapse of the regime or a return to war, particularly if it distracts from implementation of the 2005 peace treaty that ended the civil war with southern rebels.

"We could end up with another Rwanda or Somalia or Democratic Republic of Congo in which hundreds of thousands of people could be killed," he said. "We could end up with something much worse."

edmund.sanders@ latimes.com

Special correspondent Alsanosi Ahmed contributed to this report.
- - -

From Sudan Tribune Sunday 1 March 2009:
US views ICC warrant for Sudan’s Bashir as his ‘last chance’ - excerpt:
February 28, 2009 (KHARTOUM) — The US is willing to consider supporting a suspension of International Criminal Court (ICC) move against Sudan president but views it his last chance according to a news report.