The International Alliance to End Genocide
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To view the report "The International Campaign to End Genocide: A Review of Its First Ten Years," please click here. Please click here for a timeline of key events from ICEG's first ten years! Note: The International Campaign to End Genocide has changed its name to the International Alliance to End Genocide, a name that
better expresses the nature of the independent partnerships within the
International Alliance.
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1.5 million Armenians. 3 million Ukrainians. 6 million Jews. 250,000 Gypsies. 6 million Slavs. 25 million Russians. 25 million Chinese. 1 million Ibos. 1.5 million Bengalis. 200,000 Guatemalans. 1.7 million Cambodians. 500,000 Indonesians. 200,000 East Timorese. 250,000 Burundians. 500,000 Ugandans. 2 million Sudanese. 800,000 Rwandans. 2 million North Koreans. 10,000 Kosovars. Genocides and other mass murders killed more people in the twentieth century than all the wars combined.
“Never again” has turned into “Again and again.” Again and again, the response to genocide has been too little and too late.
During the Armenian genocide and the Holocaust, the world’s response was denial. In 1994, while 800,000 Tutsis died in Rwanda, State Department lawyers debated whether it was “genocide”, and the U.N. Security Council withdrew U.N. peacekeeping troops who could have saved hundreds of thousands of lives.
Genocide is the world’s worst intentional human rights problem. But it is different from other problems and requires different solutions. Because genocide is almost always carried out by a country’s own military and police forces, the usual national forces of law and order cannot stop it. International intervention is usually required. But because the world lacks an international rapid response force, and because the United Nations has so far been either paralyzed or unwilling to act, genocide has gone unchecked.
The International Alliance to End Genocide is an international coalition dedicated to creating the international institutions and the political will to end genocide forever.
The International Alliance to End Genocide has four goals:
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The provision of public information on the nature of genocide and creation of the political will to prevent and end it.
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The creation of an effective early-warning system to alert the world and especially the U.N. Security Council, NATO and other regional alliances to potential ethnic conflict and genocide.
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The establishment of a powerful United Nations rapid response force in accordance with Articles 43-47 of the U.N. Charter, as well as regional rapid response forces, and international police ready to be sent to areas where genocide threatens or has begun.
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Effective arrest, trial, and punishment of those who commit genocide, including the early and effective functioning of the International Criminal Court, the use of national courts with universal jurisdiction, and the creation of special international tribunals to prosecute perpetrators of genocide.
Genocide Watch is the Coordinator of the International Alliance to End Genocide. This Alliance is an international, de-centralized, global effort of many organizations. In addition to its work for institutional reform of the United Nations, it is a coalition that brings pressure upon governments that can act on early warnings of genocide through the U.N. Security Council. The Alliance has its own NGO early warning system and its own website: www.genocidewatch.org . Bypassing the secrecy of government intelligence services, the Alliance has created an early warning network to provide truly confidential communication links that allow relief and health workers, whistle-blowers, and ordinary citizens to create an alternative intelligence network that will warn of ethnic conflict before it turns into genocide.
The International Alliance to End Genocide covers genocide as it is defined in the Genocide Convention: “the intentional destruction, in whole or in part, of a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such.” It also covers political mass murder, ethnic cleansing, and other genocide-like crimes against humanity. It will not get bogged down in legal debates during mass killing.
Building the political will for action is the major task. Among the defense mechanisms used to justify non-action is denial of the facts. So the first job in preventing and stopping genocide is getting the facts in clear, indisputable form to policy makers. Most of that job is done by CNN and the news media. But conveying the information is not enough. It must be interpreted so that policy makers understand that genocidal massacres are systematic, or that the portents of genocide are as compelling as warnings of a hurricane. Then options for action must be suggested to those who make policy, and they must be lobbied to take action.
The International Alliance to End Genocide works to create political will through:
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Consciousness raising -- maintaining close contact with key policy makers in governments of U.N. Security Council members, providing them with information about genocidal situations.
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Coalition formation --working in coalitions to respond to specific genocidal situations and involving members in campaigns to educate the public and political leaders about solutions.
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Policy advocacy -- preparing options papers for action to prevent genocide in specific situations, and presenting them to policy makers.
The International Alliance to End Genocide concentrates on predicting, preventing, stopping, and punishing genocide and other forms of mass murder. It brings an analytical understanding of the genocidal process to specific situations. It does not simply study genocide or hold conferences, but attempts to prevent genocide, and build institutions that can end genocide forever.
The International Alliance’s headquarters location near Washington, D.C. permits it to influence U.S. foreign policy, a key to forceful humanitarian intervention when genocide threatens. But it also has key organizational members in the United Kingdom, Belgium, Germany, Israel, and other countries. It is an international effort that works with governments of U.N. Security Council members to create the political will for United Nations, rather than unilateral intervention.
The International Alliance’s coordinator is Genocide Watch, Post Office Box 809, Washington, D.C. 20044. Telephone: 7202-643-1405. FAX: 703-993-2340. e-mail: communications@genocidewatch.org website: www.genocidewatch.org
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The following organizations are members of the International Alliance to End Genocide, chaired by Genocide Watch. Originally, the Alliance started in 1999 as the International Campaign to End Genocide, and was the first international genocide prevention coalition. Since then, it has changed its name to the International Alliance to End Genocide.
The Aegis Trust - Genocide Prevention Initiative: Nottinghamshire, United Kingdom
The Anuak Justice Council: Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada; Spokane, Washington, USA
The Interfaith Anti-Genocide Alliance: New York, NY; Washington, DC; Capetown, South Africa
CALDH - centro de acción legal para los derechos humanos: Guatemala City, Guatemala
The Cambodian Genocide Group: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
The Cambodian Genocide Project, Inc.: Washington, DC, USA
Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, University of Minnesota: Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Center for Holocaust and Human Rights Studies at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva University: New York, New York, USA
Center for Political Beauty Berlin, Germany
CHAK -- The Centre of Halabja against Anfalazation and Genocide of Kurds:
London, United Kingdom; Stockholm, Sweden; Washington, DC, USA;
Copenhagen, Denmark; Berlin, Germany; Ottawa, Canada; Oslo, Norway, The
Hague, Netherlands; Helsinki, Finland
Course of Action (COA-NonProfit)
Conflict Risk Network (CRN)
Documentation Center of Cambodia (DC-Cam), Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Foundation for Global Collaboration and Peace
Genocide Alert: Germany
The Genocide Intervention Network: Washington, DC, USA CRN
Genocide Studies Program - Yale University: New Haven, Connecticut, USA
Genocide Watch: Washington, D.C., USA; Capetown, South Africa
INDICT: Baghdad, Iraq
INFORCE: Bournemouth, UK
The Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide: Jerusalem, Israel
The Institute For Genocide Awareness & Applied Research
The Institute for Horn of Africa Studies and Affairs, San Diego, California USA
Institute for Research of Genocide, Canada Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Institute for Research of Crimes against Humanity and International Law Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
International Alert: London, United Kingdom
The International Crisis Group: Brussels, Belgium; New York, Washington, DC, USA; London, United Kingdom; Moscow, Russia
Jewish World Watch: California, USA
Minority Rights Group International: London, United Kingdom
The Montreal Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies: Montreal, Québec, Canada
Never Again: London, United Kingdom; Kigali, Rwanda; Canada; U.S.A.
The Nuba Vision Coalition, Inc., Sudan, USA, UK, and Canda
The Plowshares Institute: Hartford, Connecticut, U.S.A., Capetown, South Africa
Prévention Génocides: Brussels, Belgium
The Remembering Rwanda Trust: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
The Sentinel Project for Genocide Prevention, Toronto, Canada
STAND: A Student Anti-Genocide Coalition: Washington, DC & 400+ campuses
Survival International: London, UK; Milan, Italy; Madrid, Spain; Paris, France
TRIAL: Geneva, Switzerland
World Without Genocide: Edina, Minnesota, USA
More Information
How We Can Prevent Genocide Building an International Alliance to End Genocide by Dr. Gregory H. Stanton, President, Genocide Watch.
The International Campaign to End Genocide: A Review of its First Five Years By Dr. Gregory H. Stanton, President, Genocide Watch
The International Campaign to End Genocide: A Review of its First Ten Years
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