Jewish groups welcome Darfur announcement
Jewish groups welcomed President Bush’s announcement of expanded sanctions against Sudan until it allows peacekeepers to police the Darfur genocide. Bush, following up on a warning he delivered to mark Holocaust commemoration day last month, said Tuesday that the United States was adding companies and individuals to the sanctions list, and is making it a crime for Americans to deal with the sanctioned.Bush also announced a new effort to tighten sanctions on the international level through the U.N. Security Council. His special envoy, Andrew Natsios, said he was making progress to persuade China to join in the sanctions. China, Sudan’s biggest oil client, has been the principal recalcitrant until now in achieving international consensus on ending the killings in Darfur led by militias allied with the government.Ruth Messinger, who heads the American Jewish World Service, the lead Darfur advocacy group, said the sanctions were welcome and overdue."The real issue for the Jewish, American and world communities is to hold the president to his concluding statement that he will no longer avert his eyes,” she said, “that he act to get a larger, more robust peacekeeping force on the ground to stop the ongoing violence."Echoed Hadar Susskind, the Washington director of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, another group leading activism on the issue, “This is an issue that isn’t done until the killing stops."Rabbi David Saperstein, the director of Reform’s Religious Action Center, said follow-up was critical. “Strong American leadership remains indispensable towards stopping the genocide,” he said.The American Jewish Committee also welcomed the announcement. A number of Jewish groups were invited to join a confidential teleconference later Tuesday between Natsios and Darfur activists.
This article was made possible by the support of readers like you. Donate to JTA now.
Discussions About this Article Elsewhere
Comments RSS Feed Reader Comments
There are currently no comments to this article. Leave a comment below.
Leave a Comment
To comment on this article, you must first be registered with JTA.
Not Registered?
There are real advantages to a FREE registration with JTA.org:
- Make your voice heard through comments on articles
- Receive our e-mailed Daily Briefing, an invaluable quick-read
- Help decide what Jewish news matters most with interactive tools
Register Now
Already a JTA member?
- Madoff won’t appeal sentence
- IDF salutes Palestinian security forces
- Op-Ed: Israel backers must support a settlement freeze
- Egypt arrests 26 planning Suez attacks
- Op-Ed: Palestinians’ plight, Holocaust are not analogous
- JDL members arrested in Paris
- Satmar mayor praises Obama
- Harvard Hillel victim of $780,000 fraud
- The Chosen: Jewish members in the 111th U.S. Congress
- Jackson kids’ Jewish mother could regain custody
- Biden: Israel can decide for itself on Iran
- Guard shot at Holocaust museum dies
- Canadian politician sues Jewish groups
- In endorsing two states, Netanyahu adopts popular Jewish position
- Some Jewish settlers turning against Israel
- Mass converts pose dilemma for Latin American Jews
Share
Email
Print
Trackback URL: http://jta.org/trackback/102073/
No trackbacks have been created for this article, be the first to create one.