US religious freedom panel to release report on Sudan
Mar 24, 2006 (WASHINGTON) — An US federal advisory panel will release next week a report on Sudan’s peace deal implementation, Darfur crisis, and human rights situation in the country, with recommendations on the related issue.
The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) will be joined by Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), Congressman Donald M. Payne (D-NJ), and other Congressional Members for the release of USCIRF’s Policy Focus on Sudan on Wednesday, 29 March in the Capitol.
The Commission visited Sudan in January 2006 to assess the state of religious freedom and the implementation of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement that ended a two-decades long civil war between the North and South. Policy Focus on Sudan includes recommendations for U.S. policy as a result of the findings from that visit.
Although the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) was signed a year ago, the Commission found that there have been significant delays and shortcomings in the CPA’s implementation, raising questions regarding the sincerity of the commitment of the National Congress Party in the Government of National Unity.
Moreover, the religious freedom and other human rights protections agreed to in the CPA and enshrined in Sudan’s Interim National Constitution have yet to result in significant changes in practice in government-controlled areas of the North.
The institutions intended to protect human rights still are not functioning, while an authoritarian security system remains in place, and the attitude of impunity for human rights abuses shows little sign of change.
In addition, no country comes close to Sudan in terms of the number of civilians displaced by conflict. There are more than 600,000 refugees and four million internally displaced persons (IDPs) from the North-South civil war, and more than 200,000 refugees and two million IDPs from Darfur, for a total of seven million displaced Sudanese from a population of 40 million. Engagement on both Darfur and the implementation of the CPA is critical to help the Sudanese secure the peace they overwhelmingly desire.
The United States has an opportunity to influence this process for the better. Sudan is a strategic nation where U.S. influence has already made a difference and should continue to do so. Toward that end, the Commission will call attention to its recommendations for U.S. policy in Policy Focus on Sudan, which include: U.S. diplomacy and the implementation of the CPA; U.S. sanctions on Sudan; and U.S. assistance to promote reconciliation, human rights, and the return of refugees and IDPs.
Since its inception in 1998, including after the signing of the Peace Agreement, USCIRF has determined that Sudan should be designated as a “Country of Particular Concern,” (CPC). The State Department has repeatedly adopted this recommendation.
In the past, the Commission has identified Sudan as the world’s most violent abuser of the right to freedom of religion and belief and has drawn attention to the Sudanese government’s atrocities against civilian populations, including in Darfur.
The Commission also has made a series of recommendations regarding U.S. policy toward Sudan, including that the U.S. government appoint a nationally prominent individual to bring about a peaceful and just settlement of the war in Sudan.
In September 2001, President Bush appointed former Senator John Danforth as Special Envoy for Peace in Sudan, energizing the Sudan peace process. The Commission’s consistent advocacy of strong U.S. pressure on the Khartoum regime also was reflected in the Comprehensive Peace in Sudan Act of 2004, signed by President Bush on December 23, 2004.
(ST)