Age: 18
Location: United States
Joined On: Feb 03, 2007
When the storm comes,
You shelter me.
And I don't say a word,
And you know exactly what I mean.
In the darkest times,
You shine on me.
You set me free.
And keep me steady as we go.
Access to clean water is a basic human right and a necessary precondition to all our human rights. An accessible supply of clean water is essential to good health, education and overall productivity around the world, yet currently over one billion people lack access to a basic supply of clean water and 2.6 billion people do not have access to basic sanitation.
Every 15 seconds, a child dies from a disease associated with lack of access to safe drinking water, inadequate sanitation and poor hygiene.
Of the 1 billion people lacking access to clean water, approximately 314 million live in sub-Saharan Africa.
Every $1 invested in water yields an economic return worth $8 in saved time, increased productivity and reduced healthcare costs.
Unsafe water and poor sanitation play a major role in the transmission of diseases including Diarrhea, Cholera, Malaria, and Typhoid. More than 1.8 million children die each year roughly one child every 15 seconds from water and sanitation-related Diarrhoeal diseases.
The lack of access to clean water and sanitation translates into lost educational opportunities, particularly for women and girls. Time spent collecting water often many hours each day means girls do not have time to attend school. Studies show that girls are 12% more likely to attend school if water is available within 15 minutes from home versus a one hours walk. Young girls are also less likely to attend classes if the school does not have adequate and separate toilets for girls. In addition, water-related illnesses increase absenteeism for all children and result in a loss of over 443 million school days globally each year.
With ONE voice, we are asking our leaders to commit an additional $300 million so the millions of people who lack access to clean water and basic sanitation could have the opportunity for improved health and a better quality of life.
An Opportunity
The internationally agreed upon goal is to halve the number of people without access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation by 2015. Based on current estimates, meeting this goal would result in safe drinking water for approximately 450 million more people, and basic sanitation for approximately 700 million more people.
There is no doubt the world has the knowledge, technology and resources to cut in half the number of people without access to safe drinking water and sanitation by 2015. However, meeting this target will require a substantial increase in resources and commitment from donor governments.
ONE supports the implementation of the Water for the Poor Act, which would strengthen U.S. government programs that increase affordable and equitable access to safe drinking water and sanitation in the developing world.>
There are few foreign policy positions which achieve nearly universal consensus within the international community these days, or for that matter within the U.S. A firm conviction that something should be done to end the crisis in the Darfur region of western Sudan, however, is surely one of them. Regardless of whether the carnage in Darfur is described as genocide, ethnic cleansing, a crime against humanity, or the worlds worst humanitarian crisis as the UN has called it, just about everyone whos heard of Darfur believes that more should be done to help Darfur.
So why then does the crisis persist after nearly five years, thousands of news stories, countless speeches, and more than a dozen Security Council resolutions? The short answer is this: coordinating a successful international effort to end a genocidal conflict like the one slow-boiling in Darfur is a complex, grinding, and profoundly frustrating undertaking. It is also absolutely necessary, and unquestionably worth it.
In early 2003, long-standing tensions in Darfur erupted into what the U.S. government later described as the first genocide of the 21st century soon after local rebel groups took up arms against the Khartoum-based regime of Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir. Their reasons for rebelling were relatively simple: they rightly felt marginalized by their government, saw that rebels in southern Sudan were likely to be granted major economic and political concessions as their own civil war against Khartoum ran down, and realized that they themselves were being left out in the literal and figurative desert with no hope of similar concessions or improved conditions in sight. An oil fueled economic boom was producing sky-scrapers in Khartoum, and meanwhile Darfur continued to exist largely without roads, hospitals, or a sufficient education system, and was suffering through a brutal drought.
Following a few initial conventional battles with new rebel groups in Darfur, the Khartoum regime switched tactics and began to fight a hate-fueled counter insurgency war in Darfur by funding, arming, and unleashing the proxy militias known as Janjaweed, who came from tribes which identify themselves as Arab, on the villages associated with the rebels, which came from tribes who identify themselves as African. This strategy depended on exploiting this self-proclaimed racial divide in Darfur, and it worked, despite the fact that both Arab and African Darfurians are Muslim, speak Arabic, and share the same skin tone. The result was an undisciplined paramilitary campaign which targeted men, women, and children alike.
Since this genocidal campaign began in early 2003, over 2,000 villages have been burnt, up to 400,000 people have been killed, and approximately 2.5 million more have been forced from their homes and into the Sahara desert. Horrific stories of mass rape, murder, and unspeakable atrocities have become commonplace. Survivors have gathered in IDP (Internally Displaced Persons) camps throughout Darfur, and in refugee camps across the border in eastern Chad and in the Central African Republic, waiting for conflict to end so that they can rebuild their lives, hoping that someone will help them.
For its part, the international community has reacted to different aspects of the crisis with varying degrees of success. The biggest bright spot has been the Herculean effort put forth by governmental and non-governmental aid agencies, bringing food, medicine, shelter, and basic services to the millions of Darfurians in need. Over the last few years, more than 13,000 international and Sudanese aid workers have built the worlds largest humanitarian life support system in Darfur, saving countless lives that otherwise would have been lost to starvation and disease. Nations and multilateral organizations such as the UN have done their part as well, providing billions of dollars in direct funding, donated supplies, and airlift for the aid effort.
Less successful, unfortunately, have been international efforts to reduce the threat to Darfuri civilians of physical violence, and to achieve a lasting political solution to end the conflict altogether. To achieve the former, the international community, in the form of the African Union, deployed a 7,400 strong African Union Mission in the Sudan (AMIS) peacekeeping force to Darfur in 2004. While the AU in general and the AMIS force in particular deserve credit for going into Darfur when the rest of the international community stood by and watched, and for accomplishing some real substantive goals such as helping to protect women from rape once deployed, it soon became clear that AMIS lacked the troops, equipment, funding, and mandate to truly protect civilians and help restore order to an area as large as Darfur (its roughly the size of Texas, or France). The international community therefore went back to the drawing board and settled on a plan of sending a much larger UN peacekeeping force to Darfur, with all of the equipment, funding, and mandate it would need to protect civilians. On August 31, 2006, a divided UN Security Council authorized the generation and deployment of just such a force peacekeeping force in Resolution 1706.
Unfortunately, the Sudanese government rejected Resolution 1706, effectively putting the UN between a rock and a hard place: in the entire history of the United Nations, no peacekeeping mission had ever failed to deploy once authorized by the Security Council. On the other hand, only one mission had ever deployed over the objection of the host nation, and that mission is better known as the Korean war of the early 1950s. A compromise was sought to bridge this impasse, and the result was the 26,000 strong hybrid UN-AU peacekeeping force known as UNAMID (United Nations African Mission in Darfur), authorized unanimously by the Security Council on July 31, 2007, which is just now in its initial stages of generation and deployment. That a compromise was reached is good, and that the Sudanese government has agreed to accept that compromise (and the UNAMID mission) is even better. The vast majority of the peacekeepers are not on the ground yet, however. In fact, as of this writing only a few hundred logistics and engineering personnel have actually set foot in Darfur to lay the groundwork for the larger deployment, and for the eventual adoption of AMIS forces into the UNAMID mission. Until such time as the force fully deploys, UNAMID will remain simply the best yet in a series of unimplemented peacekeeping plans designed to help protect the people of Darfur.
Efforts to arrive at a lasting political solution have fared arguably even worse. Several ceasefires have been adopted, celebrated, promptly violated, and thus rendered moot. More frustrating still were the nearly 20 months of peace talks which took place in Abuja, Nigeria, culminating on May 5, 2006, in the partial signing of the Darfur Peace Agreement, or DPA. The Sudanese government and only one of what were then just three rebel factions signed the agreement, and with the exception of a few initial concessions to the one rebel signer, almost none of it has been implemented. Since the signing and subsequent collapse of the DPA, the original three rebel factions have split into more than a dozen. The international community, operating through a combined UN AU effort, have regrouped, pooled their efforts, and organized a new set of peace talks to take place in Sirte, Libya beginning on October 27. The prospects of these talks, however, remain in question due to incomplete rebel participation, the unclear role of civil society, and lingering doubts about the Khartoum regimes sincerity.
Meanwhile, as the international community moves forward, albeit slowly, on deploying UNAMID and launching a more inclusive (and hopefully successful) peace process, the situation in Darfur has deteriorated. Rebels, janjaweed, and Khartoum alike are jockeying for position in advance of both the talks and UNAMID deployment, which has led to a dramatic uptick in violence, including recent rebel attacks on AU peacekeepers, Sudanese government and janjaweed attacks on villages thought to support rebels, and inter-rebel fighting. Needless to say, civilians continue to bear the brunt of this increased violence.
The result of all this is a continuing and increasingly complex crisis in Darfur on the one hand, and an increasing coordinated but as yet unsuccessful international response on the other. Left alone, the crisis in Darfur will continue to grow increasingly dangerous for the people who live there, costing yet more Darfuri lives, and costing everyone whos ever said never again their credibility. The clear answer, therefore, is that the international community must simply become more coordinated, more sophisticated, and ultimately more effective at ending the crisis in Darfur. Describing in detail how it should go about doing that would fill at least as much space as Ive used already several times over, but a good start would be taking all necessary steps to swiftly generate and deploy the UNAMID peacekeeping force, engaging fully in the upcoming peace talks, and demanding that all parties and especially upon the Khartoum regime cease all hostilities.
Achieving these goals wont be easy, and will certainly require the type of sustained political will that is only possible with sustained citizen advocacy, but they are possible. The real question, therefore, is not why the crisis in Darfur persists, but whether we will collectively do whats necessary to end it.
I beat you!!!
1.Irish
2.Scottish
3.Welsh
4.English
5.German
6.Jewish
7.Indian
8.French
Therefore....I'm an "Angry(German/Welsh),lying(Irish/Scottish/German/Welsh),drunk(German/Irish/Scottish/Welsh),surrendering(french),person, who scallped people(Indian), killed people during Blitzcreg(German), and also got killed at Blitz(Jewish).
I smell varmint poontang. And the only good varmint poontang is dead varmint poontang, I think.