SUDAN Leaders seek daily reports on deaths and rapes



The secretary-general urged the religious leaders to work with governments.
UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- Leaders representing over 100 million Christians, Muslims and Jews urged Secretary-General Kofi Annan to report the number of deaths and rapes in Sudan's Darfur region daily to highlight what they say is genocide.
Nobel peace laureate Eli Wiesel, a Holocaust survivor who led the delegation, said not enough is being done to end the conflict that has killed at least 70,000 people and forced 1.5 million people to flee their homes, creating what U.N. officials say is the worst humanitarian crisis in the world today.
The representatives of the major faiths saw the secretary-general Wednesday "to tell him of our pain, of our anguish, of our outrage at the situation in Darfur, where people are dying day after day, in the hundreds, in the thousands," Wiesel said.
During the meeting, he said, the delegation raised the idea of U.N. personnel in Darfur reporting daily on how many people were killed.
Hannah Rosenthal of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs said that "one way to educate the public and to demand an end to silence is to frame the issue -- not one group against another, not whether or not it fits a diplomatic definition, but how many people are being killed, starved, raped."
Meeting
The delegation was "very thrilled" to hear that the U.N. Security Council will be traveling to Nairobi, Kenya, to hold a meeting Nov. 18-19 focusing on Sudan. "And that will be in 10,000 deaths [timewise], and that's how we want to frame the issue," she said.
Dr. David Nabarro, head of crisis operations for the World Health Organization, said in September that as many as 10,000 refugees a month were dying in camps. But it has been difficult for aid agencies and the United Nations to provide a more precise death toll because they have been unable to travel throughout Darfur, a dangerous region the size of France.
It was Annan's first meeting on Darfur with interfaith leaders, many of whom are also members of the Save Darfur Coalition, which represents over 100 faith-based and civic organizations working to mobilize efforts to end the conflict.
The coalition was formed in July after an emergency summit on Darfur convened by the American Jewish World Service and the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, which teaches about past failures to prevent genocide.
Wiesel said Annan highlighted the need for money for Darfur and urged the religious leaders to work with governments to raise awareness.
"I really believe if people knew, then good people would try to intervene," Wiesel said. "For me, the indifference of the past is a source of anguish and despair. We ... say no more indifference. Wherever and whenever people kill other people, and people die, we must, must be sensitive to their pain and to their death."
Imam Talib Abdur-Rashid, chairman of the justice committee of the Islamic Leadership Council of New York, said it had worked with the Islamic Circle of North America to set up a charity four months ago to collect money and clothing for Darfur.
Support for the people in Darfur exists "not only throughout the Muslim world but among the 7 [million] to 8 million Muslims who are American citizens," he said.