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Bush
was asked by the evangelicals to "take a more decisive
role" in
Sudan
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WASHINGTON,
August 4 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Influential leaders
of the US evangelical organizations signed a letter asking President
George W. Bush to consider a military action against Sudan, as the
Sudanese government said it was ready to share power and wealth with
the Darfur rebels.
"Now
is... the time for the United States government to take a more
decisive role to prevent further slaughter and death," read the
letter signed by 35 Evangelical leaders of organizations that have 50
million members, and carried by Reuters on Wednesday, August 4.
They
complained the US-sponsored resolution in the United Nations on Darfur
did not go far enough on threatening military intervention in Sudan.
"The
administration needs to understand this constituency is serious about
Darfur," Richard Cizik of the National Association of
Evangelicals said.
"From
a moral vantage point, we can't sit on our hands and worry about the
consequences of intervention when the consequences of nonintervention
are so blatantly staring us in the face," he added.
The
message adds more pressures on Bush in his endeavor to run for a
second term in office as the evangelicals are a part of his political
base.
The
World Health Organization and the Doctors Without
Borders (MSF) group had earlier dismissed reports of the western media
on the mass killings and rapes in the Sudan's western Darfur,
considering such reports as a propagation campaign.
Marking
shift
Among
signatories of the letter were the leaders of several denominations,
such as the Assemblies of God and the Church of the Nazarene. They
also included the heads of the National Association of Evangelicals,
the World Evangelical Alliance and several seminaries, relief groups
and evangelical publications.
"We
view this as an opportunity to reach out to Muslims in the name of
Jesus," the Washington Post quoted Rev. Ted Haggard,
president of the National Association of Evangelicals as saying.
"Christian
people are appalled by this kind of genocide, and we don't want it
taking place in our generation," he added.
The
letter marks a change in the focus of the US
evangelical organizations, which had been interested for years
in solving the conflict between the Islamic government in Sudan and
Christians in the south.
The
letter came a few days after a Sudanese expert warned Christian
missionaries could
flood Darfur under the guise of humanitarian relief in
case of any foreign military intervention in the predominantly-Muslim
region.
In
2000, press reports said a number of American missionary groups have
established the "Institute for Islamic Studies" somewhere in
Latin America to teach enough about Islam to invade Muslim countries
and try to convert Muslims to Christianity.
Muslim
observers fear military intervention into Sudan could be aimed at
weakening its role in maintaining the Islamic identity of Darfur,
which has no Christians or churches. Southern Sudan has no more than
three million Christians after a massive wave of proselytization that
began in 1919.
Power
Sharing
This
came as UN Secretary general Kofi Annan's special envoy in Sudan, Jan
Pronk, has said security in the Darfur camps had improved.
The
Khartoum government also unveiled steps to improve security and allow
the return of refugees back to their homes in Darfur.
Among
other steps, Sudan intends to increase the number of police in Darfur
to 6,000 from 5,000 and deploy more troops.
The
government also expressed readiness to share power and wealth with the
Darfur rebels.
"We
are ready to share
power and resources in Darfur, we are ready for genuine
federalism," Information Minister Al-Zhawi Ibrahim Malik told AFP
on Tuesday, August 3.
"We
are ready to reach an agreement as we have done in resolving the
conflict in southern Sudan," said Malik in reference to Kenyan
peace talks with the Sudan People's Liberation Army aimed at ending
the two-decade civil war with the southern rebel group.
The
UN Security Council has adopted a resolution last Friday giving
Khartoum 30 days to disarm militias in Darfur or it would consider
sanctions against Sudan.