---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Eric Reeves" <[email protected]>
Date: Aug 27, 2017 17:57
Subject: Assaults on Camps for the Displaced in Darfur: History Makes Clear
They Will Increase
To: "Eric Reeves" <[email protected]>
Cc:

*Assaults on Camps for the Displaced in Darfur: History Makes Clear They
Will Increase*

Eric Reeves   |   August 27, 2017   |   http://wp.me/p45rOG-25W

Two headlines from Radio Dabanga today tell us a great deal about the
future of camps for displaced persons inside Darfur. The *UN Security
Council resolution gutting the* *UN/African Union “hybrid” Mission in
Darfur* *(June 30, 2017*), along with the impending permanent lifting of
U.S. economic sanctions on the NIF/NCP regime in Khartoum (*October 2017*),
provide the backdrop for what will certainly be a dramatic increase in
attacks by militia forces and regular *Sudan Armed Forces (SAF)* on camps
for the displaced:

*• Darfur displaced commemorate 2008 ‘Kalma camp massacre’ | *Radio Dabanga
| August 27, 2017 | NYALA | https://www.dabangasudan.org
/en/all-news/article/darfur-displaced-commemorate-2008-kalma-camp-massacre

On Friday, thousands of displaced people commemorated the ninth anniversary
of the ‘Kalma camp massacre.’ In August 2008, a group of militiamen and
members of the paramilitary Central Reserve Police (Abu Tira) raided Kalma
camp for the displaced near Nyala, capital of South Darfur. *(See below)*

*• Militiamen surround South Darfur camp, shoot student | *Radio Dabanga |
August 27, 2017 | NIERTETI | https://www.dabangasudan.org
/en/all-news/article/militiamen-surround-south-darfur-camp-shoot-student

*A university student was shot at Nierteti’s Northern Camp in Central
Darfur on Thursday.* Speaking to Radio Dabanga, a camp elder reported that
militiamen began firing into the air over the Northern Nierteti Camp for
the displaced on Thursday evening. “Abdelwahab Hasan Hamid was seriously
hit by bullets, and had to be taken to Nyala for treatment,” he said. The
elder said that a large group of militants in vehicles and on motorcycles
and horses began gathering north and west of the Nierteti Northern
Camp since Sunday, after one of their colleagues went missing in the area.

*[The “missing man” explanation by the militia is pure pretext: “missing”
men, or livestock, are constantly being used by militia forces as an excuse
for extortion or violence against IDP, who would be far too fearful to hold
either Arab men or livestock in camps—ER]*

International memory on such matters is short, but the first notable attack
on an IDP camp in Darfur occurred at Aro Sharow in September 2005—twelve
years ago. It was unusually well-reported, as I indicated in a dispatch at
the time, citing the assessment of Ambassador Baba Gana Kingibe, Special
Representative of the Chairperson of the AU Commission on Darfur (see “*A
Final Solution for Darfur: The View from Khartoum: Preserving the genocidal
status quo works to consolidate NIF power,”* October 9, 2005 |
http://wp.me/p45rOG-oG/):

On* 28 September 2005*, just four days ago, some reportedly *400 Janjaweed
Arab militia on camels and horseback went on the rampage in Aru Sharo, Acho
and Gozmena villages in West Darfur. Our reports also indicate that the day
previous, and indeed on the actual day of the attack, Government of Sudan
helicopter gunships were observed overhead. This apparent coordinated land
and air assault gives credence to the repeated claim by the rebel movements
of collusion between the Government of Sudan forces and the Janjaweed/Arab
militia.* This incident, which was confirmed not only by our investigators
but also by workers of humanitarian agencies and nongovernmental
organizations in the area, took a heavy toll resulting in 32 people killed,
4 injured and 7 missing, and about 80 houses/shelters looted and set ablaze.

*The following day, a clearly premeditated and well-rehearsed combined
operation was carried out by the Government of Sudan military and police at
approximately 11am in the town of Tawilla and its Internally Displaced
Persons (IDP) camp in North Darfur. The Government of Sudan forces used
approximately 41 trucks and 7 land cruisers in the operation which resulted
in a number of deaths, massive displacement of civilians and the
destruction of several houses in the surrounding areas as well as some
tents in the IDP camps.* Indeed, the *remains of discharged explosive
devices were found in the IDP camp.* During the attack, thousands from the
township and the IDP camp and many humanitarian workers were forced to seek
refuge near the AU camp for personal safety and security. (*Transcript of
press conference by Ambassador Baba Gana Kingibe, Special Representative of
the Chairperson of the AU Commission on Darfur, Khartoum, October 1, 2005)
(emphases added)*

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/IDP-camp-fire.jpg>

*Many of the fires reported constantly in the camps are of an extremely
suspicious nature; investigations of possible arson are never undertaken by
the police, the army, or UNAMID*

Such attacks continued, perhaps most notoriously on Kalma camp, the
commemoration of which Radio Dabanga cites. At the time of the attack, I
wrote (with Mia Farrow) in *The Wall Street Journal* about what was
reported in the immediate aftermath of this attack, for which no one was
held accountable by the Khartoum regime:

*"Now Sudan Is Attacking Refugee Camps," **The Wall Street Journal**, 6
September 2008* | Eric Reeves and Mia Farrow   |
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122065894281205691.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

At 6am on the morning of August 25, Kalma camp, home to 90,000 displaced
Darfuris, was surrounded by Sudanese government forces. By 7am, 60 heavily
armed military vehicles had entered the camp, shooting and setting straw
huts ablaze. Terrified civilians—who had previously fled their burning
villages when they were attacked by this same government and its proxy
killers the Janjaweed—hastily armed themselves with sticks, spears and
knives. Of course, these were no match for machine guns and automatic
weapons.

By 9am, the worst of the brutal assault was over. The vehicles rolled out
leaving scores dead and over 100 wounded. Most were women and children.

The early morning attack ensured that no aid workers were present as
witnesses. Doctors Without Borders did manage to negotiate the
transportation of 49 of the most severely wounded to a hospital in the
nearby town of Nyala. But beyond this, aid workers have been blocked from
entering the camp. Military vehicles have now increased in number and
massed around Kalma. They have permitted no humanitarian assistance to
reach the wounded. People already hard hit by recent floods and
deteriorating sanitary conditions have received no food, water or medicine
since Monday. The dead cannot even be buried with the white shrouds
requested by the families of the victims.

How can such brazen cruelty be inflicted upon our fellow human beings? How
is it that a military assault on displaced civilians in a refugee camp
creates barely a ripple in the news cycle? How does such outrageous human
destruction prompt so little outrage? How is it that those who have been
tasked with protecting the world's most vulnerable population have
failed—and failed, and then failed yet again—in their central
responsibility? What does this say about the United Nations and the
powerful member states? How have we come to such a moment?

Such questions can be answered by looking at our response to Darfur's agony
over the past six years. Any honest assessment would be as shocking and
dispiriting as the assault on Kalma itself. The international response to
massive crimes by Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir and his cabal has been
simply this: We accommodate and acquiesce, with the contrived hope that
these tyrants might grow weary of their task, or that paper agreements can
somehow have meaning without a sustained and powerful international
commitment backing them.

The Kalma massacre is a part of Khartoum's larger genocidal campaign. Since
2003, 80 – 90 percent of Darfur's African villages have been destroyed, and
more than 2.5 million survivors have fled to squalid camps across Darfur,
eastern Chad and the Central African Republic. Hundreds of thousands have
died. Khartoum's next goal is to shut down camps in Darfur, and force
people out into the desert where they cannot survive. The homes and fields
that once sustained so many of Darfur's people are ashes now, or they have
new occupants—Arab tribes from Darfur and as far away as Chad, Niger and
Mali.

The message of the Kalma massacre is chillingly clear for Darfuris. But
this assault on civilians in full view of the international community
raises the question of what the massacre says about the rest of us. The
only message we have sent to the Sudanese government is that they can now
attack the camps and the world will watch and do nothing.

[ Ms. Farrow has just returned from her 10th trip to the Darfur region. Mr.
Reeves is author of *A Long Day's Dying: Critical Moments in the Darfur
Genocide* (The Key Publishing House, 2007) ]

Given the total absence of accountability for the countless attacks on IDP
camps, large and small, we should have no doubt that dismantling the camps
is Khartoum’s “end game” in Darfur; indeed, it has long been such.

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/55c345a53dc48.jpeg>

*It is difficult to overstate how threatening the environment will be **for
those forced from camps for the displaced*

Although it received almost no international attention at the time of its
announcement in *September 2010*, the Khartoum regime’s “New Strategy for
Darfur” was—among other things—a blueprint for removing UNAMID, compelling
humanitarian organizations to convert their efforts to “development”
projects—even as relief needs were increasingly compelling—and closing the
camps because of “peace in Darfur” (see *"Accommodating Genocide:
International Response to Khartoum's 'New Strategy for Darfur,'"* *Dissent
Magazine*, October 8, 2010 | http://wp.me/p45rOG-AN/).

The policy of camp closings was even more formally announced by *regime
Second Vice-President Hassabo Mohamed Abdelrahman in December 2015*—a
little over a year and a half ago:

In a speech delivered before the representatives of former rebel groups and
IDPs in El-Fasher, North Darfur on Monday, [Second Vice-President Hassabo
Mohamed Abdelrahman] said *Darfur has "completely recovered from the war *and
is now looking forward to achieve a full peace, stability and development."

"IDP camps represent a significant and unfortunate loss of dignity and
rights of citizens in their country" he said and *called on the displaced
"to choose within no more than a month between resettlement or return to
their original areas."*

He further reiterated his *government’s commitment to take all the measures
and do the needful to achieve this goal, stressing that "the year 2016 will
see the end of displacement in Darfur."* Abdel Rahman told the meeting that
he has just ended a visit to *Karnoi and Tina areas in North Darfur, adding
the two areas which were affected by the conflict have totally recovered.* He
said his visit with a big delegation to the two areas "is a message
sceptics in the fact that *security and stability are back in Darfur"… *(*Sudan
Tribune*, December 28, 2015
<http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article57524> | El Fasher, North
Darfur) *[**emphases added] *
<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/1395166734-e1115.jpg>

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/1395166734-e1115.jpg>

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/1395166734-e1115.jpg>

*Hassabo Mohamed Abdelrahman*

Khartoum will no doubt hold back the worst of the SAF attacks on the camps,
but will continue to sanction militia attacks such as Radio Dabanga has
regularly reported for years. Many of the fires reported in camps are also
certainly the work of militia arsonists, although arson is a notoriously
difficult crime to prove, especially without eyewitnesses or sophisticated
forensic resources of a sort that simply don’t exist in any camp in Darfur.
UNAMID has long proved completely hopeless in investigating camp fires
(along with the massive sexual violence against African girls and women, a
topic that Khartoum has declared off limits; see “*Continuing Mass Rape of
Girls in Darfur: The most heinous crime generates no international
outrage” **| January 2016 |* http://wp.me/p45rOG-1QG/ ; *Arabic*
*translation* of this report | http://wp.me/p45rOG-1Rr
<http://wp.me/p45rOG-1Rr>/].

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/5639463dbb9bf.jpeg>

*Many tens of thousands of African girls and women have been the victims of
sexual violence over the past fourteen years*

Eventually, however, when it judges the moment auspicious—when further
UNAMID deployments out of Darfur have been completed and U.S. sanctions
have been fully and finally lifted—the Khartoum regime will unleash attacks
that will be greater in scale and designed to complete the “dismantling” of
the camps that Vice-President Hassabo Mohamed Abdelrahman spoke of.

And the fate of those displaced from their locations of tenuous security,
and equally tenuous humanitarian relief? They will be abandoned in an
environment marked by extraordinarily levels of ethnically-targeted
violence, by the collapse of a humanitarian operation that depends on the
fixity of camps for the provision of what is still grossly inadequate food,
clean water, sanitation, and medical care. The camp
populations—overwhelmingly, virtually entirely—are from the African tribal
populations of Darfur, and they have seen their farmlands violently seized
by militia forces, some from *Chad*, *Niger*, and *Mali*—Arab militia
forces that Khartoum has paid in kind: military efforts in return for the
land of displaced persons. There are constant reports of the violence that
face African farmers who seek to cultivate or return to their lands;
see | *“Changing
the Demography”:  Violent Expropriation and Destruction of Farmlands in
Darfur,  November 2014 – November 2015" | *http://wp.me/p45rOG-1P4

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/The-annihilation-of-Darfur-High-Resolution.jpg>

The total absence of non-Sudanese news reporting on conditions in Darfur,
Khartoum’s prohibiting of all meaningful human rights reporting, and the
disappearance of UNAMID and its highly limited reporting capacity—all
ensure that the international community will be able to avert its eyes at
the most ghastly moment in fourteen years of genocidal counter-insurgency,
Khartoum’s “final solution” to its “Darfur problem.”
-- 

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>*

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