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Howard University First HBCU to Divest From Sudan
By Christina Asquith
Apr 1, 2007, 21:11

Calling the human rights abuses in Sudan "intolerable," Howard
University's Board of Trustees voted recently to cut off all ties with
companies doing business in the war-torn African nation. 

 

This decision makes Howard the first HBCU to join the growing
divest-from-Sudan movement started by Harvard University in 2004 and
sweeping across American college campuses.  

 

"Clearly it's the right thing to do," said Howard University president
H. Patrick Swygert. "The situation in the Sudan is intolerable and has
been so for a long time." 

 

The decision at Howard, which was made public last week, came down
during a board of trustees meeting in late January following an
examination of the crisis and its devastating effects on the lives of
Black African Muslims in Darfur.

 

As the student-inspired Divest Sudan movement has spread across college
campuses, there have been a calls for HBCUs to divest.  Joe Madison, a
celebrated activist and radio and TV commentator, led a push at Howard
University last year and thinks other HBCUs must join the cause. 

 

"HBCUs have a close relationship with countries in Africa, and with the
continent. They have a historical connection. They have educated
post-colonial leaders. But most important of all: they're African
Americans. So they have a kinship to Africa and a moral obligation to
take the lead on this," Madison says. 

 

Madison has been working on African issues, and Sudan in particular, for
years, leading marches, protests and conversations on his D.C.-based
public affairs radio show.    

 

Divestment campaigns demand that universities comb through their
endowments and portfolio and sell off any investments in companies,
banks or governments doing business with the offending nation. The
monies can be big, with millions of dollars at stake; although in the
case of Sudan, even such large figures usually represent less than 1
percent of a university's overall portfolio. 

 

Most agree that in order to be effective, the tactic must be adopted by
a broad swath of groups, including international companies and banks.
Students, however, say that the negative publicity associated with their
campaign also effectively pressures politicians and companies. 

 

The Divest Sudan campaign began in late 2004 at Harvard University, when
the student newspaper reported that Harvard University was invested in
companies whose dealings with the Sudanese government helped prop up the
violent regime. 

 

Over the ensuing months, students at Stanford, Dartmouth, Yale and
others researched corporations and articles and even contacted the
Central Intelligence Agency to compile lists of companies with dealings
with Sudan. They took these reports to the board of trustees at their
respective schools. 

 

Thus far, dozens of other colleges have joined in, including the entire
University of California system.  However, HBCUs have been slow to
respond. Madison says he knows why.

 

"There's a lack of knowledge about it. There has not been the intensity
on the HBCU campuses or the organization structure, but I don't think
many student groups at primarily White institutions have reached out,"
he says.

 

Although a large country, rich with natural resources, Sudan has dealt
with crippling corruption and mismanagement that has squandered most of
its natural wealth. This has lead to fighting between tribes over food,
land, water, and most recently, millions in international aid. 

 

The largest nation in Africa, Sudan sits on the East coast, just south
of Egypt and west of Ethiopia. Fighting has long reigned between the
government in Khartoun and rebels in Southern Sudan. In 2003, a peace
agreement was being brokered between the two groups, when an uprising
broke out in the Western Sudan region of Darfur. The government is
accused of arming the Janjaweed -- the Arab militia -- to crack down on
this uprising by scorching villages and committing mass murder and rape.
While some say the government is rightfully quashing an uprising, others
say the Sudanese government's vicious crackdown qualifies as genocide. 

 

In the last three years, an estimated 2 million people have been
displaced, and reportedly between 200,000 and 400,000 people have died.
In 2004, the U.S. Congress declared the trouble a "genocide," although
some international organizations dispute that characterization. Genocide
is a legal term recognized by international law that implies an effort
exists to "destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or
religious group."  

 

The Howard University board has written a resolution that it will share
with other HBCUs to use as a model. The resolution says the university
will "bar investments in all companies doing business in the Sudan" and
"advise investment managers and investment consultants of this policy
decision and ask them to refrain from any investment in companies in
this sector in Sudan;" and "require investment managers and consultants
to inform the university by June 30, 2007 of any company in its
management portfolio doing business in Sudan."

 

"As an institution that has always opposed such flagrant disrespect for
human rights, Howard University has to use whatever options available to
pressure the government and hopefully bring to an end, sooner rather
than later, the suffering and wanton killing of so many people," Howard
president Swygert said in a statement.

 

In recent years, similar divestment campaigns, including an attempt to
pressure Harvard to return endowment money from the Bin Laden family and
a nationwide divestment campaign against Israel, both failed. Many say
the last successful divestment campaign was 20 years ago against the
apartheid South African government. 

 

U.S. companies are not legally allowed to work in Sudan, after President
Bill Clinton forced American companies out of Sudan in 1997 to protest
their human rights abuses.  However, foreign companies rushed into Sudan
to fill the void, and they are much less receptive to U.S .students
campaigns and global calls for human rights violations. The primary
companies targeted are Chinese oil and natural gas company PetroChina,
Swiss engineering company ABB and Russian oil company Tatneft. 

 

Madison says Howard has shown leadership on the issue, and he hopes that
"more HBCUs will follow suit. That is my hope." 

 

--Christina Asquith

 

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