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John Prendergast

John Prendergast

Posted: December 3, 2009 03:00 PM

House Subcommittee Hearing Reviews U.S. Sudan Policy

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Testifying before the House Subcommittee on Africa and Global Health today at a hearing to review the administration's new Sudan policy, I expressed the Enough Project's deep concern that the existing strategy of the United States and the broader international community to prevent all-out war in Sudan is failing.

One month after the release of the Obama administration's new policy, the situation on the ground has further deteriorated, with life or death implications.

Central to the administration's new policy is support for full implementation of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, or CPA, as U.S. Special Envoy to Sudan Scott Gration reiterated in his testimony today.

To date, not one of the CPA's preconditions for holding credible elections has been met. The risks of ignoring preconditions and holding a non-credible election are enormous.

Non-credible elections should not be financed and legitimized by American taxpayers. Until the parties meet the agreed conditions for a credible election, the United States and broader international community should suspend all electoral assistance.

However, efforts should continue to put in place the conditions for the January 2011 referendum, including the passage of the referendum law by the National Assembly before it adjourns. Not holding the referendum on time is the most certain trigger for all-out war.

It is time for President Obama to implement his administration's own benchmark-based policy. The U.S. should work within and outside the UN Security Council to develop a coalition of countries willing to impose consequences on the NCP for its obstruction of basic conditions for peace.

Consequences should include ratcheting up targeted multilateral sanctions, enforcement of the arms embargo, denial of debt relief, and greater support for further International Criminal Court investigations and indictments. Similar consequences should await senior SPLM officials and Darfur rebel leaders if they are found to be undermining peace as well.

As outlined in Enough's latest report on Sudan, there is a path to peace for the parties, one in which the United States has a major role to play. Without an immediate and firm response from the international community, led by the United States, full-scale nationwide war is both imminent and inevitable.


 

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lainey
Always remember Troy Davis.
06:15 PM on 12/03/2009
Thank you Mr. Prendergas­t for your constant support of the people of Darfur who are enduring genocide, for standing up for the protection of the CPA and the people in the South, as well as trying to prevent a war that would impact all Sudanese people. I applaud your efforts, your dedication and your policy for punishagai­nst against the government of Sudan. I agree with everything you said, especially the part of the US taxpayers paying for an election of a war criminal. Bashir and Co. have not had any consequenc­es for the genocide they have perpertrat­ed on the people of Darfur and the animist and Christians in the south. We must take a stand and move foward on the preconditi­ons and deliver consequenc­es. I will continue to call my representa­tive and tell him that we should support a travel ban, not give them debt relief and support the ICC. It is genocide in Darfur as it is directly targeted against the indigeniou­s people of Darfur. We, as a people, have to hold our elected officials accountabl­e and our own conscience­. Mr. President, I voted for you because I believed you would end the genocide. Please take the appropriat­e steps to make it happen. And please do it now.