18.06.2004

Sudan: Peace in the South And War in the West

By: GWYNNE DYER

USaid predicts that 350,000 people will die of hunger, disease and exposure in the refugee camps of western Sudan in the next few months.

Back in April Kofi Annan, the United Nations secretary-general, was

already warning that the international community should be prepared

to take steps in Darfur "that may include military action."

But nothing has happened.

 

Well, not literally nothing.

 

The African Union is sending a handful of observers to monitor

the ceasefire that was signed in Darfur in April (though it hasn't

actually stopped the killing).

 

A UN appeal raised $288 million for relief operations in Darfur

last week, although that is $80-100 million short of what is needed

and the rainy season will restrict deliveries to the camps starting

about now.

 

The core of the problem is in Khartoum, however, and nobody

wanted to touch that.

 

The Sudanese president, Omar el-Bashir, still insists that

foreign governments are blowing the events in Darfur out of

proportion, but low-level flights across southern parts of the

province report virtually every village burned out.

 

Over a million people are living in refugee camps (including

158,000 who have fled across the border into Chad), and even in the

camps the refugees are not safe, as raids by the Janjaweed militia

continue.

 

But at least the United States and the United Nations have

finally criticised the government in Khartoum directly.

 

"I received numerous accounts of the extra-judicial and summary

executions carried out by government-backed militias and by the

security forces themselves," said United Nations special rapporteur

Asma Jahangir in Khartoum on Sunday.

 

"There is no ambiguity that there is a link between some of the

militias and government forces."

 

After months of dodging the issue, US Secretary of State Colin

Powell echoed her words on Sunday: "We believe that the government

of Sudan did provide support to these militias."

 

He still avoided using the word 'genocide,' but he was clearly

aware that President Bill Clinton had evaded the duty of responding

to the genocide in Rwanda a decade ago by refusing to call it by

the right name: "All I know is that there are at least a million

people who are desperately in need, and many of them will die if we

can't...get the Sudanese to cooperate with the international

community.

 

And it won't make a whole lot of difference after the fact what

you've called it."

 

Why did the US and the UN wait so long before putting the blame

where it belongs? This is where it gets complicated, because the

main reason is that they were afraid of jeopardising the deal that

is finally bringing peace to the southern Sudan after 21 years of

war and at least two million dead.

 

Every government in Sudan since independence has been dominated

by the Arabised Muslims of northern Sudan who account for

two-thirds of the country's population -- and almost every one of

those governments has spent much of its time at war with rebels in

the African, predominantly Christian south of the country.

 

The current fighting flared in 1983 after an Islamist faction

got the upper hand in the struggle for power among the northern,

Arabic-speaking population and tried to impose Islamic law on the

whole country.

 

Eventually the growing importance of Sudan's oil -- it could be

exporting half as much as Kuwait in a few years -- and concerns

that the country's Islamist regime had links with al-Qaeda focussed

official American attention on Sudan.

 

An adroit use of sticks and carrots by Washington brought first

a more moderate government in Khartoum, and now a peace deal

between north and south (signed in Kenya early this month) that

provides for a ceasefire, sharing of oil revenues between north and

south, and a referendum on southern independence in six years'

time.

 

But other neglected regions, seeing what the Christian south has

achieved by revolt, were tempted to play the same game.

 

Everybody in Darfur is Muslim, but there is a deep hostility

between the African farmers of the province's southern river

valleys and the Arabised pastoral people of northern Darfur, who

traditionally raided the farmers for cattle and women.

 

So the Islamist faction in Khartoum, now out of power and

looking for a way to undermine its rivals, urged the people of

southern Darfur to revolt, which some of them did last year -- and

the faction now in power in Khartoum turned the Arabised pastoral

people of northern Darfur loose on them.

 

The Janjaweed militia's raids on the farming villages are now

backed by Sudanese government helicopter gunships, and rather than

just stealing cattle and women they murder everyone they can catch,

burn the crops and smash the irrigation systems.

 

It is genocide, no doubt about it -- but the government that

backs it is the same Sudanese government that has pushed the

Islamists out of power in Khartoum and is now making peace in the

south.

 

Now, very late in the game, the the US and the UN are starting

to condemn the Sudanese government openly, but it's not clear what

they will actually do about it.

 

Overthrow the present lot in Khartoum, and you probably re-start

the much bigger war in the south.

 

It's another problem from hell.

 

* Gwynne Dyer is a London-based independent journalist whose

articles are published in 45 countries.

 

But nothing has happened.Well, not literally nothing.The African

Union is sending a handful of observers to monitor the ceasefire

that was signed in Darfur in April (though it hasn't actually

stopped the killing).A UN appeal raised $288 million for relief

operations in Darfur last week, although that is $80-100 million

short of what is needed and the rainy season will restrict

deliveries to the camps starting about now.The core of the problem

is in Khartoum, however, and nobody wanted to touch that.The

Sudanese president, Omar el-Bashir, still insists that foreign

governments are blowing the events in Darfur out of proportion, but

low-level flights across southern parts of the province report

virtually every village burned out.Over a million people are living

in refugee camps (including 158,000 who have fled across the border

into Chad), and even in the camps the refugees are not safe, as

raids by the Janjaweed militia continue.But at least the United

States and the United Nations have finally criticised the

government in Khartoum directly."I received numerous accounts of

the extra-judicial and summary executions carried out by

government-backed militias and by the security forces themselves,"

said United Nations special rapporteur Asma Jahangir in Khartoum on

Sunday."There is no ambiguity that there is a link between some of

the militias and government forces."After months of dodging the

issue, US Secretary of State Colin Powell echoed her words on

Sunday: "We believe that the government of Sudan did provide

support to these militias."He still avoided using the word

'genocide,' but he was clearly aware that President Bill Clinton

had evaded the duty of responding to the genocide in Rwanda a

decade ago by refusing to call it by the right name: "All I know is

that there are at least a million people who are desperately in

need, and many of them will die if we can't...get the Sudanese to

cooperate with the international community.And it won't make a

whole lot of difference after the fact what you've called it."Why

did the US and the UN wait so long before putting the blame where

it belongs? This is where it gets complicated, because the main

reason is that they were afraid of jeopardising the deal that is

finally bringing peace to the southern Sudan after 21 years of war

and at least two million dead.Every government in Sudan since

independence has been dominated by the Arabised Muslims of northern

Sudan who account for two-thirds of the country's population -- and

almost every one of those governments has spent much of its time at

war with rebels in the African, predominantly Christian south of

the country.The current fighting flared in 1983 after an Islamist

faction got the upper hand in the struggle for power among the

northern, Arabic-speaking population and tried to impose Islamic

law on the whole country.Eventually the growing importance of

Sudan's oil -- it could be exporting half as much as Kuwait in a

few years -- and concerns that the country's Islamist regime had

links with al-Qaeda focussed official American attention on

Sudan.An adroit use of sticks and carrots by Washington brought

first a more moderate government in Khartoum, and now a peace deal

between north and south (signed in Kenya early this month) that

provides for a ceasefire, sharing of oil revenues between north and

south, and a referendum on southern independence in six years'

time.But other neglected regions, seeing what the Christian south

has achieved by revolt, were tempted to play the same

game.Everybody in Darfur is Muslim, but there is a deep hostility

between the African farmers of the province's southern river

valleys and the Arabised pastoral people of northern Darfur, who

traditionally raided the farmers for cattle and women.So the

Islamist faction in Khartoum, now out of power and looking for a

way to undermine its rivals, urged the people of southern Darfur to

revolt, which some of them did last year -- and the faction now in

power in Khartoum turned the Arabised pastoral people of northern

Darfur loose on them.The Janjaweed militia's raids on the farming

villages are now backed by Sudanese government helicopter gunships,

and rather than just stealing cattle and women they murder everyone

they can catch, burn the crops and smash the irrigation systems.It

is genocide, no doubt about it -- but the government that backs it

is the same Sudanese government that has pushed the Islamists out

of power in Khartoum and is now making peace in the south.Now, very

late in the game, the the US and the UN are starting to condemn the

Sudanese government openly, but it's not clear what they will

actually do about it.Overthrow the present lot in Khartoum, and you

probably re-start the much bigger war in the south.It's another

problem from hell.* Gwynne Dyer is a London-based independent

journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.