---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Eric Reeves" <[email protected]>
Date: 11 May 2017 20:13
Subject: A Permanent Lifting of U.S. Sanctions on Khartoum? Report Card
Number Two
To: "Eric Reeves" <[email protected]>
Cc:

*A Permanent Lifting of U.S. Sanctions on Khartoum? Report Card Number Two*

An interim assessment of Darfur, based on the two key terms stipulated by
the Obama administration: improvement of humanitarian access and ending
organized military violence and aerial bombardment

Eric Reeves | May 11, 2017 |  http://wp.me/p45rOG-238

*President Barack Obama* provisionally lifted U.S. economic sanctions on
the Khartoum regime by *Executive Order on January 13, 2017*; Obama cited
“positive actions” and his UN Ambassador Samantha Power went so far as to
declare that there had been a “sea change” of improvement in humanitarian
access in Sudan
<http://webtv.un.org/watch/samantha-power-united-states-final-press-conference-to-un-correspondents-13-january-2017/5281173841001>.
These sanctions were first imposed on the regime in *1997* and strengthened
during the *administration of President George W. Bush*.

The Obama Executive Order stipulated the conditions for a permanent lifting
of economic sanctions, which are essentially twofold:

*[1] *Significant improvement in humanitarian access to *Darfur* as
well as *South
Kordofan* and *Blue Nile* (the *“Two Areas*”) and,

*[2]* *End organized violence in the regions*, including a halt to the
indiscriminate aerial bombardment that has defined Khartoum’s genocidal
counter-insurgency in Darfur for fourteen years and for over almost six
years in South Kordofan and Blue Nile.

What this second criterion does not address is Khartoum’s continuing
support for militia proxies in Darfur, which have come to control the
region, creating what has recently been quite accurately described as
a “militia
state
<http://www.smallarmssurveysudan.org/fileadmin/docs/issue-briefs/HSBA-IB-27-Sudanese-paramilitary-forces.pdf>
.” The U.S. government seems intent on minimizing this defining military
reality
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/us-military-attach%C3%A9-visits-north-darfur>—and
for its distorted representation has been sharply corrected by Hamid Nur,
one of the most distinguished and knowledgeable Darfuri civil society
leaders:

*“Darfur fully dominated by militias”: civil society leader* | Radio
Dabanga | April 16, 2017 | KHARTOUM | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/darfur-fully-dominated-by-
militias-civil-society-leader

*Sudan’s western region is politically, militarily, and economically
dominated by militias, says the head of the Darfur Civil Society Platform.
The Darfur displaced and refugees have no way to return to their as the
places are occupied by militiamen and their families. *In an interview with
Radio Dabanga, Hamid Ali Nur, head of the Darfur Civil Society Platform,
called the repeated statements by the Sudanese government and the recent
report by the US military attaché about the improved security situation in
Darfur inaccurate and incorrect.

According to the civil society leader, the Khartoum government has, to a
large extent, succeeded in changing the Darfur population itself.
“Militiamen and their families have occupied the villages and farms left by
fleeing Darfuris during all these years.” The civil society activist said
that the government's options given to the Darfur displaced, either to
return to their villages of origin, or integrate them into the local
communities by re-structuring the camps, are fake. “As the displaced are
not able to return, Khartoum’s policy is aimed at permanently displacing
them from their homes, lands, and heritage.

*Dominance*

“The government militiamen known as *janjaweed*, recruited from Bedouin
groups in the region and over the past couple of years also
from neighbouring countries, are enjoying full immunity,” he stated. “They
can do whatever they want without any accountability. The Khartoum
government has given them full political, military and economic dominance,
while it denies the other entities in Darfur their basic, legitimate
rights. Nur said that the Darfuri people, “in their homes or in the camps
for the displaced, are humiliated and oppressed by the militiamen on a
daily basis. There is no opportunity to complain or resort to justice
because of the immunity enjoyed by these militias.

“Displaced returning to their areas of origin for farming in the rainy
season have to hand half of their yields to militias in the area. In other
instances, militiamen force displaced farmers to work on their farms as
slaves,” he explained. “This situation can never lead to peace, because of
the complete absence of justice and accountability.”

Unless these issues are addressed, a U.S. sanctions review will be
meaningless, at least for the vast majority of the people now suffering
continuing violence and acute deprivation. *Appendix A *collects those
dispatches from the past month bearing on the increasingly insistent threat
by the Khartoum regime of camp closures and dismantling. But the violence
that makes voluntary returns by displaced persons impossible has been
substantially documented, including in numerous dispatches from the past
month.

I will continue issuing periodic “report cards” assessing the regime’s
performance in meeting U.S. government criteria for a permanent lifting of
economic sanctions. *This present “report card” focuses on reports from
Radio Dabanga and Sudan Tribune since the last “report card (April 8, 2017* |
 http://wp.me/p45rOG-22o/); Khartoum’s grade continues to be an
*“F”—failing.*

*********************

*[1] **Improve humanitarian access in Darfur as well as South
Kordofan and Blue Nile (the “Two Areas”) *[all of my comments on these
dispatches appear in *blue italics, followed by my initials, ER]*

*•  Sheikh foresees “humanitarian disaster” as thirst grips North Darfur
camp | *Radio Dabanga, May 10, 2017 | SORTONY camp |
https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/sheik-
foresees-humanitarian-disaster-as-thirst-grips-north-darfur-camp

*Sortony camp for the displaced in Kabkabiya, North Darfur, is heading for
a ‘humanitarian disaster’ unless a solution is found for the water crisis
that has lasted more than two months.* One of the camp Sheikhs told Radio
Dabanga that the price of a tin of water has soared to SDG 6 ($0.90). He
pointed out that the displaced in the camp are currently receiving drinking
water from Kabro and Goli areas, which entails a six-hour round trip on the
backs of animals.

He said there are four water tankers operating once a day for to bring
water to the camp which houses more than 22,000 displaced people. The
Sheikh says he foresees “a severe humanitarian disaster by the end of the
summer unless the authorities and organisations resolve the problem.”

*Last month, a number of displaced people in Sortony told Radio Dabanga
that the severe drinking water shortage was caused by the **reduction
in the number of water tankers carrying water to the camp: from 17 vehicles
per day to two vehicles.*

*[There are many ways for Khartoum to obstruct humanitarian relief in
Darfur, including the denial of adequate numbers of critical transport
vehicles—ER]*

*• Lacking resources, equipment cause surgery backlog at North Darfur
hospital | *Radio Dabanga | May 10, 2017 | EL FASHER |
https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/
lacking-resources-equipment-cause-surgery-backlog-at-north-darfur-hospital

*Health authorities in North Darfur have revealed that there is a waiting
list of 24 people who require surgery for urinary fistula* at the
obstetrics and gynaecology section of El Fasher hospital.*

*[In Darfur, by far the most common cause of fistulas is violent sexual
assault, specifically rape—ER]*

The director of the fistula centre of the El Fasher hospital in the North
Darfur capital, Dr Salih El Tahir Salih, told Radio Dabanga that the lack
of material resources, medical devices, and equipment, is preventing the
operations from being carried out.

*[This lack of equipment occurs despite the reality of many tens of
thousands of girls and women victimized by rape used as a weapon of war,
deployed by Khartoum’s militia and regular military forces for over
fourteen years: see *| http://sudanreeves.org/2016/04/03/update-to-
continuing-mass-rape-of-girls-in-darfur-the-most-heinous-crime-generates-no-
international-outrage-january-2016/ —ER *]*

*• Thirst growing in Darfur camps | *Radio Dabanga | April 23, 2017 | |
SORTONY / ZAMZAM / GIREIDA | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/thirst-growing-in-darfur-camps

*Displaced living in the Sortony and Zamzam camps in North Darfur complain
about a severe drinking water shortage. Residents of the Gireida camps for
the displaced in South Darfur suffer from thirst as well.* Several
displaced told Radio Dabanga from Sortony that two weeks ago the number of
water tankers carrying water to the camp was reduced from 17 vehicles per
day to two vehicles, resulting in a severe water crisis for the about
63,000 people in the camp. “We cannot afford to buy water for SDG5 ($0.70)
per jerry-can, sold by the owners of the donkey carts,” a camp resident
said. “*And when we leave the camp to get water from a well, we more often
than not are assaulted by militiamen.”*

*[The significance of Darfur having become a “militia state” can hardly be
overstated—ER]*

In the Zamzam camp, south of the north Darfur capital El Fasher, people
also complain about shortages of drinking water and high prices. A Zamzam
camp elder told this station that 39 of the 79 pumps in the camp are not
operating. He expressed his fear that “Our thirst may become fatal in the
summer, when the water level in the wells decreases, and it will be more
difficult to collect enough water.” He said that the price of drinking
water doubled recently. “We now pay SDG30 ($4.20) to have a water tank
filled.”

In Gireida in South Darfur, the price for a barrel of water has risen from
SDG12 to SDG20 ($2.80), a resident of the Forika camp reported. “Since last
Sunday, five of the water pumps in the camp have stopped working because of
a lack of fuel.” He called on the South Darfur authorities and humanitarian
organisations to provide fuel to the camps.

*[Refusing to allow humanitarian organizations to repair pumps, or to
supply them with adequate supplies of fuel, is one way in which Khartoum is
increasing pressure on residents of IDP camps to leave—ER]*

*• Critical water shortage in Port Sudan, North Darfur camp | *Radio
Dabanga | April 19, 2017 | PORT SUDAN / NYALA | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/critical-water-shortage-in-
port-sudan-north-darfur-camp

*Nyala*

The displaced people of *camp Otash in Nyala, South Darfur*, have
complained of *a severe drinking water crisis due to a lack of fuel, and
the breakdown of a number of pumps and water wells.* One of the Sheikhs
told Radio Dabanga that WEST water organisation in the camp told them that
the cause of the crisis is a lack of fuel to run the pumps, depletion of
water levels in a number of wells, and non-operation of wells at 4 Sanatir.
He said the organisation has asked the displaced to contribute financially
to resolving the problem

*• Water outages in hospitals in North Darfur capital | *Radio Dabanga |
April 18, 2017 | EL FASHER | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/water-outages-in-hospitals-in-north-darfur-capital

*People in El Fasher face an acute lack of water because of ongoing outages
in the city's electricity sector. Two hospitals are facing problems.* The
academic hospital and the Gynecology and Obstetrics Specialist hospital
have witnessed continuous water shortages, listeners in the city reported
to Radio Dabanga. On Monday, the general directorate of drinking water
services in North Darfur confirmed its commitment to address the problem
for both hospitals. The service wants to provide them with permanent water
supply lines, and wants to re-operate the water tanks that are spread
through districts of El Fasher and supply water to the residents. A month
ago the Minister of Urban Planning of North Darfur announced the repair of
a number of water pumps in the city and to drill seven new wells, so as to
prepare for the coming summer period. South of El Fasher in Zamzam camp for
displaced people, community leaders have also called upon local
organisations to avert the looming drinking water crisis.

*[Denial of humanitarian access has knock-on effects, including the denial
of critical supplies to hospitals and clinics in Darfur—ER]*

*• Two medical staff for 90 patients/day in West Darfur’s Sirba | *Radio
Dabanga | May 1, 2017 | SIRBA | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/two-medical-staff-for-90-patients-
day-in-west-darfur-s-sirba

*Patients in Sirba in West Darfur complain about the deterioration of
medical services in the area.* Speaking to Radio Dabanga on Saturday, an
activist reported that the entire staff of Sirba Hospital, the only
hospital in the locality, exists of a medical assistant and a nurse. “There
are almost no medicines as well.” He said that the number of patients who
are daily visiting the hospital amounts to about 90. “They have to wait for
hours in a difficult environment, that does not even have drinking water.”
He called on the West Darfur state authorities “to speed up the
rehabilitation of the hospital and provide it with trained health
personnel, doctors, and medicines.”

*[Because of Khartoum's actions and the pervasive insecurity in Darfur, 97%
of those working for humanitarian organizations in the region are Sudanese
nationals; a critical shortage of doctors throughout the country is
magnified by Khartoum’s having made it virtually impossible for
international aid workers, including medical personnel, to work in
Darfur—ER]*

*• Disease fells children, seniors in West Darfur camp | *Radio Dabanga |
April 14, 2017 | MURNEI / EL FASHER | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/disease-fells-children-seniors-in-west-darfur-camp

*At least 19 people, including 11 children and eight seniors, have already
died during April of an unidentified fever that is spreading fast in Murnei
camp for the displaced in West Darfur.* The camp coordinator told Radio
Dabanga that the situation is made worse by a lack of medicines. The few
drugs that are available are too expensive for the displaced to afford. The
coordinator has appealed to the authorities to intervene to diagnose and
contain the outbreak, which causes severe diarrhoea, and provide medicines
and treatment for those infected.

A number of patients and their escorts in the intensive care unit (ICU) of
El Fasher Teaching Hospital in North Darfur have complained that the ICU
has seen an electricity outage since Monday. They have called on the
authorities to intervene immediately to save the patients’ lives. The
medical Director of El Fasher Teaching Hospital, Dr Khalil Badawi, has
acknowledged that there was an interruption in the electricity. He said
that there was a problem with the electricity supplier.

*[Again, denial of humanitarian access has knock-on effects, including the
denial of critical supplies to hospitals and clinics in Darfur—ER]*

*• South Darfur survey: hundreds mentally ill* | Radio Dabanga | April 30,
2017 | NYALA, South Darfur | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/south-darfur-survey-hundreds-mentally-ill *A survey
conducted by the Department of Social Welfare in South Darfur has showed a
significant increase in the number of mentally ill people in the
region. *Social
researcher Mohamed Abaker Eisa told the press in the South Darfur capital
of Nyala on Thursday that the war and the harsh economic conditions have
caused many neurological and mental disorders. “Preliminary results of the
survey revealed that at least 423 people in South Darfur are mentally ill.

“The spread of madmen in the streets of Nyala may be very dangerous,” he
warned, and pointed to the importance of establishing a special section for
mental and neurological patients at the Nyala Teaching Hospital*.   “There
is not a single clinic for psychiatric disorders in the state, which has
greatly exacerbated the conditions of the patients, and forced many
families to send their mentally ill relatives to El Tijani El Mahi
Psychiatric Hospital in Khartoum,” he said.*

*[Psycho-social services provided by INGOs are among the first to be cut
when humanitarian access is curtailed—ER]*
*[2]** End organized violence in the regions, including a halt to the
indiscriminate aerial bombardment that has defined Khartoum’s genocidal
counter-insurgency in Darfur for fourteen years and for over almost six
years in South Kordofan and Blue Nile.*

*• “Nine dead in RSF militia attacks on 12 Darfur villages” | *Radio
Dabanga | May 8, 2017 | ZALINGEI | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/nine-dead-in-rsf-militia-attacks-
on-12-darfur-villages

*At least nine people were reportedly killed, 22 others were injured, and
four were raped in attacks by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces on
western Jebel Marra on Sunday. A Central Darfur official has denied the
incidents.* “At about 7 am on Sunday, elements of the Rapid Support Forces
(RSF) driving 41 Land Cruisers loaded with weapons, and others on camels
and horses began to attack 12 villages north of Nierteti,” El Shafee
Abdallah, the coordinator of the camps for the displaced in Central Darfur,
told Radio Dabanga. *“Nine villagers were shot dead, four young women were
gang-raped, and at least 22 people were injured,” he reported. “Before
torching the houses, they stole all the property. They cut and burned even
the lemon trees.”*

The camp coordinator said that the entire population of the villages fled
into the mountains, “as the roads leading to Nierteti are blocked by the
militiamen.”

A Central Darfur government official denied the attacks took place.
“Reports about RSF attacks on Jebel Marra villages are sheer lies,” he told
this station. “The Jebel Marra region is currently experiencing security
and stability it has not witnessed for more than 13 years.”

*[Darfur is a “militia state”:
<http://www.enoughproject.org/reports/border-control-hell-how-eus-migration-partnership-legitimizes-sudans-militia-state>
there
is no denying this basic reality and yet it seems not to figure in the U.S.
government’s assessment of Khartoum’s military actions in Darfur. This is a
disingenuous form of denial—ER]*

*• New waves of displacement reported in Central Darfur* | *Sudan Tribune
| *May 9, 2017 (NERTITI, Central Darfur) | http://www.sudantribune.com/
spip.php?iframe&page=imprimable&id_article=62415

Hundreds of civilians have fled their villages in Darfur’s Jebel Marra area
following fresh attacks by Sudanese government militiamen forces, said a
local representative of displaced persons. On 26 April, the holdout rebel
group Sudan Liberation Movement-Abdel Wahid al-Nur (SLM-AW) said they
clashed with the government militia near Nertiti locality, Central Darfur
State.

In statements to *Sudan Tribune*, IDPs coordinator in Central Darfur State
el-Shafei Abdallah claimed that militiamen wearing military uniforms and
riding four-wheel-drive vehicles and camels recently attacked 122 villages
in Jebel Marra. He said the attacks included several villages in the
locality of Guldo and eastern part of Nertiti, adding that nine people
mostly women and children were killed and their belongings were looted.

He said the government has failed to stop the attacks by the armed militias
pointing that the new waves of displacement refute the "state government’s
repeated lies about the voluntary return in the state.” In a related
development, Adam Abdalla Ishaq, the deputy president of IDPs and refugees
association, said more than 410 families (2800 people) fled to Nertiti and
Guldo on Monday and called on aid groups to provide them with food and
shelter saying they are in poor conditions.

Ishaq blamed the government saying it encouraged the return of the IDPs to
their villages and pledged to protect them. Also, he said the local
authorities refrained from providing any services before their return to
their villages. Central Darfur government officials were not available for
comment, as the IDPs representatives are often hostile to the authorities
which accuse them of supporting the rebels.

*[It is not clear why attacks on “*122 villages in Jebel Marra” *do not
constitute “offensive military campaigns” of the sort that presumably
figure in U.S. government assessments of Khartoum’s behavior in Darfur—ER]*

*• North Darfur: Two dead in attacks on Jebel Marra villages | *Radio
Dabanga | April 10, 2017 | TAWILA, North darfur | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/north-darfur-two-dead-in-attacks-on-
jebel-marra-villages

*Two people were killed and six others wounded in attacks by gunmen on
villages in north-east Jebel Marra in North Darfur’s Tawila over the
weekend.* A resident of El Gabas village told Radio Dabanga that an armed
group driving two four-wheel drive vehicles, accompanied by others riding
camels and horses raided El Gabas, 25 kilometres west of Katur in Tawila
locality, on Friday. “They began shooting. Yousef Haroun (52) and Mahjoub
Saleh (42) were killed instantly,” he said. “All the villagers sought
shelter in the valleys. The janjaweed then left, taking with them most of
our livestock.”

The source said that the same group of militants attacked the village of
Rogoli, not far from El Gabas on Saturday. “Yousef Hussein (32), Adam
Yagoub (28), and Ahmed Bakhit (18) sustained bullet wounds. All the cattle
and donkeys were stolen from the village.” On Sunday, the same men attacked
the area around Falluja village, 20 kilometres south of Katur, a listener
reported to this station. “Omda Mohamed Omar, Salem, and Maryam Juma were
shot. The attackers took the sheep, goats and donkeys from the village.”

*• Gunmen threaten to torch South Darfur camp | *Radio Dabanga | May 3,
2017 | MERSHING, south Darfur | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/gunmen-threaten-to-torch-south-darfur-camp

*Militants have threatened to storm and torch Keila Camp in Mershing
locality in South Darfur unless the inhabitants pay compensation for
livestock the gunmen claim to have lost.* One of the displaced residents of
the camp told Radio Dabanga that they sought help of the locality police,
but the militants threatened the police and gave the displaced an ultimatum
until Saturday to return 40 cattle or the cash equivalent, or they would
pillage and burn the camp.

On Tuesday militants broke into Kushina basic school south Tawila in North
Darfur. Omda Bosh told Radio Dabanga that militants on two Land Cruisers
mounted with a Dushka machinegun 10 am on Tuesday, seized school equipment,
chairs, cupboards and other school objects including doors from the
headmaster and  teachers’ offices and the storehouse, loaded them into a
lorry headed towards Kabkabiya.

*[Threats of arson, and actual arson, have long been grim facts of life for
those in IDP camps, which have frequently been militarily assaulted. There
are two major reasons for these threats and actions: extortion and serving
the Khartoum regime’s announced policy of dismantling the camps for IDPs.
Arson is an extremely efficient method of “dismantling,” and the camp
burnings of more than a decade have often left people to flee into highly
insecure environments—ER]*

*• Mother, child die as militiamen raid five Darfur villages | *Radio
Dabanga | April 21, 2017 | EAST JEBEL MARRA | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/mother-child-die-as-militiamen-raid-five-north-
darfur-villages

*A woman and her five-year-old son have died and three more people wounded
when militiamen raided five villages in East Jebel Marra on Thursday.* Callers
told Radio Dabanga that armed militiamen, riding camels and horses
descended on the villages of Jasu, Hai Mudraj, Hillet Sheikh Adu, Hillet
Liba and Hillet Adam Abdelmajid, north of Mershing locality which is in
South Darfur. A woman and her 5-year-old son were killed by the attackers.
Sheikh Adam Abdelmajid, the village leader of the settlement named after
him, and his wife and 7-year-old son Iskander sustained injuries. Witnesses
said the attackers stripped all five villages of money, property and
livestock.

*• Deadly ambush, “foreigners bussed-in” in North Darfur’s Gallab | *Radio
Dabanga | April 30 - 2017 | GALLAB, North darfur | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/deadly-ambush-foreigners-
bussed-in-in-north-darfur-s-gallab

*A displaced woman was killed, her sister was injured, and five others went
missing in an ambush in Gallab near El Fasher, capital of North Darfur, on
Friday. A number of African families reportedly arrived in the area on
Thursday.* Speaking to Radio Dabanga, a Zamzam camp elder said that a group
of gunmen attacked seven women of the camp in the area of Gallab,
south-west of El Fasher, on Friday afternoon. “The women were collecting
straw in Gallab, when the janjaweed suddenly appeared and began to shoot
them. Maryam Osman Eisa was killed instantly and her sister Umeldur was
injured,” he said. “The five other women disappeared.” He said that two
search parties were formed, one by Zamzam camp elders and another by Adam
Jadeed, Commissioner of Tawila locality, “to hunt down the perpetrators.”

*Foreigners*

People living in the area of Gallab reported the arrival of seven lorries
from El Geneina, capital of West Darfur, on Thursday. The vehicles carried
“foreigners with their families, who were hosted at the school of Gallab
and its health centre.” They said that a lorry arrived from El Fasher on
Friday, carrying food for the newcomers, whom they believe came from Chad,
Central African Republic, Niger, and Mali. “Militant foreigners who arrived
in the past years threatened to beat and kill anyone who goes out to
collect straw and firewood or cultivate their lands,” one of the sources
said.

*[The presence of Arab militiamen from countries to the west of Darfur,
whose entry into Darfur has been facilitated by the Khartoum regime, has
been well-documented for a decade now. This is but another means of
“changing the demography of Darfur,” in the infamous words of notorious
Janjaweed leader Musa Hilal in August 2004
| 
http://sudanreeves.org/2015/11/05/musa-hilal-and-the-changing-of-darfurs-demography/
<http://sudanreeves.org/2015/11/05/musa-hilal-and-the-changing-of-darfurs-demography/>
—ER]*

*• Two dead, seven injured, Imam beaten in Darfur militia attacks | *Radio
Dabanga | April 27, 2017 | DARFUR* | *https://www.
dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/two-dead-seven-
injured-imam-beaten-in-darfur-militia-attacks

*Two people died, seven – including two children – were injured, and three
others are still missing after a night attack by armed militants on Mura
and Barkoro areas west of Katur in eastern Jebel Marra. The Imam of a
village mosque was beaten by bandits in South Darfur.* One of the survivors
told Radio Dabanga that militants on camels and horses attacked both areas
on Tuesday night, instantly killed two people, and wounded seven others,
including Yousif Ibrahim Adam, Ali Mohamed Haroun and Aisha Seifeldin. He
said the attackers plundered cash, property, about 1,500 head of cattle,
and then headed towards El Malam area of South Darfur.

On Monday, militants attacked Birka Toli village of Abu Ajoura
administrative unit in South Darfur and beat the Imam of the Haroun El Haj
mosque. A witness told Radio Dabanga that on Monday militants on camels and
horses attacked the village during Maghreb prayer, opened fire in the air
before they began to attack the worshipers. They stole cash, more than 18
mobile phones, and plundered Dr Adam's pharmacy.

*• West Darfur market killings condemned | *Radio Dabanga | April 12,
2017 | EL GENEINA | https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/west-
darfur-market-killings-condemned

*The shooting at Kerending camp in El Geneina in West Darfur, that left two
women and a child dead, and at least 12 people injured on Sunday has
prompted a chorus of condemnation from outraged voices across Darfur**. *The
Darfur Bar Association issued a statement on Tuesday saying that “the
attack [on Rokroko market of Kerending camp] in which force of arms was
used without warning, nor measures taken to remove the market, are weak
justifications.

The problems started when the Commissioner of El Geneina announced his
decision to remove the Kerending camp market earlier this week. *After the
displaced strongly opposed the idea, the Commissioner ordered police and
security forces to remove the market by force. On Sunday morning they
torched the market stalls*, whereupon camp residents set fire to the police
post and a number of locality buildings in the area. Other took to the
streets in a protest march. *The government forces then started to shoot at
the protesters. *

“The attack on the market used excessive force, in which the property of
the displaced people and the goods in the shops were burned,” the Bar
Association says. The statement condemned the practices of the authorities
of West Darfur and El Geneina and held them responsible for the loss of
innocent lives of civilians and the destruction and theft of their private
property.

The Bar Association called for a speedy investigation and accountability,
and for criminal charges to be filed against the officials. The Association
also calls for compensation for the displaced for their material losses.

In Khartoum, MP Siham Saleh Hasabullah held the Governor of West Darfur,
Fadlul Mawla El Haja and his government responsible for the incidents, and
demanded his resignation. In an interview with Radio Dabanga, Siham
confirmed that *three people were shot dead and 12 others were wounded at
camp Kerending when the displaced people protested against the decision to
remove the market and transfer it east of El Geneina.*

*[The attack on civilians in Kerending is emblematic of Khartoum’s brutal
determination to prevent any form of protest or political expression by
Darfuris—ER]*

*• Police forces kill three protesters in West Darfur camp | **Sudan
Tribune | *April 9, 2017 (EL-GENEINA, West Darfur) |
http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?iframe&page=imprimable&id_article=62152

*Three people were killed in a camp for internally displaced persons
outside El-Geneina, West Darfur, when the police opened fire to disperse a
protest by IDPs against a decision to relocate a local market to another
area. An eyewitness told Sudan Tribune that the incident took place Sunday
at the Krinding camp, on the outskirts of Geneina town, when a joint force
from the police and security services started to remove the Rako Rako
market in the implementation of a decision issued by El-Geneina
commissioner.*

"During the removal process, a fire broke out in a shop made of local
materials, and the IDPs demonstrated against the law enforcement agents who
rushed to shoot on the protesters killing a woman and injured other dozens.
Later, the hospital received the bodies of two people who died of gunshot
wounds," he said.

The residents of the Krinding camp, which is divided into two sections are
mainly, Massailit people from South and East of West Darfur but there are
also some Gimiir, Bargo, Tama and Zaghawa. There is no official statistics
about the number of residents in the camp, but the WFP in its figures of
2015 says it assists some 5,428 households in Krinding 1 and 2,416
households in Krinding 2.

A West Darfur official who preferred anonymity confirmed to *Sudan Tribune* the
incident.

He said El- Geneina commissioner since last month has issued a decision to
relocate the market to a new market at two kilometres but the displaced
refused the decision. The local official further said the decision has been
taken because the current market has become a hideout for drug trafficking,
adding that the police opened fire because some protesters were carrying
grenades in their hands.

*• Soldiers beat, torture water delegation in North Darfur | *Radio Dabanga
| April 12, 2017 | TABIT, North Darfur | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/soldiers-beat-torture-water-
delegation-in-north-darfur

Four people, including a policeman and a member of the Popular Defence
Forces were severely beaten and tortured by military personnel in the
military garrison at Tabit in North Darfur on Tuesday. *Witnesses told
Radio Dabanga that residents of the area protested as the military garrison
monopolises the only water engine in the area; civilians were prevented
from drawing drinking water for most of the week which caused thirst to
them and their livestock.*

They pointed out that on Tuesday the area water committee asked the army to
allow the residents to draw water and to organise it, but the soldiers saw
this as interference in their affairs. They allegedly assaulted and beat
four members of the water committee and took them to the military garrison.
Callers told this station that the soldiers beat and tortured the head of
the Tabit water committee, Abdelaziz Juma (35), his brother Zaki Juma (32),
an unnamed member of the Popular Defence Forces, a 35-year-old policeman
Taha Abdelkarim, and Abdullah Saleh (42) for two hours and then released
them in critical condition. They said the villagers took them immediately
to El Fasher for treatment.

*• South Darfur teachers remain detained without charge* | Radio Dabanga |
April 11, 2017 | NYALA, South Darfur | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/south-darfur-teachers-remain-detained-without-charge

*Four school teachers from Gireida have remained in detention for five
months without charges laid upon them or trial. *The four higher secondary
school teachers were detained on 10 November, without knowing the reasons.
Saber Abdallah Ahmed, Shamsuldin Mohamad Harin, Mohamed Musa Daoud, and
Bahruldin Adam El Toam have been transferred to Kober Prison in Nyala.

“They have not been interrogated either,” a relative of one of the
detainees told Radio Dabanga. “This is a violation of the rights of
detainees and blatant violation of the law.”

He called on the authorities to release them immediately or bring them to a
fair trial.

The teachers were accused of organised a protest in November, held against
a number of militia attacks in several villages in Gireida that month. *Their
arrest came under the instruction of the Commissioner of Gireida using the
Emergency Measures after their protest.*

*• Darfur herders injured, cattle stolen in Jebel Marra | *Radio Dabanga |
April 24, 2017 | JEBEL MARRA | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/darfur-herders-injured-cattle-stolen-in-jebel-marra

*Two herders were wounded in a cattle rustling incident in the eastern part
of Jebel Marra on Saturday.* Speaking to Radio Dabanga, a relative of the
victims reported that a group of gunmen in a Land Cruiser, and others
riding motorcycles and camels attacked a number of nomad settlements in the
area of Falluja, south of Dubbo El Omda, on Saturday evening. “Yousef
Haroun Ibrahim and Abdelmowla Adam Haroun were hit by their bullets,” he
said. “The janjaweed then left, taking 41 cows and two donkeys with them.”

 *[Dispatches such as the preceding are too common for all of them to be
included here; but this is the daily life for non-Arab/African tribal
populations throughout Darfur--ER] *

*[The following report from SLA/Abdel Wahid has not been independently
confirmed by non-SLA sources; nonetheless, the specificity of the account
should give pause before its authenticity is dismissed—ER]*

*• Fighting, bombing resumes in Darfur’s Jebel Marra* | Radio Dabanga |
April 23, 2017 | JEBEL MARRA | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/fighting-bombing-resumes-in-darfur-s-jebel-marra

*On Saturday, 17 militiamen were reported killed in clashes between
Sudanese government forces and rebels of the Sudan Liberation Movement,
headed by Abdelwahid El Nur (SLM-AW) in Jebel Marra. The Sudanese Air Force
bombed villages in north-west Jebel Marra on Saturday and today. *Speaking
to Radio Dabanga, SLM-AW spokesman Ezzeldin Sambala, reported that
government forces launched an attack on the area of Torantora, one of the
movement's strongholds in Jebel Marra on Saturday morning. He said that the
SLM-AW combatants managed to repel the attackers. “We inflicted heavy
casualties on the enemy. 17 militiamen were killed, among them
Lance-Corporal Hamdan Mohamed Eisa.”

*Bombing*

The Sudanese Air Force bombed at least 15 villages in the area between Maya
in Kabkabiya locality and Aja in northern Jebel Marra were bombed on
Saturday and Sunday. “It is unclear yet how many people were killed and
wounded,” Hussein Abusharati, spokesman for the Darfur Displaced and
Refugees Association told this station. “The explosions set fire to many
houses in the villages,” he said. "What is required now is urgent action by
the United Nations,” the camp leader added. “They should pressure Khartoum
to stop the indiscriminate aerial bombardments of civilians in Darfur, that
only causes more displacement. “We further call on humanitarian
organisations to immediately intervene, and provide aid to the thousands of
villagers who fled into the wilderness without being able to take anything
with them.”

After a relative calm for months, the Sudanese air force dropped three
barrel bombs on the area of Jawa in the eastern part of Jebel Marra on 6
April. The latest bombing occurred in October, weeks after renewed
fighting had broken out between government forces and SLM-AW combatants.
*APPENDIX A: CAMP CLOSURES, INVOLUNTARY RETURNS*

>From the beginning of the Darfur genocide, the camps for displaced persons
have been an embarrassment to the Khartoum regime—an unignorable sign of
the massive violence and destruction that drove people to the camps, as
well as the continuing insecurity that prevents the return of displaced
persons. Over the past two years, regime officials—in Darfur and in
Khartoum—have become increasingly strident and threatening in their
declarations that the camps will be dismantled, this based on the patent
fiction that Darfur is secure and these people have villages, homes, and
lands to return to.

A satisfactory resolution of the status of IDPs—including restitution and
security—is the only way a meaningful peace can be achieved in Darfur. This
basic fact seems lost on U.S. government officials, with their
concentration on humanitarian access (still terribly compromised) and
military “offensives,” still occurring if now almost exclusively by way of
militia proxies.

The following dispatches reveal all too much of the reality that the
international community as a whole is content to ignore:

*• “Militiamen living in our villages, using our lands”: Darfuri displaced
| *Radio Dabanga | April 17, 2017 | BELEIL / ZALINGEI |
https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/militiamen-living-in-our-
villages-using-our-lands-darfuri-displaced

*The continued announcements of the Sudanese government and the recent
declaration of the US military attaché in Khartoum about the improved
security situation in the region are “false propaganda”, according to the
displaced people in Darfur.* “These statements about security in Darfur
have no basis in reality,” Hussein Abu Sharati, the spokesman for the
Darfur Displaced and Refugees Association, commented to Radio Dabanga. “In
terms of security and stability, the situation in Darfur is now more
serious than three years ago. As the region is currently under the control
of those who fought alongside government forces against the people, and
chased them from their villages. The government rewarded them by letting
them occupy our lands.”

Abu Sharati explained that the displaced and refugees do not refuse to
return voluntarily. “On the contrary, they are longing to return to their
places of origin. It is imperative however, to achieve a comprehensive
peace, to restore security, disarm the militias, expel the militiamen and
their families from the occupied lands, and bring those who have committed
crimes against civilians in Darfur to justice. “Otherwise, we have nothing
to do with any re-planning of camps, nor with the so-called voluntary
return as it is promoted by the government,” he added.

*“Baseless propaganda”*

According to* El Shafee Abdallah, Coordinator of the Central Darfur camps
and one of the members of the Darfur Camps Coordination Committee, the
government's announcement of security in Darfur and the possibility for the
displaced people in the camps to return to their villages is “baseless
propaganda.* “The *lands and villages of the displaced people are currently
occupied by militiamen, from the region or neighbouring countries, who are
allied with the government,” he said.* “They daily prevent the displaced
from leaving the camps to collect firewood and straw, let alone to return
to their villages.”

He explained that “The government aims to keep the displaced people where
they are, after a so-called replanning of the camps. “If the camp areas are
annexed to the towns and the displaced registered as town residents, they
will deprived from the possibility to reclaim their land. Thus the way to
legalising the new settlers’ ownership of our lands will be paved.”

“That is why the displaced people will never accept the re-planning of the
camps and their integration into the towns,” he said.

*• “No voluntary return in insecure Darfur”: displaced to US | *Radio
Dabanga | April 25, 2017 | EL FASHER, North Darfur |
https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/no-
voluntary-return-in-insecure-darfur-displaced-to-us

*People in Zamzam camp for displaced people in North Darfur complained that
the security and humanitarian situation in the camp is very bad. They told
a United States envoy that militiamen occupy their home farms; voluntary
return is out of the question.*

A delegation from the office of the US Special Envoy to Sudan and South
Sudan, Paul Steven, arrived at Zamzam, south of El Fasher, to meet with
Sheikhs, leaders and youth and women representatives. Zamzam is one of the
largest camps in Darfur.

The coordinator of the camp told Radio Dabanga that the delegates asked
them about the security and humanitarian situation, in addition to the
possibility of voluntarily returning to their home areas. Steven said that
security problems remain despite “the relative improvement” in the
situation in North Darfur. In a press statement he urged the Sudanese
government to take control of the militias and protect its citizens, along
with granting the AU-UN hybrid peacekeeping mission (Unamid) and aid
agencies freedom of movement. Making progress on the human rights situation
in Sudan is of utmost importance, he added.

*Attacks*

The security situation in the vicinity of Zamzam is very bad, youth and
women representatives said. Armed men and militia members attack people who
go outside. Meanwhile residents have witnessed a reduction of the food
ration cards and a deterioration of the health situation.

The envoy's office wanted to assess the situation on the ground in Darfur
to present a full report on the situation in Sudan in July, the month set
by the US Government to review the progress in the country and ease
economic sanctions and a trade embargo that have been in place against
Sudan since 1997.

Earlier this month the military attaché of the US embassy in Sudan visited
North Darfur for a briefing by the State Governor. Sudanese media reported
that Military Attaché Jörn Pung said he witnessed great developments in
North Darfur. A week later the embassy said the US “encourages close
cooperation among the Government of Sudan, United Nations, and native
administrations.”

*• Darfur displaced “under pressure” from health issues, plans to dismantle
camps | *Radio Dabanga | May 9, 2017 | DARFUR / ZALINGEI |
https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/darfur-displaced-under-
pressure-from-health-issues-plans-to-dismantle-camps

*Displaced people in camps in Darfur feel they are facing pressure to leave
the camps while health issues continue to emerge.** The government is
preparing plans to dismantle the camps.* Yesterday, community elders from
various camps reported to Radio Dabanga that the camps witness the spread
of diabetes, blood pressure issues and mental illnesses among camp
residents. They said these are caused “by the horrors of war, the living
conditions and the economic crisis”. One of the sheikhs of camp Murnei, in
West Darfur, told this station that seventeen people had a leg amputated in
the camp because of diabetes-related complications. About 20 people
reportedly suffer from mental illness.

He called on the humanitarian authorities and organisations to provide
health care and the necessary medical and psychological support, especially
to the patients.

*Continued announcements of the Sudanese government and the recent
declaration of the US military attaché in Khartoum about the improved
security situation in the region are signs of a campaign to increase the
numbers of voluntary returnees from the camps to their areas of origin.
While the majority of displaced long to return, reports of militiamen with
their families occupying the abandoned villages and farms continue to
emerge.*

Meanwhile people in Zalingei, Central Darfur, are witnessing an increase in
medicine prices, poor medical services, poor hospital environment, and a
lack of life-saving medicines in the emergency sections. Yesterday one of
the residents told Radio Dabanga that no maintenance is done in the city's
hospital, and dirty wards, toilets, and broken fans cause mosquitoes to
breed.

“Patients in the hospital suffer from their disease, but also the lack of
medicine and high prices in the pharmacies.” He called on the state
authorities to expedite the sanitation of the hospital environment,
maintenance of wards, improvement of hygiene standards and also to provide
more medicine to the state.

*• “Gireida camps to be closed”: South Darfur governor | *Radio Dabanga |
April 24, 2017 | GIREIDA, south Darfur | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/gireida-camps-to-be-closed-south-darfur-governor

*The Governor of South Darfur has given the residents of the Gireida camps
the choice between accepting the annexation of the camp sites to the town
or returning voluntarily to their places of origin**. *In a public meeting
in Gireida, Governor Adam El Faki told the displaced people that the more
than ten camps may be added to the existing residential districts or they
may become new districts in the town.

In both instances, the displaced people will not be entitled any more to
humanitarian aid.

The camp residents strongly rejected the options, for legal and security
reasons. “Actually the annexation of the camp sites to Gireida town means
the legitimisation of the theft of our lands. In this case, the land
ownership will be officially transferred to the new settlers and the
government’s militiamen,” a camp elder told Radio Dabanga.

“Yet, the people are also unable to return, because of the presence of
militiamen in their villages and at their farms. They prevent us from
returning to our lands for farming. Even when we leave the camp for a few
kilometres to collect firewood or straw, they attack us. “So we can only
return if the situation has become secure, and a comprehensive peace has
been reached,” he said.

*“Baseless propaganda”*

El Shafee Abdallah, Coordinator of the Central Darfur camps, told this
station earlier this month that the lands and villages of the displaced
people are currently occupied by government-allied militiamen, from the
region or from neighbouring countries.  “The government aims to keep the
displaced people where they are, after a so-called replanning of the
camps,” he said. “If the camp areas are annexed to the towns and the
displaced registered as town residents, they will deprived from the
possibility to reclaim their land. Thus the way to legalising the new
settlers’ ownership of our lands will be paved.” “That is why the displaced
people will never accept the re-planning of the camps and their integration
into the towns,” he explained.

*• Central Darfur displaced reject land rezoning | *Radio Dabanga | April
13, 2017 GARSILA, Central darfur | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/central-darfur-displaced-reject-land-rezoning

*The residents of Arula of Garsila locality in Central Darfur, who fled to
Garsila camps in 2003 because of the war, have refused a local committee's
decision to build public facilities at Arula and compensating them with
alternative housing.* Yesterday one of the sheikhs told Radio Dabanga from
that the displaced have refused a decision to remove their residential land
and return voluntarily because of insecurity. They called on Shartai
Ismaili Mohammad Bashar and his local committee to build schools, hospitals
and police stations on their original sites, not in the places instead of
on their land. They also demanded from the local and state authorities to
intervene immediately to stop this rejected decision. In Khartoum, the
Governor of South Darfur announced the transformation of camp El Salam
which accommodates 150,000 displaced people, to El Salam city as part of
the government plan for the camps.

*Voluntary return*

The* Governor of South Darfur, El Faki said after a meeting with the First
Vice President and the Prime Minister Bakri Hassan Saleh in Khartoum that
the process of voluntary return in South Darfur has begun in more than 15
villages without interference from the government.*

The Prime Minister stressed the importance of planning the camps and
enhancing the process of voluntary return for peace and stability in South
Darfur.

The Commissioner of Um Baru, Ahmed Mohammed El Taher announced the return
of 40,000 refugees and displaced persons to their places of origin.
Yesterday he announced to Sudan News Agency the opening of Um Baru hospital
and five health centres at areas of Orshi, Musbat, Um Haraz and Um Marahik
to provide medical and treatment services for the patients.

He explained that during the last phase the locality has managed to
implement several service projects such as the rehabilitation of the Orshi
reservoir in cooperation with the voluntary organisations and the local
community, digging eight underground wells, the maintenance of about 25
hand pumps and installing of six solar units to benefit from in running
wells.
-- 

Eric Reeves, Senior Fellow at Harvard University’s François-Xavier Bagnoud
Center for Health and Human Rights



[email protected]

www.sudanreeves.org

Twitter@SudanReeves

About Eric Reeves: http://sudanreeves.org/about-eric-reeves

Philanthropy: 
*http://ericreeves-woodturner.com/woodturnings-available-for-purchase-dire
<http://ericreeves-woodturner.com/woodturnings-available-for-purchase-dire>*

-- 
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/d/forum/southsudankob
View this message at 
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/southsudankob/topic-id/message-id
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"South Sudan Info - The Kob" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/SouthSudanKob.
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/SouthSudanKob/CAJb14orSqJZAOW1qjSAyKgiCSDUv_OPOyJkK7BWsseWK4iX7mg%40mail.gmail.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to