Why doesn the United Nations stop the Arab slave trade?
• Arab slave trade continues. U.N. condemns Israel. World thirsty for Oil. Nur Muhammad al-Hasan emerges from the Sudanese bush. His loose, once-bright white jalabiya flutters as he strides towards me. I in turn step through the long, dry grass towards him, stooping slightly as I walk under the weight of a U.S. army kit bag full of grimy Sudanese bank notes. It is April 1999 and the midday sun is oppressive. Nur and I greet each other with a handshake and “Salam ‘alaykum.” We slip under the shade of an enormous mango tree where we have some important business to discuss: The liberation of slaves, mainly women and children. Our enterprise is not to everyone’s liking. Last spring, Sudan’s government, the radical Islamist regime of the National Islamic Front (NIF) headed by Hasan at-Turabi and Gen. ‘Umar al-Bashir, protested to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights about our work. The regime claims that my organization, Christian Solidarity International (CSI), is the main source