[Dehai-WN] Sudantribune.com: Sudan: Events in Darfur Rapidly Spiralling Out of Control

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Thu, 29 Aug 2013 22:42:28 +0200

Sudan: Events in Darfur Rapidly Spiralling Out of Control


By Eric Reeves,

29 August 2013

As the world reacts with horror to chemical weapons attacks on civilians in
Syria, and watches with grim anticipation as an American military response
takes shape, there appears to be little "band-width" for other international
news. It is all easy too overlook the much more widespread suffering and
civilian destruction in Darfur, an ongoing catastrophe that is accelerating
in such a way that humanitarian organizations may soon be compelled to
withdraw, leaving an immense vacuum in the provision of food, primary
medical care, and clean water. The UN/African Union Mission in Darfur
(UNAMID) appears to be in a state of collapse, unable to protect itself or
to serve any deterrent or civilian protection purposes. Several events in
particular this past week give a sense of how weak this beleaguered force
has become and the consequences of allowing Khartoum to create in Darfur an
intolerable climate of insecurity. Their implications are analyzed briefly
below.

It seems important as well, however, to understand just how misleading the
implicit comparisons are between civilian victims of chemical weapons in
Syria and the civilian victims of utterly indiscriminate aerial bombardment
by the Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) of the Khartoum regime--not only in Darfur
but in Blue Nile and the Nuba Mountains of South Kordofan as well. In the
case of Syria, the strenuous language deployed is a pretext for military
action in a region of very considerable geostrategic significance. As a
consequence, there has been much talk of how the Assad regime's chemical
attacks on the outskirts of Damascus are a "moral obscenity," that they are
somehow uniquely "gruesome," that such actions are the ne plus ultra of
military barbarism. But such descriptions as used by U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry are finally expedient; for presumably Kerry knows full well the
consequences of aerial attacks on civilians in Darfur and greater Sudan as a
whole. There have been more than 2,000 such confirmed aerial attacks on
civilians and humanitarians over the past fifteen years, and this is likely
only a small fraction of the actual number of bombings. Many tens of
thousands have been killed in these attacks--directly or
indirectly--dwarfing the number of casualties from chemical weapons attacks
in Syria and even in Iraq during Saddam Hussein's infamous al-Anfal campaign
against the Kurds in the late 1980s.

And any comparison of how "gruesome" death is by means of chemical attack on
the one hand, and the shrapnel-inflicted wounding of children, women, the
elderly on the other, will inevitably be invidious. Histories of the First
World War have given us many images, narratives accounts, even poetry
representing the agony of mustard gas inhalation; it is without question
horrific, indeed "gruesome." But can this justify implicit claims that the
nature of death from shrapnel exploding out of crude barrel bombs,
inflicting ghastly wounds, is any less "gruesome"? Indeed, it is a pointless
and misleading comparison. But if there are those who wish to see
photographs of the agony endured by bombing victims--children and women are
the most common victims, but they include any and all caught in the broad
swathe of crude barrel bombs dropped from an Antonov cargo plane at a height
of 5,000 meters--I have posted a number of them on my Tumblr account
(caution: many of these are deeply disturbing images, even as they do not
include the most "gruesome": http://www.tumblr.com/blog/sudanreeves).

At the time of the First World War, the victims of military conflict were
overwhelmingly soldiers; now the figures are completely reversed and in the
21st century, civilians account for over 90 percent of all casualties of
war. The treaty banning chemical weapons that followed the First World War
was a function of a European response to European soldiers who were killed
or whose lungs were horribly scarred by mustard gas. It was a treaty that
came into existence at a time when the idea of massive, deliberate, and
indiscriminate aerial bombardment of civilians was simply not conceivable.
It is the Rome Statute of 1998 that contains language making clear the
ongoing, systematic deployments of such aerial attacks against civilians
constitute, in aggregate, crimes against humanity (see "'They Bombed
Everything that Moved': Aerial Attacks on Civilians and Humanitarians in
Sudan, 1999 - 2012," pages 19 - 20, www.sudanbombing.org).

Let us be clear: as "gruesome" as the chemical attacks in the Damascus
suburbs and elsewhere have been, the character of human suffering has been
rhetorically inflated, in part because the implications of an artificially
drawn "red line" are now being amplified as much as politically and
rhetorically possible. Why is there no acknowledgement of the "gruesome"
suffering of a mother who watches her children die of malnutrition and
disease and then slowly dies of starvation herself? Many hundreds of
thousands have died in precisely this way in Sudan because humanitarian
relief operations have been and still are denied access by the National
Islamic Front/National Congress Party regime, as it has done for the
entirety of its 24 years of its tyranny. Does it serve any purpose to make
these invidious comparisons, explicitly or implicitly, when suffering is so
great and the number of dead so staggeringly large? What are we to say to
victims of attacks such as this from Radio Dabanga (August 18, 2013)?

At least four people--including a pregnant woman--are reported to have died,
many injured, and a village completely destroyed on Saturday and Sunday,
following a series of air raids on East Jebel Marra. Multiple reports
reaching Radio Dabanga from civilians fleeing the area say that on Sunday,
the pregnant Hawaa Suleiman Yahiya died, and at least two people were
injured, when "a group of eight Sudanese Air Force aircraft including MiG
jets, helicopters and Antonovs bombarded a large area of East Jebel Marra."
The North Darfur villages of Tanagara, Sharfa, Dolma, Abu Hamra, Sani Kundo,
and Tagali Umagali were all reportedly hit. Tanagara was apparently
completely destroyed. (Radio Dabanga [eastern Jebel Marra], August 18, 2013)

Who can presume to compare the "obscenity" of such an attack with what we
have seen in Syria?

[An updated report and statistical accounting of the bombing of civilians in
Darfur is forthcoming, adding to the substantial data at "'They Bombed
Everything that Moved': Aerial Attacks on Civilians and Humanitarians in
Sudan, 1999 - 2012," (www.sudanbombing.org) ]

Darfur Now: Key Events

[1] Several recent attacks on or abductions of international relief workers
suggest a level of danger and vulnerability that cannot be endured for long.
Although receiving little attention, they are highly significant harbingers
in light of the killing of two World Vision workers in their Nyala compound
(July 4, 2013).

Gunmen in Sudan's troubled Darfur region were holding two employees of the
Red Cross on Tuesday but six others have been freed, a spokesman for the
organization said. "Two of the colleagues, along with two of their trucks,
have still not been released," Rafiullah Qureshi, spokesman for the
International Committee of the Red Cross in Sudan, told Agence France
Presse... . Government-linked militia and paramilitary groups are also
suspected to have carried out many kidnappings, carjackings and other crimes
in Darfur. Analysts say Sudan's crisis-hit regime now has less money for
militias it deployed against the insurgency, and the militias are acting
outside government control. (Agence France-Presse, August 27, 2013; all
emphases in all quotations have been added.

Just as alarming are reports of the plundering of humanitarian resources,
even in urban areas. Radio Dabanga reports (August 27, 2013):

Masked gunmen reportedly raided the compound of the Red Cross near to the
airport of Nyala, capital of South Darfur on Monday morning. Separately, the
organisation has confirmed that six of the eight members of staff abducted
near Nertiti, also on Monday morning, have been released. A witness told
Radio Dabanga that nine masked gunmen scaled the fence into the Red Cross
compound in Nyala's airport zone at about 1am. They allegedly beat two
guards before removing mobile phones, computers, foreign currency and other
property of the organisation's workers before fleeing to an unknown
destination. The source said that several international staff members were
present in the compound at the time of the attack, including Swiss,
Canadian, and Serb nationals. [Nyala is the largest city in Darfur--ER]

Sudan Tribune reports (August 24, 2013):

Unidentified gunmen looted the office of the American Refugee Committee
(ARC) in neighbourhood of the airport in Nyala, the capital of South Darfur
state, on Saturday. Security sources said the masked assailants threatened
two guardians at gunpoint to open the doors of ARC building and stole all
computers, electronic devices and all the belongings of the charity group
which works in the state since 2004.The looters also tried to open the safe
box but left it behind after moving it to outside the two flour building,
the police added... . The capital of South Darfur state, Nyala, suffers
criminal attacks carried out by former militia members who assault regularly
commercial convoys and trade stores... . ARC provides agricultural
livelihoods support to the farmers in South Darfur and runs 16 primary
health clinics serving remote communities. It also maintains a "mix of
emergency and recovery programs, serving 350,000 displaced and war-affected
people around the city of Nyala" say the website of the humanitarian group.

[2] What makes these attacks especially ominous is how closely they comport
with the announced goals of the Khartoum regime, specifically the removal of
international humanitarian workers from Darfur. Radio Dabanga reports
(August 22, 2013):

New measures proposed by the Khartoum government to control the activities
of international humanitarian groups, including UN agencies in Sudan, will
only permit national [i.e., Sudanese] organisations to work in the field of
rights in the country. In a statement via the state news agency SUNA,
Interior Minister Ibrahim Mahmoud Hamid said that the new rules were agreed
upon at a meeting on Wednesday between President Omar Al Bashir, and the
Ministers of the Interior, Justice, Foreign Affairs as well as the Director
of the security apparatus. Hamid: "The meeting put forward detailed
procedures for the work of foreign humanitarian groups in the capital
Khartoum and the regions, ensuring that it is in line with government
policies and strategy.

This "strategy" was of course first announced in a document promulgated by
the NIF/NCP in August 2010 and formally adopted in September 2010. It took
no great interpretive skill to see that that the so-called "New Strategy for
Darfur" entailed forcing humanitarian organizations out of Darfur by
declaring the humanitarian emergency to be over, and that the priority had
therefore shifted to returns of the displaced persons and "development," a
word that appears constantly in the document (see "Accommodating Genocide:
The International Response to Khartoum's "New Strategy for Darfur,'" Dissent
Magazine, October 8,
2010http://www.dissentmagazine.org/online_articles/accommodating-genocide-th
e-international-response-to-khartoums-new-strategy-for-darfur). The official
propaganda organs of the regime have recently made the logic of this
"strategy" boldly explicit, linking it speciously to "reform" in the regime:

"President Directs Cut-down of Foreign Workers": President of the Republic
Omer Al Bashir has underlined the need for continuity of the process of
reform and administrative planning and the development of the civil service
institutions. At a meeting yesterday with staff of the Ministry of Human
Resources Development, the President also directed the importance of
reviewing strategy of technical education and vocational training and the
need to downsize foreign workers by replacing them with Sudanese workers.
[Minister of Human Resources Development Ishraqa Sayed Mahmoud] said the
meeting discussed the administrative reform process, development of laws and
administrative aspects of civil service. As a ministry, we have taken the
permission of the president to inspect government institutions as part of
reform process, she said. (Sudan Vision, 26th August 2013)

The message continues to be announced with startling clarity:

"Al Bashir Gives Directive for Continuity of Administrative Reform Process":
President of the Republic, Field Marshal Omer Al Bashir called for
continuity of administrative reform and planning process and enhancement of
the civil service institutions. This came when he received last Monday in
his office at the Republican Palace the Minister, State Ministers and
leaders of the Ministry of Manpower Development and Labor. President Al
Bashir called for reviewing the strategy of technical education and
professional training as well as reducing the foreign labor and replacing it
with Sudanese manpower. (Sudan Vision, 28th August 2013)

As the recent denial of visas to 20 workers for the UN High Commission for
Refugees clearly indicates, the regime is prepared to take "reduction of
foreign labor" into its own hands by whatever means it chooses.

[3] The continuing collapse of UNAMID is extraordinarily dangerous: it is a
force no longer capable of protecting itself from increasingly emboldened
militia forces, let alone protecting civilians and humanitarian, its primary
mandate from the UN Security Council. The deterioration in the effectiveness
of a mission that was never nearly adequate to this mandate occurs even as
the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations (UN DPKO) continues to plan for
a drawn-down of not only soldiers but civilian personnel. A "review of
uniformed personnel" was carried out last year, and the decision was to cut
the number substantially by June 2014; currently there is a review of
civilian UANMID personnel that is also likely to result in substantial cuts.
All this occurs against the backdrop of a dramatic increase in violence and
insecurity over the past year and more. The claim by UN DPKO head Hervé
Ladsous that the force is "sufficiently robust" is pure mendacity--and has
been contemptuously dismissed by those who know the current situation on the
ground in Darfur best; recent developments only justify this contempt
further. How else to explain events such as this, reported by Human Rights
Watch on the basis of satellite photography and witness reports? -

Satellite images confirm the wholesale destruction of villages in Central
[formerly West] Darfur in an attack in April 2013 by a militia leader sought
by the International Criminal Court, Human Rights Watch said today. The
images show the town of Abu Jeradil and surrounding villages in Central
[formerly West] Darfur state almost completely burned down, Human Rights
Watch said. Villagers who fled the area told Human Rights Watch in May that
Sudanese government forces, including the militia leader Ali Kosheib, had
attacked the area. More than 42 villagers are believed to have been killed
and 2,800 buildings destroyed.

"Satellite images show the total destruction of villages during the April
attacks in Central Darfur," said Daniel Bekele, Africa director at Human
Rights Watch. "How can the Sudanese authorities claim there's nothing they
can do when their own security forces were involved and the war crimes
suspect Ali Kosheib is on the loose?" Human Rights Watch analysis of
satellite imagery found that more than 2,800 buildings were probably burned
down in Abu Jeradil and four neighboring villages, which is 88 percent of
all buildings in the area. (Sudan: Satellite Images Confirm Villages
Destroyed; ICC Suspect Involved In Attacks Remains At-Large, Nairobi, 19
June 2013)

There is a simple reason for the draw-down of UNAMID and it has nothing to
do with improvement in "conditions on the ground," as Ladsous absurdly
declared last year: it is an effort to reduce the size and thus expense of
what has been the world's largest and most costly and least effective UN
peacekeeping operation. The conclusion was clearly reached within UN DPKO
that since UNAMID was failing, the solution was not to strengthen the force
but to pull the financial plug. Darfuri lives have been judged not worth the
expense of an effective peacekeeping mission.

This is a "moral obscenity," but one that neither John Kerry nor anyone else
in the Obama administration--or in the EU or AU--wishes to talk about.

What are we to make of a force that is repeatedly defined by incidents such
as these?

"Militia attack UN peacekeepers in Sudan" A convoy of the UN peacekeepers in
Sudan was attacked in East Darfur with the police and villagers witnessing
the fire exchange. At least three casualties were evacuated by a helicopter
for treatment in the hospital of Ed Daein. The convoy was reportedly moving
from state capital Ed Daein to Muhajeriya. Eyewitnesses told Radio Dabanga
that a group of militiamen attacked a UNAMID convoy in the Umwargat area,
36km northeast of Ed Daein, on Tuesday morning [August 27].

Sources also claim that the two of the 10 vehicles belonging to the UNAMID
convoy were seized during the attack. Speaking to Radio Dabanga by phone
from North Darfur capital El Fasher on Tuesday evening, UNAMID media
relations officer Rania Abdulrahman confirmed that "three peacekeepers have
been injured in clashes with an unknown armed group in the village of
Mumudiri, 36km northeast of Ed Daein." [The police commander for the region]
then deployed forces to Umwargat, where they found a fuel tanker overturned,
five Land Cruisers, two of which were stuck in the mud, and five troop
carriers. He said his forces sent all of the vehicles to Ed Daein carrying
the peacekeepers. (Radio Dabanga [Ed Daein], August 27, 2013)

This is only the most recent in a long string of attacks on UNAMID, attacks
that have killed more than 50 troops since the mission took up its mandate
in January 2008. Many of these attacks are clearly linked to Khartoum-allied
militia forces (see "Killing UN Peacekeepers: A Ruthless Proclivity of
Khartoum's SAF, Militia Proxies," 9 May 2013,
http://www.sudanreeves.org/?p=3960 and "The Killing of Seven UN Peacekeeping
Personnel in Darfur: An Update," 18 July 2013,
http://www.sudanreeves.org/?p=4128).

[4] Even as UNAMID becomes an increasingly ineffective force on the ground,
a range of ethnic and tribal clashes are creating more and more insecurity;
conflict between Arab groups has reached an unprecedented scale. The
conflict between the Beni Hussein and the northern Rizeigat that began in
the Jebel Amer region (North Darfur) last summer has continued, and was a
major engine in newly displacing some 300,000 Darfuris this year by mid-May.
Large-scale displacement has continued, much of it into Chad where
humanitarian resources are even more limited and there is no protection
force (UN IRIN has recently provided an excellent series of reports). The
Sudan Tribune (August 21, 2013) reported that 839 people were killed in
recent clashes between the Beni Hussein and northern Rizeigat
(http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article47747).

Large-scale violence between the Salamat and the Ta-isha tribes has been the
major force driving more than 50,000 people into eastern Chad, a great many
from the Umm Dukhun area of West Darfur. Khartoum has decided to support the
Ta'isha in this conflict, in part because one of the prime Janjaweed
leaders, Ali Kushayb, belongs to the Ta'isha. Ali Kushayb has been indicted
by the International Criminal Court for massive crimes against humanity in
this region of Darfur early in the war.

In eastern Darfur the Rizeigat tribal group of the area has been fighting
with the rival Maaliya, vastly expanding the geography of Arab tribal
violence:

Fighting between rival Arab tribes rocked Sudan's Darfur region for a second
day Sunday after 100 people died in unrest that has already killed hundreds
this year, tribal sources said. Battles were taking place in the Adila area
of southeastern Darfur, the sources said. "The fighting today spread to many
areas," said a member of the Rezeigat tribe which has been fighting the
rival Maaliya since Saturday. "I saw some wounded Rezeigat taken to the
hospital in Ed Daein on Land Cruisers," he said, asking for anonymity. Ed
Daein is the capital of East Darfur state. A Maaliya resident confirmed
fighting south of Adila, and a doctor in Nyala city to the west told AFP
that some wounded Maaliya had been taken there for treatment. They were not
able to give casualty figures for Sunday's fighting but tribal sources said
dozens had died on Saturday. "We clashed with Maaliya... and we destroyed a
compound of theirs and killed 70 of them," another Rezeigat source said,
declining to be named. "We lost 30 of our men." (More fighting in Darfur
after 100 killed: Sudan tribes, France 24, August 11, 2013)

There is also fighting between the non-Arab Gimr tribe and the Arab Beni
Halba (a useful compendium of this variously ramified tribal violence is
offered by AllAfrica.com at
http://article.wn.com/view/2013/06/25/Accusations_of_Genocide_As_Beni_Halba_
Gimr_Clash_Again_in_So/#/related_news). UNAMID is powerless to mitigate the
destructiveness of this growing violence. Moreover, the spillover effects
have certainly affected humanitarian operations, and increasing insecurity
will certainly further limit already severely attenuated relief efforts.

For a perspective on just how great humanitarian needs are in Sudan--not
just Darfur--the Sudan Tribune recently provided a shocking summary account:

Nearly 4.5 million people across Sudan remain in need of humanitarian help
despite the country being home to one of the biggest aid operations in the
world, the UN said in a statement issued by its Khartoum headquarters to
mark World Humanitarian Day on Monday. The United Nations resident and
humanitarian coordinator in Sudan Ali Al-Za'tari said the agency and
humanitarian aid organisations have spent more than $10.5 billion dollars in
Sudan over the past decade to meet the needs of people mainly in
conflict-affected areas. He said thousands had been forced to flee their
homes as a result of war and internal fighting in Darfur, South and North
Kordofan, Blue Nile and Abyei, while many more had lost their property and
livelihoods as a result of ongoing conflicts. (Sudan Tribune, August 19,
2013; http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article47703 )

Mark Cutts, head of office for the UN's Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs, recently provided another summary account; many of the
figures almost defy comprehension:

OCHA assists more than 4.5 million people in Sudan. War violence, and
conflicts made more than 2 million people flee their homes in Darfur since
2003, OCHA estimates. At least 1.4 million are still living in displaced
camps. In South Kordofan and Blue Nile over a million people have been
displaced or severely affected by the war since September 2011.

Forty-seven aid workers have been killed in Darfur since 2003, 139 have been
injured, and 71 have been abducted. Two Sudanese aid workers were killed in
Nyala in South Darfur only one month ago. In UNAMID, since 2007, 51
peacekeepers have been killed. Thirteen of those were killed in the last
year.

The Sudanese government estimates that 1.8 million children are out of
school in the country. Many of them are in places like Darfur, South
Kordofan and Blue Nile. The overall level of malnutrition throughout Sudan
is 16%, a latest government survey indicates. This is higher than the 15%
emergency threshold considered by the World Health Organization. Rates are
even higher in other states of Sudan, such as the Red Sea state in the east
of the country. The UN, working with the Ministry of Health and other
ministries in government, estimates that there are about 750,000 children
suffering from severe malnutrition in 2013.

More than five million people in Sudan do not have adequate access to basic
health services. The number of trained health personnel in Darfur is 5 times
lower than the benchmark given by the UN's World Health Organization.
(Statement cited by Radio Dabanga [Khartoum], August 16, 2013)

And yet President al-Bashir and his fellow génocidaires are seeking to
reduce the presence of international relief workers in Sudan. Having
squandered countless billions of dollars on war, military purchases, the
various security services, a vast patronage network, and grotesque
self-enrichment, the Khartoum regime neither wishes nor has the financial
resources to respond to these extraordinarily grim numbers. The agricultural
sector has deteriorated badly under the NIF/NCP and this does much to
account for the astounding fact that "the overall level of malnutrition
throughout Sudan is 16%," a level for the entire country that is above the
UN humanitarian emergency threshold. And even where the need is acutest in
Darfur, UNAMID refuses to challenge Khartoum's humanitarian blockades. For
example, access to those in eastern Jebel Marra--in truly desperate need of
humanitarian aid--continues to be denied:

Due to the precarious security situation in Darfur's East Jebel Marra, about
70,000 displaced persons are "facing extreme difficulty," according to the
Association of Displaced Persons and Refugees of Darfur. Speaking to Radio
Dabanga on Tuesday, association spokesman Hussein Abu Sharati said that the
displaced of Naivasha and Shaddad camps in East Jebel Marra are facing
extremely difficult humanitarian and health situations. "They have not
received humanitarian aid since 2012, because of fighting between the
government forces and the Sudan Revolutionary Front," he said. "This is
aggravated due humanitarian organisations leaving the region since 2012."
(70,000 "facing extreme difficulty" in Darfur's East Jebel Marra: displaced,
eastern Jebel Marra, August 20, 2013)

[5] As great as these problems are, and as culpable as the Khartoum regime
has been in exacerbating conflict and engaging in a war of attrition against
international humanitarian relief efforts, the greatest problem facing
Darfur remains the displacement of non-Arab/African farmers from their
lands--and the violent appropriation of those lands by Arab groups and
militias determined to use them as pasturage in support of their
nomadic/pastoral way of life. It is here that UNAMID's complete impotence is
most conspicuous; just in the past few weeks Radio Dabanga has reported:

- An elderly displaced woman has reportedly suffered two torn eyeballs on
Monday after being whipped and beaten, allegedly by pro-government
militiamen, at Abu Suruj near Sirba in West Darfur. An activist told Radio
Dabanga that "Fatima Assad (80) was tending her farm when a group of armed
men whipped her and beat her with sticks and rifle butts" on Monday evening.
The source said that Assad was attempting to prevent the herdsmen from
allowing their livestock to graze on her farm. As previously reported,
frequent reports reach Radio Dabanga of similar assaults by herdsmen on
farmers throughout Darfur. The activist said that Assad was taken to
hospital in state capital El Geneina for treatment, and appealed through
Radio Dabanga for local authorities and UNAMID to protect the displaced and
end these attacks. ("Herdsmen beat 80-year-old woman in West Darfur, Sirba
Camp [West Darfur], August 19, 2013)

But UNAMID is powerless to protect these lands and those attempting to
return--and has shown no inclination to make a serious effort to do so.

- A farmer was killed and another injured at El Ta'ah in Adila loacality,
East Darfur on Wednesday, when they reportedly resisted gunmen from grazing
livestock on their farm. A relative of the deceased told Radio Dabanga that
Juma Joda Noor died and Tahim Ibrahim was injured when eight gunmen, mounted
on horses, allegedly herded their livestock onto the farm. The farmers then
tried to block them and were shot. Noor apparently died on the spot.
(Herders kill East Darfur farmer, wound another in shooting, el Ta'ah,
August 22, 2013)

- Multiple farmers from throughout Darfur have complained of "armed
pro-government herdsmen" trespassing on their farms and beating and
harassing them. Similar reports have reached Radio Dabanga from South, West,
and Central Darfur states of herdsmen allowing their camels and livestock to
graze on farms. Farmers who face up to them are reportedly "beaten, lashed,
and threatened with death." Farmers from the Manawashi, Marshang, and Duma
in South Darfur, Zalingei, Garsila, Mukjar and Bundisi in Central Darfur and
Foro Baranga and El Geneina in West Darfur have told Radio Dabanga they face
fierce attacks by the herdsmen. (Darfur, 31 July 2013)

- The farmers of Kabkabiya locality in North Darfur have expressed concern
of the failure of this year's planting season due to several factors. One of
the farmers explained to Radio Dabanga that he although there have been good
rains, the current planting season threatens to be failure as armed herdsmen
are grazing camels and cattle in the farms. "They do this by force of arms,
beating farmers and threatening them with death if they confront them," the
farmer said. (Kabkabiya, North Darfur, 7 August 2013)

- The poor security situation in Central Darfur state has resulted in a
failed planting season for the displaced of the camps in the vicinity of
state capital Zalingei, said the coordinator of the camps. He added to Radio
Dabanga that the humanitarian situation in the camps is dire... . "The
security situation has deprived them of the opportunity of exercising their
daily lives, so the autumn of this year has not been encouraging." The
coordinator expressed concern of a deepening humanitarian crisis should the
agricultural season fail altogether. Throughout Darfur, banditry by
marauding armed groups can make it difficult for the displaced to move
outside the camps, according to daily reports reaching Radio Dabanga. This
is especially true for those who leave the camps daily to plant and tend
farmland. (Zalingei Camps, [formerly West] Darfur, July 30, 2013)

(See Appendix III [August 16, 2013 analysis] for further examples of denial
of access to farmlands, http://www.sudanreeves.org/?p=4161).

If this critical issue is not addressed squarely and urgently, no peace
negotiations will have a chance of success; the Doha Document for Peace in
Darfur (DDPD) is an entirely dead letter with Darfuri civil society and the
consequential rebel groups. Only with immediate, widely supported
international attention to this highly destabilizing demographic shift in
land ownership is there any hope of a true, just, and lasting peace in
Darfur, with the opportunity for real development in Darfur. And yet by
supporting this major, de-stabilizing demographic and economic shift,
Khartoum hopes to keep the loyalty of some Arab groups and prevent others
from joining the growing rebellion against the regime. It represents a
brutal logic, of just the sort to be expected from these seasoned and
ruthless survivalists.

The views expressed in the 'Comment and Analysis' section are solely the
opinions of the writers. The veracity of any claims made are the
responsibility of the author not Sudan Tribune.

 




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