English edition -4th quarter 1998

International Community should put an end to the slaughter in the Sudan
 

During the last meeting of the World Council of Churches that has taken place in Harare (Zimbabwe) on the 5th of December 1998, PARIDE TABAN, Catholic Bishop of TORIT (Southern Sudan), has called for an urgent action of the international community to put an end to the slaughter that bleeds his people since too many years. Let us listen to him: 

"Many friends of Sudan are very keen on relief work. Spending on relief alone is like fattening a cow for slaughter. How long can one be doing relief work without spending time, energy and resources on root causes?

"The suffering people of Sudan hear that the great nations have imposed a no-fly zone on the Iraqi Government of Sadam Hussein to protect the Kurds in Northern Iraq. Our people ask, "Are we not worth human life to be protected from the Sudanese air  force by the imposition of a no-fly zone from the 13th to the 14 parallels?

"Recently we heard that the President of Yugoslavia was forced by Europeans and Americans to stop the massacre of the people of Kosovo and to pull out his troops or face the wrath of Nato. This sounds great. And what about us in the Sudan? Can anyone,  please, can you tell the Americans and Europeans to do the same thing for us in the Sudan?"

"I witnessed two blitz-style bombing raids carried out by Khartoum," 
"There was no military presence in either of the centres where I witnessed the bombs fall. The recipients are simple, struggling, uninvolved civilians. I saw them as people trying  to reconstruct their lives, trying to experience and taste again some of the normality that you and I take for granted.

"They are building schools - their children hunger for  knowledge. They construct small chapels - they want to be a community, to be close to God, to live out their hope. They plant food - they want enough to eat.

"The devilish bombs from above continually rip their ambitions apart. The planes from Khartoum come almost daily. Who knows  the deep psychological and emotional scars that are on the souls and minds of these innocent people?

"They suffer from chest complaints. They cough and wheeze. "Do these bombs contain chemical, dangerous gases?" they ask me. "Can we have doctors to test us?"

"They feel abandoned. They are alone and frightened, disillusioned and confused. The cry that arises from all this suffering and pain is: "Is there anybody, anywhere, who knows us? Is there anybody, anywhere, who really cares?'" 

"Let me add that the war in Sudan is not as it is simply  portrayed - Christians against Muslims. There are leading Christians and Muslims on both sides of the war. At the heart of the problem is a group of Muslims who prefer to use Islam as an ideology of power, of control and domination."

The bishop said that the people of Sudan needed a voice to speak out on its civil wars, on increasing poverty, urbanisation, international debt, the arms trade, refugees and displaced people, demographic concerns, the oppression of women, the spread of Aids, the survival of slavery.

"Are there voices to proclaim liberty to captives, to set the downtrodden free? "

V.S. December 1999
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