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Africa: East
Thousands flee attacks in Western Darfur
2004-01-06
In the last ten days an estimated 3,000 families have fled to the town of Junaynah from militia attacks in Western Darfur, according to local sources. Over the weekend between 3,000 and 4,000 people had streamed into the town after their villages were burned and looted, and were continuing to arrive on Monday. Many of the displaced are reportedly sleeping in the open without shelter, while some have been taken in by local people. Since the breakdown of peace talks on 15 December between the government and the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) rebel group, fighting and militia attacks in all three Darfur states have escalated. In December alone, about 30,000 people fled from militia attacks across the border to neighbouring Chad, bringing the number of refugees there - mostly women and children - to 95,000.

An SLA spokesman, Dahar Ibrahim, told IRIN that on 2 January about 225 men, women and children had been killed by Arab militias mounted on horses and camels in the village of Sorrah, about 15 km outside of Zalingei, Western Darfur. Describing the attack as "ethnic cleansing", he said the inhabitants of the town were mainly from the Fur ethnic group. Meanwhile, rebels reportedly attacked the village of Sharaya in Southern Darfur on 2 January, killing between four and six policemen and soldiers, and looting a local market. The Sudanese government has vowed to crush the Darfur rebellion, which it views as a security threat, using any available means. "We will use the army, the police, the mujahidin, the horsemen to get rid of the rebellion," President Omar al-Bashir was quoted as saying on state-run Sudanese television. But regional analysts say a political solution, based around devolution of power and equitable sharing of resources, is necessary to resolve Darfur’s decades of economic and political neglect.
Not when you've got camel-riding Arabs with guns available, it seems...
December peace talks with the SLA fell apart after Chadian mediators accused the rebels of upping their demands to include the creation of an autonomous state in Darfur and a percentage of oil revenues. The SLA has denied the charge. The SLA spokesman, Dahar Ibrahim, told IRIN that a delegation sent to the Chadian capital, Ndjamena, had neither met the government delegation nor disclosed any of its demands to the Chadian negotiators, whom it views as being too friendly with Khartoum. Following preliminary and informal talks, Dahar said the mediators had told the SLA to go home. "They said they believed we could not reach an agreement, so we were told to go back to Darfur. We were surprised," said Dahar. "How did they come to this conclusion?"
Obviously because they didn't want to come to an agreement. Without a "crisis," who have a dictator? It's job security for Omar...
Regional analysts believe the talks may have collapsed due to a lack of willingness on the part of the Sudanese government to "internationalise" them, by allowing international monitors to take part. The SLA has repeatedly demanded the presence of international observers during peace talks; the protection of civilians and the guaranteed safe passage of humanitarian relief; and international observers to monitor a future ceasefire. In a statement released after the breakdown of the talks, it also proposed including the negotiations in the peace process being sponsored by the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development between the Sudanese government and the rebel Sudan People’s Liberation Movement - expected to reach an agreement this month - and called on the UN to form a committee to investigate massacres in Darfur.
Yep. Forming a committee oughta do it...
Neither Darfur’s second rebel group, the Justice and Equality Movement, nor the militias have been included in peace talks to date. Regional analysts accuse militias of perpetrating gross human rights abuses including the killing of several thousand people and displacing hundreds of thousands of others. It remains unclear to what extent either the government or local Arab tribal leaders exercise control over them.
Or want to. To me, it also remains unclear where they get their money...
Posted by:Dan Darling

#12  Tancred, tribal not religious? Is it to the death?
Posted by: Lucky   2004-1-7 12:41:38 AM  

#11  Lucky: Khartoum has aleady taken sides, and the Bashir government has done so since taking power in July 1989. It backs the Arab abbala (camel) and baqqara (cattle) nomads of the Darfur region who have tried over the last two decades to invade and occupy from land occupied by the African Muslim tribes (Fur, Berti, Messalit, Zaghawa, Toubou, etc.). The issue has now become very complicated with Turabi lending a hand to exacerbate the chaos. Regarding the funding of rebels, there are some elements in London who have been collecting money for years; there is also the fact that there is just a massive amount of arms to be found in Sudan, and the southern Sudanese (including John Garang's SPLA) have had good reason to arm the rebels. The old enemy of my enemy philosophy. Over the last two months the warfare (indiscriminate government bombing and strafing) has become very vicious. The west has food available to ship into Darfur but now the Khartoum government won't allow it. It doesn't want information to leak out about the atrocities occurring there.
Posted by: Tancred   2004-1-6 4:00:59 PM  

#10  A globe comes in really handy while one attends Rantburg. Tancred, is that a round-up and set them free thing or is Khartoum really taking sides.

BTW Dan Darling. Your sites interchange with the Belmont Club really helped when Rantburg went down.
Posted by: Lucky   2004-1-6 2:42:33 PM  

#9  You forgot about Larry King and his hard-hitting, prime time investigative reporting of the Petersen case (ad nauseum), and Michael Jackson.
Posted by: ScottAK   2004-1-6 11:12:54 AM  

#8  The Khartoum regime has begun the roundup of village chiefs and mullahs living west of Nyala in southwestern and western Darfur. The roundup began with leaders living in Khartoum itself. The government is presently contemplating the re-arrest of Islamist leader Hassan al-Turabi, leader of the National Islamic Front, and friend of Osama Bin Ladin and the Al Qaida leaders, for his involvement in the Darfur region.
Posted by: Tancred   2004-1-6 10:48:46 AM  

#7  Phil_B: I've found that I usually skim the comments before I read the article. Most of the time Rantburger's pick out important points (like connections to previous stories) that I might otherwise miss.
Posted by: Laurence of the Rats   2004-1-6 9:14:08 AM  

#6  Yes and Britney got married (and divorced) too.
Posted by: RW2004   2004-1-6 9:08:44 AM  

#5  They've been too busy chasing Pete Rose to give a rat's ass about massacres.
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2004-1-6 8:00:01 AM  

#4  Dan D: I've been a news junkie all my life and now Rantburg is my primary source of news. Not only do those nice Rantburg folks edit out the column inch filling junk and leave the meat of the article, they also provide interesting and amusing commentary.
Posted by: phil_b   2004-1-6 5:20:21 AM  

#3  Big time. While waiting for the Mars probe to land the other night, I watched several minutes of CNN for the first time since Brent Sadler's pistol-packing car chase in Tikrit last spring. It was almost painful. Can't say Fox or MSNBC are much better. Debka on its worst day is better than any of them.
Posted by: Dan (not Darling)   2004-1-6 3:01:23 AM  

#2   I've long considered Rantburg far superior to any network news in terms of both information and analysis. Rather sad when a few dozen folks on the internet can do a better job reporting than enormous network news services ...
Posted by: Dan Darling   2004-1-6 2:46:30 AM  

#1  God bless CNN and the broadcast networks for their nightly in-depth coverage of this festering atrocity. Thanks to Aaron Brown and Dan Rather, every American is familiar with this and similar Arab/black schisms in other south Saharan states (Mauritania, Mali, etc.), and the ongoing Ethiopian/Eritrean debacle, and the shariah wackos in northern Nigeria, and the Lord's Resistance Army, and...

"Dan... Dan, wake up, you're having that dream again."

"Aunt Em! Uncle Henry! Toto! I was in this wonderful place..."
Posted by: Dan (not Darling)   2004-1-6 2:30:19 AM  

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