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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!daemon
- From: Christic Institute <christic@igc.apc.org>
- Subject: More On The Worst Human Tragedy
- Message-ID: <1992Jul29.042415.6738@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: daemon@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: ?
- Date: Wed, 29 Jul 1992 04:24:15 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 62
-
- /* Written 9:07 pm Jul 28, 1992 by peacenet in cdp:pn.alerts */
- /* ---------- "More On The Worst Human Tragedy" ---------- */
- From: <peacenet>
- Subject: Re: More On The Worst Human Tragedy
-
- From dmorse Tue Jul 28 17:23:25 1992
- From: Dorothy Morse <dmorse>
-
- I called that State Department number. It is a general line for public
- opinion. A live woman seemed to listen and even to take notes. She said
- the calls are summarized and passed onto Secretary of State James Baker.
- Please call if you can.
- The number again is 1-202-647-4000.
-
- Here is some background information from the New York Times, July 19:
- "Red Cross officials say they believe that about 1/3 of Somalia's people,
- estimated to number anywhere from 4.5 million to 6 million, are likely to die
- within the next 6 months unless more food is pumped into the country."
-
- (That's about 2 million people in 6 months, folks. Please call the State
- Department, call your congressperson, write your newspapers, call in to
- radio talk shows.)
-
- More from the Times: the Somalians have had a traditional method of
- coping with cyclical droughts and clan warfare, because the warfare was
- simply carried on in rural areas with spears. But now they have drought
- and war together, and the clan war is carried on with modern military equipment
- bestowed on them by the US in the 1980's and the Soviet Union in the 1970's,
- decades when Somalia was of strategic interest to the superpowers. It is no
- longer. But their ancient ways of coping are gone; 25 percent of their
- cattle are dead, and "untold numbers" of their camels. Heavily armed gangs
- steal grain and cattle, burn down fields so that sorghum cannot be planted.
-
- "The Director of the United Nation's Children's Fund, Dr. Siad Mure Aden, pointed to
- to countless children he said would die in the next few days, despite the one
- feeding a day provided by UNICEF.
- "Dr. Aden gestured toward one child, a shriveled 5-year-old named Manour, whose
- father tried to warm him with the embers of a kerchief sized fire on the
- grounds of the center. "He will die," Dr. Aden said. "There is no hope."
-
- The Red Cross seeks to arrange safe passage for people who come to their
- feeding kitchens, after their livestock and supplies are taken by the
- armed gangs.
-
- Although violence and technology have created the famine, the violence
- escalates now because of lack of food. An educated Somalian said, "You have
- three choices: leave, work for a humanitarian organization, or grab a gun and
- loot." For this reason, some people want a UN Peacekeeping force in there.
- Doctors Without Borders wants to saturate the area with food, stopping what
- violence is caused by frantic people fighting over food. It's not
- a question of either/or--everything possible should be done.
-
- Finally, a top Red Cross official said:
- "I thought I would never see Ethiopia again, and I DIDN'T THINK WE WOULD
- ALLOW IT TO HAPPEN AGAIN."
-
- Why was it allowed to happen again? The Red Cross predicted this disaster
- 6 months ago.
-
- For comparison purposes: the UN is supposed to have 50 unarmed monitors on
- the scene--the peacekeeping force sent to Yugoslavia is, I believe, 14,400
-
-