Displaced and dispossessed of Darfur: Explaining sources of genocide - The Journalist's Resource (original) (raw)

The International Criminal Court (ICC) has an open investigation into the genocide that occurred over the last decade in Darfur, Sudan. Though mass extermination is the chief focus of the international law, Article II of the 1948 Genocide Convention also bans “deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction.”

A 2011 report in the British Journal of Sociology, “The Displaced and Dispossessed of Darfur: Explaining the Sources of a Continuing State-Led Genocide,” examines 1,000 interviews with Black African participants who fled from 22 village clusters in Darfur to various refugee camps. The report looks at how attacks by state security men or Janjaweed (armed militia from ethnic Sudanese Arab tribes) intentionally targeted food and water sources to dislodge Black Africans en masse in Darfur from February 2003 to August 2004. The report explores links between these targeted attacks and the ethnic motivations behind them.

Key findings include:

The report concludes that “a key challenge in developing the international criminal law and research on the use of elimination strategies is the issue of intent.” However, as indicated in the above analysis, the authors state that “there is abundant evidence of intent in Darfur.”

Tags: war