Irrigation and development of Sudan’s rich resources could solve intertribal fighting?

The following is via Sudan Watch:

The U.S. corporate media is unanimous in simplistically describing the crisis in Darfur as atrocities committed by the Jan jawid militias, supported by the central government in Khartoum. This is described as an “Arab” assault on “African” people. This is a total distortion of reality.

As the Black Commentator, Oct. 27, 2004, points out: “All parties involved in the Darfur conflict - whether they are referred to as ‘Arab’ or as ‘African,’ are equally indigenous and equally Black. All are Muslim and all are local.” The whole population of Darfur speaks Arabic, along with many local dialects. All are Sunni Muslim.

Drought, famine and sanctions

The crisis in Darfur is rooted in intertribal fighting. A desperate struggle has developed over increasingly scarce water and grazing rights in a vast area of Northern Africa that has been hit hard by years of drought and growing famine. Darfur has over 35 tribes and ethnic groups. About half the people are small subsistence farmers, the other half nomadic herders. For hundreds of years the nomadic population grazed their herds of cattle and camels over hundreds of miles of grassy lowlands. Farmers and herders shared wells. For over 5,000 years, this fertile land sustained civilizations in both western Dar fur and to the east, all along the Nile River. Now, due to the drought and the encroaching great Sahara Desert, there isn’t enough grazing land or enough farmland in what could be the breadbasket of Africa.

Irrigation and development of Sudan’s rich resources could solve many of these problems. U.S. sanctions and military intervention will solve none of them.

3 Comments »

  1. […] From Darfur Awareness, a post about the connection between water, desertification, and the Darfur conflict: Irrigation and development of Sudan’s rich resources could solve intertribal fighting? […]

    Pingback by Noli Irritare Leones » Blog Archive » Sudan chairing the African Union?/Task force on sexual abuse/Peacekeepers on Darfur border/Humanitarian aid in Chad — January 18, 2007 @ 10:13 pm

  2. The Wordless Voice of Virtue

    Whenever a heart has become so hard
    that Virtue cries till tearless
    hatred births a slaughters gore
    then poisons weary justice

    Revenge is the fuel for the fires of Hell
    thus Satan fears forgiveness
    for grace not only quells his flames
    it weakens his dominion

    True hearted Virtue’s the mother of shame
    through grace, disgrace will cease
    her wordless silent voice proclaims

    Through …………. Grace …………… Peace

    Comment by Through Grace Peace — February 18, 2007 @ 3:43 pm

  3. Hi, vileicht fit is not so precisely on the topic, but … I live in Munich (Germany), and in our work many Afrikana company, but not a single Egipter Arabs. And the Afrikana are actually quite nice :-)

    Comment by Salatdressing — February 12, 2008 @ 9:29 am

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