http://www.aawsat.net/2013/03/article55295005


Written by : Osman Mirghani 
on : Thursday, 7 Mar, 2013 
The War of the Marginalized 
In our Arab world, preoccupied with endless conflicts and wars, many people 
will not know much more about the war in Darfur than its name, perhaps along 
with some basic information about its roots and causes. If we were to ask 
someone about this war they may remember only the notorious Janjaweed, whose 
name momentarily jumped to the forefront of Arab attention several years ago. 
For a while, the media was fascinated by the strangeness of the name and 
analyzed the group’s origins, especially when the UN and human rights 
organizations accused it of genocide, and the International Criminal Court 
(ICC) issued arrest warrants against some of its leaders on war crimes charges. 

Sadly, what one discovers about this war from studies and articles by Western 
research centers and media outlets greatly outstrips the information present in 
the Arab and Islamic world. 

In a similar vein, the African Union’s interest in this tragic war is far 
greater than that of the Arab League, which has long been reluctant to take an 
active stance on the crisis, considering it to be an internal issue and arguing 
that the league does not interfere in the domestic affairs of its member 
states. It is suffice to note here that the international forces that have been 
present in Darfur for several years are African troops with international 
support, whereas Arab participation has been late, limited, and symbolic. It is 
true that the Arab League occasionally sent missions to Darfur, especially 
during Amr Mousa’s term as secretary-general, and likewise Arab summits also 
adopted several resolutions on the situation there. However, no moves have ever 
been sufficient to match the crisis level. The Arabs have never gone beyond 
expressions of support for the path of peace, unity, and development, 
contributions towards the financing of African-international forces, and 
support for peace talks that have taken place in recent years under Qatari 
auspices. It is worth noting that Doha was a supporter of Sudan’s Islamist 
regime even before Qatar recently emerged as the sponsor and supporter of the 
Muslim Brotherhood and its affiliate branches, whether in the countries of the 
Arab Spring or elsewhere. 

Last week marked the tenth anniversary of the outbreak of the war in Darfur (26 
February 2003). According to UN estimates, this conflict has so far claimed the 
lives of 300,000 (although the Sudanese government contends the death toll is 
9,000), has led to the displacement of more than 2 million people, and has 
destroyed about 44 percent of villages in the region. This week marks the four 
year anniversary (4 March 2009) of the ICC issuing an arrest warrant against 
Sudanese President Omar Al-Bashir, accusing him of committing war crimes and 
crimes against humanity in Darfur, hence making him the first head of state to 
be issued with an international arrest warrant while still in power. These two 
anniversaries are nothing but a cause for further sadness and depression, at a 
time when the war is escalating and becoming more complex, and is continuing to 
claim more lives and ravage a war-weary country. Many fear that the secession 
of the south, after decades of conflict, will not be Sudan’s only separation if 
the regime continues the approach of war and policies of exclusion and 
marginalization. 

Regardless of what the Khartoum government might say, the Bashir regime is 
responsible for the secession of the south after escalating war there and 
calling for jihad against its own citizens, and then failing to make unity 
attractive during the interim period that followed the signing of the 
Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) in 2005. Furthermore, the regime failed 
miserably and irrevocably to achieve the peace it was preaching at the time, 
and the north ended up becoming the scene of three wars stretching from Darfur 
to South Kordofan and the Blue Nile. Meanwhile, the regime’s relationship with 
South Sudan cannot even be described as a cold peace, because it fluctuates 
between proxy wars and direct armed confrontations between the two sides. The 
Bashir regime, in its impatience to get rid of the problem of the south, which 
some deemed to be an obstacle hindering the formation of an Islamic republic, 
left several heated issues unresolved when putting pen to paper on the CPA, 
including the issue of border demarcation. Moreover, it only offered a loose 
formula under the title of “popular consultation” to resolve the problems of 
South Kordofan and the Blue Nile, and so now the regime finds itself embroiled 
in wars and tensions. Its only success has been to push armed opposition 
movements to unite against it in the form of a “revolutionary front”, 
coordinating with other opposition parties in a pledge to overthrow the regime 
peacefully or otherwise. 

Wars now cover close to one-third of Sudan, and Darfur alone covers a quarter 
of Sudan’s remaining territory following the secession of the south, spanning 
an area more than twice the size of Britain and bordering four countries 
(Libya, Chad, Central African Republic, and South Sudan). But unlike South 
Sudan, which raised the slogan of secession from the very beginning of its 
insurgency, Darfur’s groups are not calling to cut ties with Khartoum. They are 
demanding a democratic system and balanced development, and justice and 
equality in the division of power and wealth—by virtue of decentralization—so 
as to achieve the demands of the marginalized areas and support a principle of 
unity based on diversity and pluralism. These demands will resonate with most 
of the people of Sudan, and they do not seem difficult to achieve if there is 
good will and the country rids itself of military or religious dictatorships. 
The political elite must work earnestly to achieve a balance between the 
capital and the other regions so that the policies of political, economic, and 
cultural marginalization become a thing of the past in a country that was 
originally characterized by its diversity, and its people’s tendency towards 
coexistence and tolerance. 

The war in Darfur alone, aside from its exorbitant humanitarian price, has cost 
Sudan about USD 11 billion according to some studies, in addition to another 
USD 14 billion representing the value of losses as a result of the destruction, 
displacement, and disruptions in facilities and production. This cost will only 
grow as the conflict continues and expands from Darfur to South Kordofan and 
the Blue Nile. More seriously, the war will lead to the weakening of 
coexistence, the erosion of unity, and increasing feelings of injustice, along 
with all that implies for the rest of Sudan. Let us consider here what has 
already happened in the south


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