Congress: Justice Delayed
Sudan Peace Act may be a casualty of the war on terrorism.
Art Moore | posted 11/12/2001 12:00AM

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Restrictions Resisted
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and many financial leaders have joined the Bush administration in opposing capital-market restrictions. Opponents believe that other international investors would take up the slack, making the U.S. restrictions irrelevant. Investors in Sudan's oil industry include corporations based in Belgium, Britain, Canada, China, France, Italy, Malaysia, and Sweden.
Stock exchanges in Toronto and New York trade shares of Canada's Talisman Energy. A 25 percent stake in the Greater Nile Oil Project in Sudan, which produces 200,000 barrels a day, is becoming a significant source of revenue for Talisman. Talisman has indicated it would sell its Sudan investment rather than face removal from the New York Stock Exchange.
Paul Marshall, senior fellow at the Center for Religious Freedom at Freedom House in Washington, d.c., notes that the United States has the largest capital market in the world. Marshall says that if lawmakers void restrictions, "We're saying we are willing to fund foreign companies to do things which we have forbidden American companies to do." American companies were barred from doing business with Sudan in a 1997 executive order.
The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom has joined the campaign for capital-market limits. Spokesman Lawrence Goodrich says he is worried about the delay.
But he is not ready to say that U.S. policy toward Sudan has fundamentally changed.
President Bush, he notes, recently appointed former Senator John Danforth of Missouri to broker a peace deal in Sudan. Goodrich says this is a sign of the administration's continued concern.
Republican Senator Sam Brownback, a backer of market restrictions, has cautioned Danforth, an Episcopal priest, not to "equate the two sides" in the conflict. "These are bad operators in Khartoum," says Brownback, who has visited Sudan. "They have done a lot of awful things over a long period of time."
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Related Elsewhere:
Recently, Christianity Today reported that persecution watchdogs fear that religious freedom protection may be traded away for help in the war on terrorism.
Media coverage of the Sudan Peace Act since September 11 includes:
New casualty: Sudan peace act — The Washington Post (Oct.5, 2001)
US delays move to impose sanctions on oil companies — UN Integrated Regional Information Networks (Sept. 27, 2001)
The naughty are rewarded in US's foreign policy shift — Inter Press Service (Sept. 25, 2001)
Talisman reprieve comes by way of U.S. Congress — National Post (Sept. 25, 2001)
For in-depth analysis of religious persecution in Sudan, see the 2001 International Religious Freedom Report.
In June, Christianity Today'sBearing the Cross looked at the persecution of Christians in Sudan.
The U.S. Department of State's Bureau of African Affairs has country information on Sudan.
For more on how can you help Christians in Sudan, see Christian Solidarity Worldwide, Samaritan's Purse, and Persecution.com. Plus, Make Me Your Voice is a worship album dedicated to the massive persecution currently taking place in Sudan.
The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum site has a page warning against the current Sudan genocide. The Sudan area includes resources for more information.
For more articles on the Sudan and the peace act see Yahoo's full coverage area, allAfrica.com and Christianity Today's area on persecution.
Our earlier coverage of the Sudan genocide includes:
Slave Redemption | Americans are becoming instant abolitionists. But is the movement backfiring? (Aug. 9, 1999)
Freedom Panel Alleges Genocide | U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom makes suggestion on Sudan's worsening abuses. (May 4, 2001)
Turn Off Sudan's Oil Wells, Say Canadian Church Visitors | Christian leaders say they are "outraged" that a Canadian oil company is paying huge royalties to Sudanese government. (Apr. 20, 2001)
The Maturing of Victimhood | A new exhibit at the Holocaust Museum is a very good sign. (Mar. 29, 2001)
Sudan Loses Election for U.N. Security Council Seat | Sanctions continue to plague the African nation's bid for international acceptance. (Oct. 12, 2000)
Southern Sudan Bombed Despite Cease-fire Promise | Details sketchy from town of Yei, near Democratic Republic of the Congo. (May 8, 2000)
Editorial: Confronting Sudan's Evils | Western Christians and governments should press Khartoum on multiple fronts. (Apr. 12, 2000)
Sudan Relief Operations Endangered | Rebel demands cause agencies to curtail efforts. (April 3, 2000)
Bombs Continue to Fall on Ministry Hospitals in Sudan | Samaritan's Purse hit for fourth time, two killed in Voice of the Martyrs bombing. (March 24, 2000)
Mixing Oil and Blood | Sudan's 'slaughter of the innocents' toughens religious freedom coalition. (Mar. 15, 2000)
Protest Begins as White House Rethinks Policy on Sudan Regime | Religious leaders urge Clinton administration to act against oppression. (Feb. 10, 2000)
Christian Solidarity Loses U.N. Status | Slave-freeing organization's rebel spokesman violated U.N. rules (Dec. 14, 1999)
Sudan Releases Jailed Catholic Priests | President Resolves Impasse in Contrived Bombing Trial (Dec. 13, 1999)
Jailed Sudanese Priests Reject Presidential Amnesty | Clerics waiting for 'total acquittal' by courts. (Dec. 6, 1999)
Oil Exports Draw Protests | Christians urge divestment from Canadian company (Nov. 15, 1999)
Starvation Puts 150,000 at Risk (Sept. 6,1999)
The Price of a Slave | "I was taken by a slave master [who] beat me and shamed me, telling me that I was like a dog." (Feb. 8, 1999)
Sudanese Christians Bloody, but Unbowed (Aug. 10, 1998)
How Apin Akot Redeemed His Daughter (Mar. 2, 1998)
Muslim-Christian Conflicts May Destabilize East Africa | Christians raped, forced into slavery, and killed. (Apr. 29, 1996)