Islamic Supreme Council of Canada
Ontario: 2126
Burnhamthorpe Rd., West, : P.O.Box 67070, Mississauga,
Ontario L5L 5V4
Alberta: 28 Crowfoot Terrace NW, P.O.
Box 68142, Calgary, Alberta T3G 3N8,
Canada
British Columbia: 4065 Pandora Street,
Burnaby, B.C. V5C 2B1
Date: May 3, 2006
Press Release
Protest Against the Genocide in Darfur
ISCC urges the Canadian government
to help the victims in Darfur
Darfur conflict is NOT a
Christian & Muslim Conflict
Calgary) Once again, the executive council of
Islamic Supreme Council of Canada (ISCC) has strongly condemned the brutal
situation in Darfur. In a meeting held
yesterday, ISCC council members have asked the Prime Minister Stephen Harper to
help the victims in Darfur by sending the peacekeepers in the region and
increasing the aid funding for Darfur
region. Council has expressed
serious concerns over the lack of commitment from the international community
to resolve the conflict. ISCC condemns the government backed militia and the
rebels for murdering thousands of Sudanese Muslims and making more than 2.5
million homeless.
Moreover, ISCC executive council denounces the efforts by some anti-Islam
fundamentalists and anti-Islam media reporters for misleading Canadians. Darfur conflict is NOT a Christian and Muslim conflict.
It is a political and economical conflict between two Muslim ethnic groups. The
overwhelming majority on both sides is Muslim.
“In this conflict nearly everyone is Muslim and nearly everyone is
black”, Emily Wax, the
Washington Post East Africa bureau chief wrote in a column on April 23, 2006.
ISCC national president, Syed Soharwardy will be discussing the Darfur crises in his speech on Friday, May 5, 2006 at
1:45 PM at the Al Madinah Calgary Islamic Centre. After the speech a protest
rally will be held in front of the Al Madinah Calgary Islamic Centre, 5700 Flasbridge Dr., Calgary NE
For any questions, please call Syed Soharwardy @ 403-208-7148 OR Toll Free
(866)-208-6898
Thanks
Heard all you need to know about Darfur?
Think again. Three years after a government-backed militia began fighting
rebels and residents in this region of western Sudan, much of the conventional
wisdom surrounding the conflict -- including the religious, ethnic and economic
factors that drive it -- fails to match the realities on the ground. Tens of
thousands have died and some 2.5 million have been displaced, with no end to
the conflict in sight. Here are five truths to challenge the most common
misconceptions about Darfur:
1 Nearly everyone is Muslim
Early in the conflict, I was traveling through the desert expanses of
rebel-held Darfur when, amid decapitated huts and dead livestock, our SUV
roared up to an abandoned green and white mosque, riddled with bullets, its
windows shattered.
In my travels, I've seen destroyed mosques all over Darfur.
The few men left in the villages shared the same story: As government Antonov
jets dropped bombs, Janjaweed militia members rode in on horseback and attacked
the town's mosque -- usually the largest structure in town. The strange thing,
they said, was that the attackers were Muslim, too. Darfur is home to some of Sudan's most
devout Muslims, in a country where 65 percent of the population practices
Islam, the official state religion.
A long-running but recently pacified war between Sudan's north and south did
have religious undertones, with the Islamic Arab-dominated government fighting
southern Christian and animist African rebels over political power, oil and, in
part, religion.
"But it's totally different in Darfur," said Mathina Mydin, a
Malaysian nurse who worked in a clinic on the outskirts of Nyala, the capital
of South Darfur. "As a Muslim myself, I
wanted to bring the sides together under Islam. But I quickly realized this war
had nothing to do with religion."
2 Everyone is black
Although the conflict has also been framed as a battle between Arabs and black
Africans, everyone in Darfur appears
dark-skinned, at least by the usual American standards. The true division in Darfur is between ethnic groups, split between herders
and farmers. Each tribe gives itself the label of "African" or
"Arab" based on what language its members speak and whether they work
the soil or herd livestock. Also, if they attain a certain level of wealth,
they call themselves Arab.
Sudan
melds African and Arab identities. As Arabs began to dominate the government in
the past century and gave jobs to members of Arab tribes, being Arab became a
political advantage; some tribes adopted that label regardless of their ethnic
affiliation. More recently, rebels have described themselves as Africans
fighting an Arab government. Ethnic slurs used by both sides in recent
atrocities have riven communities that once lived together and intermarried.
"Black Americans who come to Darfur
always say, 'So where are the Arabs? Why do all these people look black?'
" said Mahjoub Mohamed Saleh, editor of Sudan's independent Al-Ayam
newspaper. "The bottom line is that tribes have intermarried forever in Darfur. Men even have one so-called Arab wife and one
so-called African. Tribes started labeling themselves this way several decades
ago for political reasons. Who knows what the real bloodlines are in Darfur?"
3 It's all about politics
Although analysts have emphasized the racial and ethnic aspects of the
conflict in Darfur, a long-running political battle
between Sudanese President Omar Hassan Bashir and radical Islamic cleric Hassan
al-Turabi may be more relevant.
A charismatic college professor and former speaker of parliament, Turabi has
long been one of Bashir's main political rivals and an influential figure in Sudan. He has
been fingered as an extremist; before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks Turabi often
referred to Osama bin Laden as a hero. More recently, the United Nations and
human rights experts have accused Turabi of backing one of Darfur's
key rebel groups, the Justice and Equality Movement, in which some of his top
former students are leaders.
Because of his clashes with Bashir, Turabi is usually under house arrest and
holds forth in his spacious Khartoum
villa for small crowds of followers and journalists. But diplomats say he still
mentors rebels seeking to overthrow the government.
"Darfur is simply the battlefield for a power struggle over Khartoum," said
Ghazi Suleiman, a Sudanese human rights lawyer. "That's why the government
hit back so hard. They saw Turabi's hand, and they want to stay in control of Sudan at any
cost."
4 This conflict is international
China and Chad have played key roles in the Darfur conflict.
In 1990, Chad's Idriss
Deby came to power by launching a military blitzkrieg from Darfur
and overthrowing President Hissan Habre. Deby hails from the elite Zaghawa
tribe, which makes up one of the Darfur rebel
groups trying to topple the government. So when the conflict broke out, Deby
had to decide whether to support Sudan or his tribe. He eventually
chose his tribe.
Now the Sudanese rebels have bases in Chad; I interviewed them in towns
full of Darfurians who tried to escape the fighting. Meanwhile, Khartoum is accused of supporting Chad's anti-Deby rebels, who have a military
camp in West Darfur. (Sudan's
government denies the allegations.) Last week, bands of Chadian rebels nearly
took over the capital, N'Djamena. When captured, some of the rebels were
carrying Sudanese identification.
Meanwhile, Sudan is China's
fourth-biggest supplier of imported oil, and that relationship carries
benefits. China, which holds
veto power in the U.N. Security Council, has said it will stand by Sudan against U.S.
efforts to slap sanctions on the country and in the battle to force Sudan to replace
the African Union peacekeepers with a larger U.N. presence. China has built highways and factories in Khartoum, even erecting
the Friendship Conference Hall, the city's largest public meeting place.
5 The "genocide" label made it worse
Many of the world's governments have drawn the line at labeling Darfur as genocide. Some call the conflict a case of
ethnic cleansing, and others have described it as a government going too far in
trying to put down a rebellion.
But in September 2004, then-Secretary of State Colin L. Powell referred to
the conflict as a "genocide." Rather than spurring greater
international action, that label only seems to have strengthened Sudan's rebels; they believe they don't need to
negotiate with the government and think they will have U.S. support when they commit
attacks. Peace talks have broken down seven times, partly because the rebel
groups have walked out of negotiations. And Sudan's
government has used the genocide label to market itself in the Middle East as
another victim of America's
anti-Arab and anti-Islamic policies.
Perhaps most counterproductive, the United States has failed to follow
up with meaningful action. "The word 'genocide' was not an action word; it
was a responsibility word," Charles R. Snyder, the State Department's
senior representative on Sudan,
told me in late 2004. "There was an ethical and moral obligation, and
saying it underscored how seriously we took this." The Bush
administration's recent idea of sending several hundred NATO advisers to
support African Union peacekeepers falls short of what many advocates had hoped
for.
"We called it a genocide and then we wine and dine the architects of
the conflict by working with them on counterterrorism and on peace in the
south," said Ted Dagne, an Africa expert
for the Congressional Research Service. "I wish I knew a way to improve
the situation there. But it's only getting worse."
waxe@washpost.com
Emily Wax is The Washington Post's East Africa bureau chief.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/21/AR2006042101752.html
For any
questions, please call Syed B. Soharwardy @ Toll Free (866)-208-6898
Thanks
Syed B.
Soharwardy
President
ISCC
Toll Free
(866)-208-6898
Soharwardy@shaw.ca