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The
Politics of Slaughter in Sudan
Dan Connell
(Dan Connell,
a contributing editor of Middle East Report, writes frequently
on the Horn of Africa. He teaches journalism and African politics
at Simmons College in Boston.)
October 18,
2004
One day in
the summer of 2004, more than 400 armed members of the janjaweed
militia attacked the western Sudanese village of Donki Dereisa.
They killed 150 civilians, including six young children, aged 3
to 14, who were captured during the assault and burned alive later
that day, according to the Washington-based human rights group Refugees
International. A man who tried to save the children was beheaded
and dismembered. Eyewitnesses say that a military aircraft bombed
the village during the attack and that Sudanese Army foot soldiers
joined in the fighting on the ground. Afterward, government sources
denied any involvement and downplayed the incident. That response
pattern has typified the ongoing crisis in the Sudanese province
of Darfur from the start.
In the face
of such disclaimers, journalists, relief workers and human rights
monitors describe a scorched-earth operation waged jointly by the
government and the janjaweed of wholesale massacres, summary executions,
the razing of entire villages and the depopulation of wide swathes
of farmland. "The government and its janjaweed allies have
killed thousands of Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa -- often in cold blood
-- raped women, and destroyed villages, food stocks and other supplies
essential to the civilian population," says a recent Human
Rights Watch report.
At least 70,000
civilians have been killed, 400 villages destroyed and more than
1.5 million people displaced -- 200,000 fleeing to neighboring Chad
-- in a brutal campaign that has devastated Darfur over the past
year, leading UN officials to term this "the world's worst
humanitarian crisis." Though large-scale attacks slowed over
the summer after a parade of reporters, diplomats and relief workers
trooped through the area -- including Secretary of State Colin Powell
-- acts of terror continue. Militiamen are raping women and girls
as they leave camps to collect firewood, says Dennis McNamara, a
senior official in the UN's Nairobi Office for the Coordination
of Humanitarian Assistance.
Terror has
become a daily fact of life for Darfuris, according to UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan's Special Representative for Sudan Jan Pronk, who told
the Security Council on October 8 that since August "there
was no systematic improvement of people's security and no progress
on ending impunity." In response, Annan established a five-member
commission to determine whether genocide is being committed. Headed
by Antonio Cassese, an Italian judge who served as the first president
of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia,
the commission includes members from Egypt, Pakistan, Ghana and
Peru. Its appearance signals a growing international outcry over
this slaughter, muted for nearly a year as the bodies piled up,
even as punitive action is delayed.
In mid-October,
the Dutch foreign minister raised the prospect of European Union
sanctions on Sudan, and Britain, Australia and New Zealand have
offered to send peacekeepers. Congress has called the killing "genocide"
and, on September 18, the Bush administration shepherded a resolution
threatening sanctions through the UN Security Council. George W.
Bush has echoed the Congressional charges of genocide (as has Democratic
presidential hopeful John Kerry), but, like everyone else, he has
taken no action to stop the carnage. In fact, for all the public
hand wringing, precious little action has resulted from any quarter
beyond the dispatch of a few dozen African Union monitors to document
the deteriorating situation. Nor is it likely to, apart from efforts
to send more monitors and to accelerate a belated relief effort
-- which suits the Khartoum government and just about everyone else
involved, outside of Darfuris themselves.
ROOTS OF THE
CONFLICT
The Darfur
crisis, often described as tribal warfare between Arabs and Africans,
is both more and less than that.
The frontline
combatants and their victims are mainly of Arab or African descent,
though it is often difficult to distinguish them face to face. But
the janjaweed themselves are more a rampaging gang than an organized
militia. Even their name is merely a colloquialism for "horsemen
with guns," not a term with cultural, linguistic or political
roots, and they do not in any organized way "represent"
the Arab tribes in western Sudan. Those who are being described
as janjaweed and are raping and pillaging under this name are drawn
mainly from pastoral peoples known as murahilin (migrants) who compete
with the settled Fur farmers they are attacking for access to land
and water. This long-standing contest has intensified as desertification
has worsened. Many of these nomads only arrived in Sudan from Chad
and West Africa in the 1970s and 1980s. These tensions escalated
into today's catastrophe when Sudan's central government, fearing
a popular uprising among the Fur after the emergence in early 2003
of two small rebel groups demanding greater autonomy, stoked the
resource rivalry by unleashing the janjaweed as a proxy army. In
the meantime, Khartoum developed a more systematic counterinsurgency.
The Darfur
crisis is not one people assaulting another in a frenzy of long-buried
ethnic hatred, as in Rwanda. It is a mob of armed thugs cashing
in on the opportunity to loot at will, while securing political
objectives set by their handlers: the quashing of an uprising that
could not only threaten the government's hold on this region but
also unravel its efforts to reach a lasting truce with the rebellious
south and perhaps kick off new revolts in the restive east and north.
Nor is the nature and scope of this disaster unique within Sudan.
It is the outcome of a decades-long strategy of divide and rule
that successive governments -- all drawn from the fractious elite
that resides in and around Khartoum -- have used to put down challenges,
mostly out of the international spotlight.
The roots of
this conflict lie in decades of grossly unequal development in Sudan's
wealthy, riverine core at the confluence of the two main Nile tributaries
and the rest of the country -- not only the black African south,
which revolted even before the country gained its independence from
Britain in 1956, but much of the west, east and north as well. These
areas were marginalized under colonial rule and then exploited or
ignored by successive Sudanese governments, of which the "Islamic"
regime of Gen. Omar al-Bashir is only the latest incarnation.
WIN-WIN, LOSE-LOSE
The narrow
focus on the violence and the plight of its victims, as horrific
as it is, has obscured the politics behind the crisis. The tragic
reality is that the Sudanese government has largely got what it
wanted from its janjaweed proxies by now: the routing of the two
small rebel armies -- the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) and the Justice
and Equality Movement (JEM) -- that attacked government military
installations in 2003 and the draining of the civilian sea in which
they swam. For their part, the janjaweed have got what they wanted:
a treasure trove of booty pillaged from their victims, none of which
is likely to be returned, together with vastly expanded access to
grazing land for their herds. Aid workers told visiting journalists
in September that janjaweed working as camp police were trying to
bribe refugees to go back to their villages to blunt international
protest.
If the Khartoum
government can maintain a modicum of control over the janjaweed,
the Bush administration will get what it wants, too: an apparent
diplomatic success at modest cost that both satisfies its evangelical
Christian constituency, which has turned Sudan into a moral crusade
based on the regime's persecution of southern Christians, and permits
the dismantling of Clinton-era sanctions and the reopening of Sudan's
extensive and largely untapped oil reserves to American companies.
The losers
will be the millions of terrified and impoverished Darfuris who
have lost homes, crops, animals and basic security and who now face
the prospect of, at best, indefinite reliance on international charity.
Down the line, the losers could be the Bejas of eastern Sudan, or
the Nuba in the north, or whatever other people in this, Africa's
most ethnically diverse nation, has the temerity to demand its rights.
SCAMMING THE
WORLD
The challenge
to the international community is to approach Darfur from the standpoint
both of how to stem the violence today and how to resolve the issues
that drive the crisis in order to avoid a repetition. In short,
efforts to ameliorate the disaster should be folded into a comprehensive
peace process that embraces the entire country.
The most pressing
need in Darfur is security, without which not only will the violence
get worse, but the humanitarian emergency will spin out of control.
In the summer of 2004, the African Union (AU) sent 133 observers
to monitor the shaky ceasefire between rebel groups and the government,
with 300 more troops added to protect the monitors, but they have
been overwhelmed by the task of operating in an area the size of
Texas that contains an at-risk population of five to seven million.
Khartoum has indicated, under pressure, that it may be willing to
accept another 3,500 AU troops and monitors, but many observers
say that at least three times that many are needed. In October,
the Sudan Liberation Movement called on British Prime Minister Tony
Blair to expand the AU mission to 30,000. Meanwhile, field reports
suggest that many of those there today cannot move about Darfur
because their vehicles lack fuel and spare parts.
Without security,
the war-displaced civilians will remain in unsanitary camps where
disease is a bigger killer than hunger. The resulting protracted
dependence on international relief will create a new set of problems.
Meanwhile, major famine looms even if they do go home. The widespread
theft of animals and grain stores, the razing of villages and crops,
and the inability of war victims to sow any seeds over the summer
leave millions at risk of starvation until the end of the next crop
cycle in 2005. As the rainy season winds to a close and transportation
routes reopen, there will be a need to protect relief convoys so
that there is not a repeat of the Somali crisis of the early 1990s,
in which armed bands hijacked incoming aid and built their militias
with it.
Beyond these
humanitarian efforts, there must be accountability for the mass
murder and looting. So far the government's much touted arrests
of men they claim are janjaweed have mostly turned out to be common
criminals already imprisoned for months or even years. The authorities
may even execute some to make it appear they are acting decisively.
This is such a poorly conceived scam that one has to wonder who
Sudanese officials thought they were fooling, yet it typifies the
sense of "impunity" described by Jan Pronk in his October
8 report to the Security Council. This same sense of impunity led
Sudanese Foreign Minister Mustafa Ismail, in Libya for regional
talks on the Darfur crisis, to add a new twist to the government's
claims that they have tried to rein in the janjaweed. Despite having
dispatched more troops to Iraq than Khartoum has to Darfur, Ismail
told the BBC, the US has been unable to establish security in the
country it invaded.
As is now well-established,
however, it was not just janjaweed doing the killing. Extensive
firsthand testimony and Sudanese government documents obtained by
Human Rights Watch indicate that Sudanese regular army and air force
units were directly involved. It certainly was not just the local
gangsters who unleashed the carnage. They simply took advantage
of the opportunity when it was thrust upon them. Accountability
for the disaster in Darfur must go up the chain of command to the
officials in Khartoum who gave the orders, sent the troops, provided
the air cover and supplied the stream of excuses of which Ismail's
is only the latest.
SQUEEZED BETWEEN
LOBBIES
The Sudanese
civil war, taking place on many fronts, is a highly fluid confrontation
between conflicting visions of what it means to be a Sudanese, who
will enjoy the full fruits of Sudanese citizenship and whether those
who have until now been forcibly excluded will remain a part of
Sudan at all. A halt to the fighting in Darfur that fails to address
these deeper issues is bound to founder. To ignore the longer history
and focus only on the resolution of recent grievances, as the Bush
administration has done, in Darfur as in the north-south conflict,
is folly. Yet the US may have painted itself into a corner on Sudan
from which there is no easy -- or constructive -- way out. This
corner was illuminated by the inability of either Bush or his opponent
Kerry to offer a straight answer to PBS anchor Jim Lehrer when,
during the September 30 presidential debate, he asked the candidates
why the US has not acted to stop the "genocide" in Darfur.
At home, the
administration is squeezed between contending lobbies. On one side
are right-wing evangelicals, led by Rev. Billy Graham's son Franklin,
who were initially drawn to this issue by the presence of Christian
victims in the north-south conflict. They are joined by African
Americans outraged at the treatment of black Africans. Both constituencies
favor stepped-up US intervention, ranging from stiffer sanctions
to direct military involvement. Pulling in the other direction are
oil companies and other corporate interests that argue for "constructive
engagement" in order to soften the regime's rough edges --
and reopen the country to American investment, blocked since the
Clinton years. "China, India, Malaysia and some European countries
are dramatically expanding business ties with Sudan, taking advantage
of US sanctions that bar American companies from operating here,"
warned a recent front-page story in the Bush-friendly Washington
Times.
In the face
of these conflicting pressures, the administration has been increasingly
strident in its criticism of the Khartoum government, while quietly
struggling to keep the faltering north-south talks going, but taking
no other action toward Sudan beyond urging modest sanctions in a
UN Security Council ill-disposed to do its bidding. China, which
has a major investment in Sudan's oil fields, had threatened to
veto anything stronger and ended up abstaining on the 11-4 vote
on the September 18 resolution, along with Russia, Pakistan and
Algeria. Pakistan is also invested in Sudan's oil. Russia, which
does a brisk trade in arms with Sudan, has been lukewarm to sanctions.
For its part, Algeria, fearing a precedent, voiced concerns that
the UN was treading on Sudan's sovereignty.
One problem
for Bush is that his administration has so thoroughly poisoned the
atmosphere for international peacemaking by its unilateralism on
Iraq, its one-sided posture in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
and its cavalier attitude toward multilateral mechanisms elsewhere
that it is unable to rally support for action on Sudan. The appetite
for another US-initiated intervention is simply not there. Nor can
the Bush administration afford to alienate its shaky Middle East
allies over one more action aimed at an Arab state, however corrupt
it may be. In this climate, Ismail's comparison of Khartoum's policy
in Darfur to US policy in Iraq may actually fall on some sympathetic
ears.
The US failure
to halt (or even speak out about) the violence in Darfur until it
peaked in 2004 also highlights the weakness of the north-south peace
process in which the Bush administration is so heavily invested.
Nearly four years of cajoling both sides, using former Missouri
senator and current ambassador to the UN John Danforth as a special
envoy, brought the warring parties to the brink of an agreement
to end the fighting. But the pact is stuck and may yet collapse.
Its main weakness is that is turns the south into an exception to
national policies that remain anathema to other oppressed and marginalized
peoples. By failing to restructure Sudan itself, it simply sidelines
one problem to make room for others to arise.
US policy needs
to be thoroughly recast to deal with Sudan's intricate ethnic, religious
and political conflicts. It needs to be tailored to the complex,
shifting reality on the ground, and it needs to be built with strong
support from the wider international community. None of this would
be easy under normal conditions. It is made even more difficult
in an election year, and, given the conflicting pressures upon the
Bush administration from within its own base, the prospect for sustained,
effective action is dim indeed. Yet anything less will only postpone
additional bloodshed, at best.
NO PATCHWORK
APPROACH
What is obvious
today -- if not before -- is that a patchwork approach to the crises
in Sudan cannot work, not only because it will fall apart under
increasing pressures and tensions from multiple directions but because
this way of conceptualizing the conflict is just plain wrong. Those
who insist on this failed strategy are the ones who characterized
the north-south civil war as a Muslim-Christian conflict and who
now present the slaughter in Darfur as an Arab-African fight. But
then how do we explain the war in the Nuba Mountains, where people
of many faiths and ethno-linguistic groups have revolted and faced
unrelenting government violence? How do we explain the revolts in
the northeast among the Beja and other ancient Islamic cultures,
or among their Arab allies from the riparian heartland? Add these
battlegrounds up and they paint a picture of a regime that is colonizing
Sudan from within, using the tried and true colonial strategy of
divide and rule.
The only two
possible solutions under these circumstances are to fold Darfur
and other regional conflicts (including that in the northeast) into
the north-south peace talks taking place in Naivasha, Kenya, and
deal with the nation as a whole, or to give up on the notion of
a unified Sudanese state. If autonomy is appropriate for one area,
it should be considered for all. If suspension of the regime's narrow
interpretation of Islamic shari'a law is inappropriate to one area,
it ought to be considered for all. Otherwise, the breakup of Sudan
may no longer be a taboo prospect for those who are serious about
ending the slaughter. In fact, the ice has already been broken by
the acceptance of a referendum on the south's political status six
years down the road. If Sudan cannot exist as a pluralistic society,
it may have to do so as several.

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