September
9th, 2004
Powell
Calls Sudan ‘Genocide,’ Activists Rally at UN
The
rally, organized by the American Anti-Slavery Group (AASG), begins at
2 pm in Dag Hammarskjold Park at the UN Plaza, 47th Street, New York
City. Speakers include women’s rights activist Gloria Steinem,
Congressional Black Caucus founder Rev. Walter Fauntroy, Guardian Angels
founder Curtis Sliwa, and Alan Hevesi, Comptroller of New York. They
will be joined by leaders of the Sudanese community in America, including
survivors of genocide
Gloria Steinem, Curtis Sliwa, refugees to decry UN
inaction on genocide in Sudan
As Secretary of State Colin Powell declared the atrocities unfolding
in Sudan to be "genocide," a coalition of Sudanese refugees, human rights
activists and other concerned Americans prepared to rally at the United
Nations on Sunday, Sept. 12 to tell international leaders to stop standing
by and start saving lives.
The rally, organized by the American Anti-Slavery Group (AASG), begins
at 2 pm in Dag Hammarskjold Park at the UN Plaza, 47th Street, New York
City. Speakers include women’s rights activist Gloria Steinem,
Congressional Black Caucus founder Rev. Walter Fauntroy, Guardian Angels
founder Curtis Sliwa, and Alan Hevesi, Comptroller of New York. They
will be joined by leaders of the Sudanese community in America, including
survivors of genocide. "My village was totally destroyed - some of my
family were shot, raped, or burned alive," said Mohamed Adam Yahya of
the Representatives of the Masaleit Community in Exile. "Our goal is
for the people of Darfur to be protected, saved and freed, so as to live
with dignity and peace."
A day after New Yorkers commemorate the anniversary of the Sept. 11
attacks, they will stand in solidarity with Sudanese victims of terror.
Activists will demand UN intervention to stop government-backed militias,
insist that Sudanese leaders be tried for war crimes, and call for the
liberation of thousands abducted into slavery. "The mass murder of Blacks
in Darfur is the first genocide of the 21st century," said Tommy Calvert,
AASG chief of external operations. "50,000 have been slaughtered, 2 million
displaced, and thousands raped and enslaved. In the South, the Shiluk
Kingdom faces extermination. Across Sudan, millions of Blacks forced
from their homes now live in refugee camps. Yet the Security Council
has allowed the Government of Sudan to ignore the Aug. 29 deadline for
stopping the violence."
The rally occurs just before the UN reconvenes, reminding leaders that
their first order of business must be to avert another Rwanda in Sudan.
In June, AASG rallied during Kofi Annan’s visit to Harvard University
to protest his inaction on Sudan’s genocide. "Go to Sudan, Not
Harvard" was the rally’s slogan - two weeks later Annan went to
Sudan.