Salon Member log in | Help
Benefits of membership

Ending "the world's hottest war"

Pages 1 2

The Janjaweed militias have systematically targeted the civilian population. Suddenly appearing on horses and camels, the militiamen frequently descend on undefended villages in an orgy of violence. The looting and pillaging, the raping of women and girls, the wanton burning of entire settlements -- all of their excesses have been well documented. Often, they have shot everyone unable to run away and have thrown children into the burning houses.

The West remained largely unaware of the atrocities until early 2004, when European media outlets began reporting on them. In a March interview, Mukesh Kapila, then the U.N. resident and humanitarian coordinator, called Darfur the "world's greatest humanitarian crisis" and compared it to the genocide in Rwanda, sparking worldwide media coverage. In May 2006, the government and a rebel group signed a so-called peace agreement, but the crisis only got worse.

It is hard to understand why the international community has not been able to stop the Sudanese over the past three years. Prendergast sighs, buries his face in his hands, and says, "Everybody in the Security Council has a different reason." The Chinese have oil interests in Sudan and are siding with the regime in Khartoum. Prendergast criticizes the Europeans for failing to follow up on their threats. Some, he says, still believe that diplomacy can influence the Sudanese. Others are merely looking out for their own economic interests.

According to Prendergast, however, U.S. involvement is the key to resolving the conflict. "But the Americans are hesitant to take action because of the counterterrorism relationship they have with the Sudanese regime." For years, Sudan supported the al-Qaida terror network and even harbored Osama bin Laden. However, after the terrorist attacks in the U.S. on Sept. 11, 2001, the regime in Khartoum switched sides and began supplying U.S. intelligence agencies with information about its former friends. "Washington doesn't want to put this cooperation in danger," he says. "That is why we haven't stopped it."

Prendergast says that in Africa, the Bush administration is repeating the same mistakes made by Bush's predecessors during the Cold War. The U.S. currently depends on allies like Sudan for help in its war against terrorism and in exchange, Prendergast charges, the U.S. has given ally governments carte blanche to ignore or even support massacres within their own borders. In the meantime, the region -- and the entire Horn of Africa -- is going up in flames. The Sudanese government does whatever it wants, destabilizing the whole country. Ethiopia, another U.S. ally, apparently drove the Islamists out of Somalia recently, yet the country remains a failed state and heavy fighting continues. There are more than 9 million refugees fleeing crises in the region. The United States, says Prendergast, should actually be developing a peace initiative instead of giving in to the demands of its allies.

Prendergast stretches in his armchair and yawns. The phone rings nonstop; every few minutes, the computer announces new e-mail. He used to spend six months out of the year in Africa, traveling from country to country, eating only cereal bars out of fear of stomach troubles. "I've got no skills," he once said. "All I have is my mouth."

He has met with presidents, rebel groups and diplomats; some have called him the most informed American on the subject of Africa, and that probably still is the case. Recently, however, he has been spending less and less time on the continent while he focuses on his new role: Prendergast the activist, who informs Americans about Africa. Prendergast, trusted advisor to the Hollywood stars.

He knows "elitists" are critical of him but he says he's not interested in suggestions that certain celebrities don't really care about Africa. He has served as a panelist with actress and UNICEF goodwill ambassador Mia Farrow and eaten dinner with Angelina Jolie. "I've never picked up the phone, I never chased anybody," he says. "These people are really concerned about what's going on." It was Jolie who approached him after she spoke before Congress and said: "We have to go to the Congo together." That's how it all started.

People are crazy about celebrities, he says, and if a celebrity takes an interest in Africa, thousands of other people follow suit. "It's a great boon to our movement."

Public pressure on Darfur has made a difference. President Bush on Tuesday announced a new set of sanctions against Sudan, including measures targeting government-run companies involved in the country's oil industry. In April, Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte traveled to Sudan and finally wrangled a minor concession from the country's rulers. Khartoum agreed to allow a U.N. peacekeeping force of no more than 3,000 troops and six helicopter gunships to support the African Union forces already on the ground. But the newly brokered deal is still a far cry from an effective solution.

"We are just trapped still in this kind of pre-action mode. Debate and discussion, back and forth, but no action" says Prendergast. "This is so contrary to what this administration usually does. It would be almost funny if it weren't so deadly." He says he's now full of hope, and the problems are not so difficult to solve: "We've got examples all over Africa that once the international community got serious, there was a solution. We've seen it." Sierra Leone and Burundi are good examples. He adds that Liberia was a nightmare 10 years ago. Now, Africa's only woman president is successfully governing the country.

Prendergast thinks that Sudan could have a similarly bright future -- and he has the blueprint of a plan that he thinks could work.

It consists of three components: promoting peace, protecting people, and punishing perpetrators. None of these can work in isolation, he says; the full package is necessary.

Promoting peace entails bringing rebel groups and the government to the negotiating table. Then, he suggests initiating a peace process that, together with international support, would lead to power sharing in Darfur.

To protect people, Prendergast suggests a larger, armed U.N. peacekeeping force that can protect civilians, as well as secure the borders to the neighboring countries of Chad and the Central African Republic, where the conflict is threatening to spread.

Third, Prendergast wants to punish perpetrators with immediate multilateral sanctions against the Sudanese government. He believes other countries should join the United States in applying economic sanctions against Sudan and proposes freezing the responsible parties' bank accounts and imposing travel bans. He would also prohibit Sudan from doing business with international banks. Furthermore, he wants the International Criminal Court to have access to intelligence on the role of the Sudanese regime in the atrocities.

Finally, he is calling for international citizens' initiatives to put the necessary pressure on governments around the world.

"If we did those things and did them effectively, I think we'd see a pretty rapid turnaround in Sudan's behavior," Prendergast says, grinning.

Africa is not a lost continent. "Africa is one of the brightest hopes on the face of the earth. But in Sudan, it's one of these crossroads situations." If the international community continues to stand by and do nothing, then he believes Sudan will go to the dogs. "But it could go the other way. It could become a model country for tolerance and reconciliation. We'll see what happens."

In the United States, Prendergast is the man most readily associated with the International Crisis Group. He was featured in a short film at the last Sundance Film Festival, he has his own agent in Hollywood, and he is now more famous than his boss, former Australian Foreign Minister Gareth Evans.

Evans, who works out of the group's Brussels, Belgium, headquarters, said of Prendergast, "He is not exactly low maintenance, but he's very effective. Every organization should have someone like him. But perhaps one would be enough."

Prendergast winces when people remind him of it and says he actually doesn't want to be in the limelight. But somehow it happens again and again. Following his forced departure from the U.S. National Security Council, he attended a White House ceremony. Afterward, President Bush came to him, and they spoke at length. It was an interesting conversation, Prendergast says, though he was a bit surprised that the president wanted to talk to him. It wasn't until later that he found out why: Bush had mistaken him for Bono, the rock star.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

This article has been provided by Der Spiegel through a special arrangement with Salon. For more from Europe's most-read newsmagazine, visit Spiegel Online or subscribe to the daily newsletter.

Pages 1 2

Related Stories

Congress steps on Bush's Darfur applause line
The day after Bush got cheers for mentioning Darfur, members of his own party blasted him for neglecting the region. Does a new Congress mean new hope?
By Michael Scherer
01/25/07

Starving season
World hunger is by far the worst crisis humanity faces, and it's getting worse -- especially in Africa. Until the West overcomes its apathy and works toward long-term solutions, millions of people -- many of them children -- will continue to die unnecessarily.
By Samuel Loewenberg
06/13/06

A problem from hell
Does applying the generic label of "genocide" to violence in Darfur make it even harder to stop the killing?
By G. Pascal Zachary
01/19/06

Story finder (3 ways to search Salon)

Powered by Yahoo! Search

Salon Directory (browse by topic)