First Published 2009-01-31


History repeated in Africa? Aid in one hand, bible in the other

 
In Darfur: US aid comes with Arabic bibles

 
US aid group, seen as cover to promote Christian missionary work, expelled from Darfur.

 
KHARTOUM - A US aid group has been expelled from Sudan's war-hit region of Darfur for having a large stock of Arabic-language bibles, the official SUNA news agency reported on Saturday.

The Texas-based "Thirst No More" humanitarian group's Internet website says its work in Darfur focuses on "bringing clean, safe, and sustainable drinking water," with no reference to Christian missionary work or distribution of bibles in Muslim Darfur.

A Sudanese official said members of the group have admitted possessing 3,400 bibles in Arabic in violation of laws and agreements governing the work of humanitarian organisations in the country.

SUNA quoted Osman Hussein Abdallah, Sudan's commissioner for humanitarian aid in North Darfur, as saying the organisation was unable to explain why it had such a large number of bibles.

The American embassy in Khartoum was unable to confirm that Thirst No More had been expelled, saying it had been unable to contact members of the group.

Dozens of international aid groups operate in Darfur, where aconflict broke out in 2003 as rebels took up arms against the government. Since then, the conflict has disintegrated into a maze of fraying rebel groups, banditry, tribal conflict and flip-flopping militias.

The United Nations has said 300,000 people have died and more than 2.2 million have been displaced. Khartoum puts the number of dead at 10,000.

Many of the rebels enjoy direct and indirect foreign support that helped fuel the conflict, with some critics pointing the finger at France, which has a military presence in neighbouring Chad – also accused of arming the Sudanese rebels. France had been accused of involvement in the genocide in Rwanda, but Paris denied responsibility, conceding only that ‘political’ errors were made.

The involvement of foreign missionary work in Darfur is expected to make matters even worse.
PrintPrinter Friendly Version


Top

 Biden hails US troops 'success' in Iraq
 Yemen rebels free 200 captured soldiers
 Tuk-tuks chug into Gaza, powered by smuggled fuel
 Palestinian family evicted from Jerusalem home
 Four soldiers killed in Iraq attacks
 Kuwait gets $650 million in Iraqi reparation
 Al-Qaeda claims suicide bombing in Algeria
 Yielding to pressure: Iran ready to stop uranium enrichment
 US urges accountability in Egypt police case
 Saudi leader kicks off regional tour in Egypt