Hands Up
For Darfur
In
Sudan over 200,000 people have been killed and at least 2 million people
displaced since 2003.
Emily Cadei of student activist group Hands
Up For Darfur writes about the appauling genocide in Darfur and what
her organisation have been doing to help.
March
9, 2007: In Geneva, UN human rights investigators were attempting to
deliver a report to the body’s High Commission for Human Rights,
which accuses Sudan’s government of ‘gross and systematic’
human rights violations of its own people in the Darfur region.
Further north in England, University of Oxford students were attending
a charity ball to raise money for aid organisations working in Darfur
and perhaps to learn about the full scale of the atrocities there for
the first time. And in Derby, the university was hosting a panel discussion
on the conflict to raise awareness and generate activism on the issue.
Thousands of miles away in Darfur, itself, March 9 was just another
day in what has become a seemingly interminable civil war, which is
gradually becoming more and more catastrophic in scale.
The conflict, which began four years ago as a counter-insurgency effort
by the government and allied militias, has led to the death of more
than 200,000 people and the displacement of at least 2 million more.
Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir has been steadfast in his rejection
of United Nations peacekeeper involvement and to make matters worse,
the violence is now spilling over the borders into Chad and the Democratic
Republic of the Congo.
It is unlikely the people of Darfur are aware of the attention their
plight has generated in the university halls and parliaments of far-off
foreign countries. But they would hopefully be encouraged to know that
finally, there are the stirrings of an international movement to effect
change. In England, that movement is being led by students.
Lara Nassif first became interested in Darfur after reading We Wish
to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will be Killed With Our Families, journalist
Philip Gourevitch’s account of the genocide in Rwanda. It noted,
she says, that despite all the uproar following the slaughter of the
Tutsis, the world was now standing by as similar atrocities were being
committed in Darfur.
Following her first year of undergraduate studies at Oxford, Nassif
and several classmates decided that instead of lamenting the situation
in Sudan, they wanted to actually do something about it. These discussions
spawned the foundations upon which the organisation Hands Up For Darfur
(handsupfordarfur.co.uk)
would be built. Nassif became the organisation’s president.
In the past nine months, Hands Up For Darfur, or HUFD for short, has
hosted a series of events to raise money and awareness for the ongoing
human rights crisis in Sudan. These include a charity row-a-thon and
a Hands Up for Darfur Day, which featured a discussion panel on how
to diffuse the crisis, hosted by Channel 4 News presenter Jon Snow.
In the process, HUFD has earned the backing of some high-profile individuals
- from Shadow Secretary of State for International Development Andrew
Mitchell to American film actress Sharon Stone.
The culmination of Hands Up for Darfur’s efforts thus far has
been the Midnight Moment Ball, held March 9 at the Oxford Town Hall.
The
event - part social gathering, part awareness-raising forum - featured
a key-note speech by Ishbel Matheson, former BBC correspondent in Africa
and the first Western journalist to report on Darfur, and entertainment
by Sudanese child-soldier-turned-rapper Emmanuel Jal. All told, the
ball raised over £50,000 for HUFD’s two charity beneficiaries
- Medecins Sans Frontiers and Kids for Kids, both of whom are performing
desperately needed aid operations in the Darfur region.
According to Nassif, the success of the event took even its organisers
by surprise, “I am thrilled with how it went, we sold 100 tickets
over target, propagating the message about the terrible situation in
Darfur more widely across the student population.”
In addition to promoting activism within Oxford, Hands Up for Darfur
has teamed up with Aegis Society (aegisstudents.org),
a national network of anti-genocide student organisations, to spread
the initiative for Darfur across Britain’s universities. Aegis
itself is a relatively new student group, spawned from the work of the
Aegis Trust, a London-based charity working to publicise and prevent
genocide.
The first student chapter was established at Oxford in 2005. The organization
now counts 12 societies at uni’s around the country. Seven of
these - Birmingham, Nottingham, Nottingham Trent, Leeds, Derby, Manchester,
and Sussex - hosted events to raise funds for the HUFD charities over
the weekend of March 8 through 12.
Since the ball, Hands Up for Darfur’s committee has taken a step
back from their feverish organising, as they contemplate the next steps
for the group. Nassif says HUFD will continue to conduct fundraising
activities and, come spring term, will team with Oxford’s Aegis
Society and other students to promote the university divestment campaign.
Currently getting underway, the campaign is working to pressure the
university and its colleges to rescind any investments made in companies
doing work in Sudan or for the Sudanese government.
In Sudan, meanwhile, the Darfur conflict shows little signs of abating.
Recent violence against aid workers and African Union troops sent to
patrol the area has threatened the humanitarian missions operating in
the region.
Despite meetings with UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon and the secretary
general of the Arab League, President Bashir has shown no inclination
to bend to international pressure on stemming the violence or accepting
UN patrols. But there is tougher talk coming from the governments of
the United States and Britain, including agitation for a no-fly zone
over Sudan.
While the average individual may feel hopeless to do anything to remedy
what is undisputedly a complex political situation, Hands Up for Darfur
and other student groups are leading the way in demonstrating how their
fellow English citizens can contribute to positive change in Darfur
and elsewhere.
The money raised by these groups will make a substantial difference
in the lives of those being aided in Darfur. And by continuing to agitate
on the issue and demand change, the students involved are making sure
Darfur remains on the agenda of those in power.
As Jon Snow said in his closing remarks at the Hands Up For Darfur Day,
“If everyone here tells five people about what they have learnt
today, then the conflict in Darfur will be one step closer to being
resolved.”