John Prendergast

The Crisis in the Sudans: The Urgency of U.S.-China Cooperation

This op-ed co-authored with actor George Clooney originally appeared on Time.com.

On the surface, our recent trip to the rebel-held areas of Sudan’s Nuba Mountains hauntingly echoed earlier visits to Darfur and South Sudan. A huge group of people—targeted by their government in Khartoum because of their ethnicity, the rich land they live on, and their resistance to dictatorship—are being serially bombarded, raped, abducted, and starved in this case for the second time in the last two decades. The culprit remains the same as well: the Khartoum regime led by General Omar al-Bashir, wanted by the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity. This human rights catastrophe within Sudan is unfolding alongside a virtual state of war between Sudan and South Sudan, playing itself out in the border oilfields not far from the Nuba Mountains.  Read More »

Chris Meloni vs. Joseph Kony: Funny or Die, Enough Project Take on the LRA

How did the Enough Project team up with actor Chris Meloni to produce this new video with Funny or Die about LRA leader Joseph Kony? This op-ed, originally featured on the Huffington Post, describes how Meloni got invested in the cause and about what the Obama administration must do to ensure that the military advisors deployed to central Africa are successful in their mission to help bring an end to the LRA.  Read More »

George Clooney Witnesses War Crimes in Sudan's Nuba Mountains – New Enough Project Video

Date: 
Mar 14, 2012

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Jonathan Hutson, jhutson@enoughproject.org, +1-202-386-1618

WASHINGTON – George Clooney witnessed indiscriminate bombing of civilians in the conflict-torn state of South Kordofan, Sudan during a trip last week with Enough Project Co-founder John Prendergast. A four-minute Enough Project video released today, written and directed by Clooney, documents an aerial attack in the Nuba Mountains and spotlights the urgency for action to stop the targeting of civilians in Sudan.

“This isn’t a war of retaliation, this is simply trying to clear people out ethnically because of the color of their skin,” said Clooney in the video.

South Kordofan, which is home to Sudan’s ethnic minority Nuba people, has been an ongoing target of aerial bombardment by the Sudanese Armed Forces, or SAF. According to UN estimates, most of the 200,000 Nuba people who remain in South Kordofan are hiding in caves to avoid attacks, cut off from humanitarian aid.

“This is a civilian protection crisis,” said Prendergast in the video. “We talk all the time about the responsibility to protect human life—right here is a ground zero for that responsibility.”

In the video, Clooney takes cover alongside Nuba people as apparent SAF Antonov bombers fly overhead. He speaks to witnesses and victims of recent bombings, and includes footage of a young boy who lost both of his hands while hiding in a cave during an attack.

At the conclusion of the video, the Enough Project urges viewers to take action (Text Sudan to 30644) and send their Member of Congress a message to support the recently-introduced Sudan Peace, Security, and Accountability Act of 2012.

View the video: “George Clooney Witnesses War Crimes in Sudan's Nuba Mountains

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Enough is a project of the Center for American Progress to end genocide and crimes against humanity. Founded in 2007, the Enough Project focuses on crises in Sudan, eastern Congo, and areas of Africa affected by the Lord’s Resistance Army. Enough’s strategy papers and briefings provide sharp field analysis and targeted policy recommendations based on a “3P” crisis response strategy: promoting durable peace, providing civilian protection, and punishing perpetrators of atrocities. Enough works with concerned citizens, advocates, and policy makers to prevent, mitigate, and resolve these crises. For more information, please visit www.enoughproject.org.

AOL Feature: 'You've Got John Prendergast'

John Prendergast on AOL

John Prendergast tells AOL how he got started as an activist and why "you've got to fight for human rights."  Read More »

Three Challenges for Two Sudans

This piece first appeared as part of New York Times "Room for Debate." Enough Project Co-founder John Prendergast and other debaters—including Oxfam’s Sudan Country Director El Fateh Osman, Former Special Envoy to Sudan Andrew S. Natsios, Girifna member Dalia Haj-Omar, Chair of Islamic Studies at American University Akbar Ahmed, National Director of STAND Daniel Soloman, and Heritage Foundation Research Associate Morgan Roach—address the question: How can world leaders prevent another humanitarian disaster from taking place in Sudan?  Read More »

USA Today Oped: Sudan and Congo Savaged as World Shrugs

2011 was a year of unprecedented action on behalf of freedom and human rights. When citizens flooded streets throughout the Middle East and North Africa, the U.S. and other countries dropped their long-standing presidential allies and demanded new leadership. When massive human rights abuses loomed in Libya and Ivory Coast, the international community acted decisively. That backdrop makes it all the more puzzling why the two countries where human rights abuses are worst in the world—Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo—have received such comparatively tepid international responses.  Read More »

Saving Darfur’s Peace Process: Enough Project Report

Date: 
Oct 12, 2011

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Jonathan Hutson, jhutson@enoughproject.org, +1-202-386-1618

WASHINGTON – The international community must take a new approach to peace in Darfur by abandoning its piecemeal approach to Sudan, and demanding a comprehensive peace process that will address overarching national grievances, according to a new Enough Project policy report.

“It is time to recognize that the issues in Darfur mirror those in South Kordofan, Blue Nile, and the East, which all stem from a common denominator of marginalization by the center,” said co-author and Enough Project Advisor Omer Ismail.  “To move toward peace in the north, the international community should prioritize a push for an all-inclusive, national process that reflects the will of the Sudanese people.”

The authors advocate for a comprehensive peace process that would deal with all of Sudan’s warring regions collectively, and establish mechanisms to address national issues such as the concentration of power and wealth sharing.

"The Darfur peace process is dead,” said co-author and Enough Project Co-Founder John Prendergast. “The idea that any one region can be negotiated in a process unconnected to other regions that suffer the same inequities and repression is fatally flawed.  The time has come to move to a new phase in peacemaking in Sudan, before the country is engulfed in a full-scale national war.  A process involving all regions, constitutional reform, and elections is the peaceful way to resolve Sudan's multiple conflicts.  Absent that, more intense war will follow, and the suffering of Sudan's population will deepen."

A national peace process, which includes establishing a constitutional conference followed by free and fair elections, should aim to resolve shared grievances—such as economic and political marginalization at the hands of the ruling regime in Khartoum—that have been negotiated ineffectively at the regional level. The process should also include a second phase in which regional stakeholders, including Darfuris, could negotiate any outstanding issues unique to their region.

“To ensure the success of a comprehensive peace process, there must also be a change in the mediation,” said co-author Laura Jones, a Sudan policy analyst for the Enough Project. “The competitive approach to peacemaking that has defined the Darfur mediation thus far must be countered by the designation of a new, internationally-supported mediator, who can effectively negotiate with all parties.”

The report provides a "Checklist for a more inclusive all-Sudan peace process," which outlines attributes of an ideal mediator, as well as prerequisites for a successful peace process.

Read the full report: "How to Save Darfur’s Peace Process"

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Enough is a project of the Center for American Progress to end genocide and crimes against humanity. Founded in 2007, the Enough Project focuses on crises in Sudan, eastern Congo, and areas of Africa affected by the Lord’s Resistance Army. Enough’s strategy papers and briefings provide sharp field analysis and targeted policy recommendations based on a “3P” crisis response strategy: promoting durable peace, providing civilian protection, and punishing perpetrators of atrocities. Enough works with concerned citizens, advocates, and policy makers to prevent, mitigate, and resolve these crises. For more information, please visit www.enoughproject.org.

How to Save Darfur’s Peace Process

The time has come to recognize that the issues in Darfur mirror those in South Kordofan, Blue Nile, and the East, and should therefore not be dealt with in isolation. The international community needs to abandon its piecemeal approach to Sudan and unite behind a demand for a comprehensive solution to the problem of overly concentrated, abusive power at the center.

What the Arab Spring Means for Sudan

The combination of current internal, regional and international variables could provide a real catalyst for future peace in Sudan. Demonstrations earlier this year, inspired by Arab Spring initiatives in neighboring countries, were ruthlessly crushed with draconian regime tactics—including rape of women involved in protests.

A New U.S. Policy for Two New Sudans

After a decades-long deadly struggle for freedom, South Sudanese celebrated for days over the realization of their dream of independent statehood. A new U.S. policy—rooted in the international responsibility to protect civilian life and democracy promotion—is desperately needed for these two new Sudans.

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