Great Event at USC on Wednesday, April 1

Preventing Genocide: A Blueprint For U.S. Policymakers

What: Preventing Genocide: A Blueprint For U.S. Policymakers
When: April 1, 2009
6:00 PM
Where: University of Southern California (USC)
Edward L. Doheny Jr. Memorial Library, Room 240
3550 Trousdale Parkway, Los Angeles, CA 90089
RSVP: RSVP to Amber Mirafuentes at mirafuen@usc.edu
or 213.740.2950

Admission free

"The Genocide Prevention Task Force, convened by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, The American Academy of Diplomacy, and the United States Institute of Peace, and co-chaired by Madeleine Albright and William Cohen, released Preventing Genocide: A Blueprint for U.S. Policymakers on December 8, 2008. The report explains why genocide and mass atrocities threaten core American values and national interests and how the U.S. government can prevent these crimes in the future. Join us to learn more about this report from two members of the task force's executive committee.

Presentations will be followed by a question-and-answer session. Refreshments will be served."

More info here.

NYTimes: Court Issues Arrest Warrant for Sudan’s Leader


From NYTimes.com:

PARIS — Judges at the International Criminal Court ordered the arrest Wednesday of President Omar Hassan al-Bashir of Sudan for atrocities committed in Darfur, but Sudanese officials swiftly retaliated, ordering Western aid groups that provide for millions of people to shut down their operations and leave.

After months of deliberation, the judges charged Mr. Bashir with war crimes and crimes against humanity for playing an “essential role” in the murder, rape, torture, pillage and displacement of large numbers of civilians in Darfur. But the judges did not charge him with genocide, as the prosecutor had requested. (more)

GENOCIDE DEFINED

Genocide: any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:

a. killing members of the group;

b. causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;

c. deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;

d. imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;

e. forcibly transferring children of the group to another group. 

                                        Convention for the Prevention and the Punishment of the Crime of Genocide

To read more: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/rwanda/reports/dsetexhe.html



The Armenian Genocide, 1915-1917



On April 24th1915, commemorated worldwide by Armenians as Genocide Memorial Day, hundreds of Armenian leaders were murdered in Istanbul after being summoned and gathered. The now leaderless Armenian people were to follow. Across the Ottoman Empire (with the exception of Constantinople, presumably due to a large foreign presence), the same events transpired from village to village, from province to province.

The remarkable thing about the following events is the virtually complete cooperation of the Armenians. For a number of reasons they did not know what was planned for them and went along with "their" government's plan to "relocate them for their own good." First, the Armenians were asked to turn in hunting weapons for the war effort. Communities were often given quotas and would have to buy additional weapons from Turks to meet their quota. Later, the government would claim these weapons were proof that Armenians were about to rebel. The able bodied men were then "drafted" to help in the wartime effort. These men were either immediately killed or were worked to death. Now the villages and towns, with only women, children, and elderly left were systematically emptied. The remaining residents would be told to gather for a temporary relocation and to only bring what they could carry. The Armenians again obediently followed instructions and were "escorted" by Turkish Gendarmes in death marches.

The death marches led across Anatolia, and the purpose was clear. The Armenians were raped, starved, dehydrated, murdered, and kidnapped along the way. The Turkish Gendarmes either led these atrocities or turned a blind eye. Their eventual destination for resettlement was just as telling in revealing the Turkish governments goal: the Syrian Desert, Der Zor. Those who miraculously survived the march would arrive to this bleak desert only to be killed upon arrival or to somehow survive until a way to escape the empire was found. Usually those that survived and escaped received assistance from those who have come to be known as "good Turks," from foreign missionaries who recorded much of these events and from Arabs. - Text by Armeniapedia.org