---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Eric Reeves" <[email protected]>
Date: Aug 30, 2017 21:36
Subject: The Trump Administration Prepares the Way for Lifting Sanctions on
Sudan
To: "Eric Reeves" <[email protected]>
Cc:

*The Trump Administration Prepares the Way for Lifting Sanctions on Sudan*

Eric Reeves   |   August 30, 2017   |  http://wp.me/p45rOG-25Y

The Trump administration—staffed by fools and arrogant blowhards, and
without a functioning *Africa Bureau* at the *State Department*, or
even an *Assistant
Secretary of State for African Affairs*—gives clear evidence of preparing
the way for a permanent lifting of U.S. economic sanctions on the genocidal
regime in Khartoum, even as that regime continues to deny in highly
consequential ways humanitarian assistance to more than two million people
in Sudan. This figure includes refugees from *Darfur* in *eastern
Chad*), *South
Kordofan* (primarily in *South Sudan*, and *Blue Nile* (primarily in
*Ethiopia*); the number is much larger if we include *Eastern Sudan*, where
the regime has proved relentless in expelling or excluding international
humanitarian organizations—see *Appendix A*). The *UN’s Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs* indicates that well over two million
Sudanese suffer from *“Acute Malnutrition”*; figures from *UNICEF* for
children under five suggest a malnutrition crisis much, much larger (see |
“An Internal UNICEF Malnutrition Report on Sudan and Darfur: Why have these
data been withheld?” | September 5, 2014 |  http://wp.me/p45rOG-1pL/).

The latest evidence of a determination to lift sanctions comes in the form
of an *August 28, 2017 *statement from Khartoum by* Mark Green*,
Administrator for the US Agency for International Development (USAID):
<http://reliefweb.int/report/sudan/usaid-administrator-mark-greens-remarks-following-his-meeting-north-darfur-state>

In particular, we are hoping to see progress on humanitarian access right
here in North Darfur. We are at a critical point in Sudan. There is still a
need for life-saving humanitarian assistance, and *we hope to see a
successful resolution to the conflicts in Darfur and the Two Areas.*

Today, I will be also visiting internally displaced people, people to whom
USAID and its partners are giving critical assistance. I want to
underscore—*America
will not walk away from our commitment to humanitarian assistance*, and we
will always stand with people everywhere when a disaster or humanitarian
crisis strikes, for that is who we are as Americans.

Pious, unctuous words in defending the indefensible decision that is now
impending.

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/595fc8a735ba6.jpg>

*Some of those from whom the U.S. is indeed "walking away from our
commitment to humanitarian assistance"*

What was *not* said by Administrator Green:

Green made no mention of the *vast cholera epidemic* sweeping Sudan, now
for over a year. Indeed, his USAID cannot bring itself to use the word
“cholera,” but rather follows fecklessly the *UN’s World Health
Organization* and *Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs*—referring
to the cholera pandemic as cases of “acute watery diarrhea—this in
deference to Khartoum’s insistence that Sudan not be stigmatized by the
presence of cholera. No matter that cholera rages in neighboring *Yemen*
 and *South Sudan *and all evidence to date points clearly to a cholera
epidemic: the U.S. is content to defer to this brutal regime’s
sensibilities.

Failure by the UN and USAID to speak honestly about *cholera in Sudan *(
*#Cholera_In_Sudan*) makes impossible an adequate international response,
including massive supplies of re-hydration equipment; physicians who
specialize in infectious diseases, particularly cholera; specialists in
cholera epidemiology; and a broad public education program.

More than 3 million people in Darfur who are in urgent need of humanitarian
aid
<http://reliefweb.int/report/sudan/sudan-humanitarian-bulletin-issue-18-31-july-13-august-2017-enar>;
yet according to one highly knowledgeable person from the humanitarian
community working in Darfur, with a great deal of experience on the ground,
as many as *1 million of these people *are still denied humanitarian access
by the *National Islamic Front/National Congress Party regime*. This is why
we see constant reports such as the following:

*The cholera infection rates are rapidly increasing in East Jebel
Marra in South Darfur. Last week, more than 300 new patients were recorded
in the locality. Dozens of them died.*

*“The situation definitely requires intervention by the World Health
Organisation (WHO), and other humanitarian organisations,”* he said. “Since
the outbreak of cholera in the locality on August 22, the number of
infections reached 316. Dozens of them died.” Abusharati said that there
are no humanitarian organisations or doctors operating in the area. *“There
are health assistants providing first aid in the areas of Sabi, Rokona,
Deribat, Lebei, and Duwa only.”  *(Radio Dabanga, August 28, 2017
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/dozens-die-of-cholera-in-darfur-s-east-jebel-marra-within-a-week>
|
EAST JEBEL MARRA / KASS / NIERTETI / KALMA)

We may be sure that in his tightly controlled visit and extremely brief
visit to North Darfur, Green saw none of this.

Green, during his *Military Intelligence*-overseen trip to Darfur, saw *Zamzam
camp in North Darfur*, the largest in the state. One wonders whether he has
read the various statements by the Khartoum regime about its plans to
dismantle such camps, with extraordinarily threatening and destructive
consequences. *Second Vice-President Hassabo Mohamed Abdelrahman in
December 2015*—a little over a year and a half ago—gave voice to the
regime’s views:

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)

When *UNAMID* is finished with its current round of deployments, and the
U.S. under the callous and ignorant Trump administration has permanently
lifted sanctions, we may be sure that Hassabo’s plans will be put into
action—often violently.

[ See *Assaults on Camps for the Displaced in Darfur: History Makes Clear
They Will Increase, *August 27, 2017 | http://wp.me/p45rOG-25W/ ]

L
<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/Screen-Shot-2017-05-11-at-1.32.23-PM-1.png>

*Life in the camps is already one of deprivation, suffering, and danger;
closing them, as Khartoum plans to do, will put these innocent civilians at
extraordinary risk, from many causes*

Again, Green’s exceedingly brief “show the flag” mission was to make the
decision to lift economic sanctions on the Khartoum regime somehow more
palatable—and to second the words of the ignorant and duplicitous* U.S.
Charge d’Affaires in Khartoum, Steven Koutsis.*

[ See | “*U.S. Charge d’Affaires in Khartoum Steven Koutsis: Dishonest,
Tendentious, Misleading” | **Sudan Tribune* | June 28, 2017 |
http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article62859/ ].

It will, of course, do nothing to alleviate the suffering of those who
continue to suffer under the Khartoum-imposed humanitarian embargo on areas
in South Kordofan and Blue Nile controlled by the *Sudan People’s
Liberation Movement/Army-North*, where people—especially children—are dying
from starvation.

The following email from *Dr. Tom Catena of the Mother of Mercy Hospital
near Kauda* in the Nuba Mountains came to me on August 18, 2017:

The food shortages here are very severe.  We're now in the usual “hunger
gap” period which goes from late June through end of August every year. We
usually gauge the level of food shortages by when the village women show up
at the hospital gates asking to work in exchange for food. Normally the
women start coming in June and are gone by the end of August.  This year,
we're had large numbers of women lining up at the hospital gates starting
in February and there are still large numbers there every day.

Our hospital matron has been working hard trying to find work for them in
exchange for a couple malwas of sorghum.  Even our staff have run out of
food and buying enough in the market is not feasible given the high cost of
the food there.  We are doing our best to take care of as many as
possible.  We arranged to buy a quantity of sorghum from a market several
hours from here in order to help our staff who were out of food. The number
of malnutrition cases on our pediatric ward is way up this year.  We
normally have 8 to 10 malnourished children at any one time whereas now we
have 25 or so on the wards.  God knows how many are in the villages and not
coming for evaluation…

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/sudan-may-2012-20004.jpg>

*Children are starving in the Nuba Mountains because Khartoum refuses to
allow food deliveries by international humanitarian organizations; this is
a crime against humanity (see http://wp.me/p45rOG-I6
<http://wp.me/p45rOG-I6>/)*

Khartoum refuses to negotiate in good faith the delivery of food to these
people and has refused for over six years. Green’s statement declares
vaguely that “we hope to see a successful resolution to the conflicts in
*Darfur* and the *Two Areas*.” But it is clear that there is no will to
confront Khartoum over its continuation of a humanitarian embargo used as a
weapon of war against the SPLM/A-North, no matter how many civilians die as
a consequence. That this clear and fundamental fact is glossed over by
Green should remind us of the closing days of the Obama administration,
when then *UN Ambassador Samantha Power* declared—falsely—that there had
been a “sea change” of improvement of humanitarian access in Sudan.
<http://sudanreeves.org/2017/01/14/the-final-betrayal-of-sudan-obama-administrations-lifting-of-economic-sanctions-un-ambassador-samantha-power-justifying-the-move-claiming-a-sea-change-of-improve/>
*The Realities of Humanitarian Access in Sudan*

To argue as the Obama and Trump administrations have in working to defend a
lifting of U.S. economic sanctions on Sudan entails ignoring not only the
ghastly realities created by the six-year humanitarian embargo directed
against the people of *South Kordofan* and *Blue Nile *states, but the
all-too regular reports from Darfur on humanitarian shortcomings that are
typically a result of restrictions of one sort or another imposed by
Khartoum:

*• Malnutrition cases increasing among Darfur IDPs: official | **Sudan
Tribune* | July 14, 2017 (NYALA) http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?
article62990

*A growing number of children and elderly are malnourished at Darfur camps
for the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) due to the reduction of food
rations provided by the World Food Programme (WFP), said IDPs official*. In
its weekly bulletin on 24 June, the U.N Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said a recent survey conducted by the UN
Children’s Fund (UNICEF) found critical levels of acute malnutrition in
Jebel Marra…

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/cholera-zim.jpg>

*Suffering from cholera*

*• Cholera update: Displaced people in Darfur especially vulnerable | *Radio
Dabanga | July 13, 2017 | DARFUR / SOUTH KORDOFAN / EL GENEINA / TOKAR |
https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/cholera-update-displaced-
people-in-darfur-especially-vulnerable

*On Monday six people died at Kabkabiya hospital in North Darfur of
cholera, while on Tuesday the isolation centre reported 18 new cases of the
disease, bringing the total number of hospitalised cases to 28. More deaths
and infections have been reported from across Sudan.* The Coordinator of
Kabkabiya camps told Radio Dabanga that four of the dead were displaced
persons residing at El Salam, Midan El Kheil and Hay El Salam camps, while
the other two were residing in the western and northern areas of Kabkabiya.

*He pointed out that there is only one medical assistant for all infection
cases in the hospital. He said the local authorities have not responded to
their repeated demands to spray the camp and specify the health centre for
cases of cholera*.

*• Woman dies giving birth, care lacking in Jebel Marra | *Radio Dabanga |
July 14, 2017 | DERIBAT | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/woman-dies-giving-birth-care-lacking-in-jebel-marra

*A woman died in labour in a village near Deribat in East Jebel Marra on
Wednesday.* *There was no adequate medical care or an ambulance available.* The
woman died in Talba, north of Deribat, in the most mountainous area of
Darfur. One of her relatives told Radio Dabanga that there was no adequate
medical care, or an ambulance to transport her to El Fasher*. “There has
been a lack of health facilities in Jebel Marra recently. This causes an
increase in the mortality rates of pregnant women and women in labour in
this area,” he said.*

*Medical sources reported that health services are “entirely absent” in
large parts of East Jebel Marra, while the government of South Darfur
continues to deny medics access to the area. *In 2015, the federal Ministry
of Health in* South Darfur reported it has the highest maternal mortality
rate in Sudan
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/highest-maternal-mortality-rate-of-sudan-in-south-darfur>,*
without
the government being able to reduce the figures.

*• Darfur’s East Jebel Marra devoid of health services, 30 die of cholera
| *Radio Dabanga | July 10, 2017 | DARFUR / NORTH KORDOFAN / EASTERN SUDAN
| https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/
darfur-s-east-jebel-marra-devoid-of-health-services-30-die-of-cholera

*Medical sources in South Darfur reported that more than 30 people died of
cholera and at least 50 others have been infected in East Jebel Marra
locality during the first week of July.* The disease has spread to Liba,
Jasu, Fugouli, Rakona, Dolda, Sawani, Duwo, and Fina, they said*.*

*The sources confirmed that health services are “entirely absent” in large
parts of East Jebel Marra, while the government of South Darfur continues
to deny medics access to the area. *They called on the federal health
authorities, the international community, especially the World Health
Organisation, to act to allow health actors access to the locality to save
the lives of people.

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/5883a9e508b4f.jpg>

*The cholera baterium (Vibrio cholerae) is readily identified in a
laboratory; the UN's WHO refuses to do so with fecal samples from Sudan*

*• Cholera update: Nine die in West Darfur camp | *Radio Dabanga | July 7,
2017 | MURNEI / SHEARIA / KABKABIYA / SENNAR | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/cholera-update-nine-people-die-in-west-darfur-camp

*East Darfur*

One person died of cholera and four others were infected at Khazan Jadeed
area in Shearia, East Darfur, on Wednesday. Omda Jaafar told Radio Dabanga
that the medical isolation centre has seen eight patients die from cholera
since the disease broke out in the area on 6 June. He said that so far
there had been 102 cases of cholera. 88 people recovered from the disease.
Fourteen are still being treated. *“I am concerned about the increase in
the number of cases because of the residents' dependence on drinking water,
which is unsafe.”*

*[Sanitation and provision of clean water have been critical tasks on the
part of** international humanitarian organizations—when they have
access—ER]*

[See also |

*#Cholera_In_Sudan: An important dispatch from Radio Dabanga gives some
sense of what is now exploding in Darfur | *August 22, 2017 |
http://wp.me/p45rOG-25S/]

*Rewarding Policies that Starve Children in the Nuba Mountains of South
Kordofan | **Sudan Tribune* | August 22, 2017  | http://www.sudantribune.
com/spip.php?article6328 <http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article63285>

The *U.S. intelligence community*, and its lust for whatever
“counter-terrorism” intelligence the Khartoum regime is putatively able to
provide, defines U.S. Sudan policy under the Trump administration, as it
did for the entirety of the *Obama administration *and most of the
*administration
of George W. Bush*. And the U.S. intelligence community—largely but not
entirely invisibly—simply doesn’t care about children starving to death in
the *Nuba Mountains*, or the continuing rape of girls and women in Darfur
<http://sudanreeves.org/2017/03/07/continuing-mass-rape-of-girls-in-darfur-the-most-heinous-crime-generates-no-international-outrage-january-2016/>,
or the costs of allowing the deadly silence concerning *cholera* to
continue. It does not care that the Khartoum regime is a vast kleptocracy
<http://sudanreeves.org/2015/12/09/7041/>, forcing on the people of Sudan
policies that have put the economy in an irreversible spiral downward. This
economic decline is of little matter to the men in power, so long as they
control the national budget, in which over half of national resources are
devoted to the military and security services.

In the eyes of the U.S. intelligence community—and *European
countries* desperate
to stem the flow of African migrants to the European continent—the Khartoum
regime will remain in power for the foreseeable future. That this
calculation may be wrong—that economic distress has brought the Sudanese
people to the point of insurrection—doesn’t concern the U.S. intelligence
community: it is collectively confident that some *modus vivendi* can be
fashioned with whatever political arrangement succeeds the *NIF/NCP*.
Perhaps it will be costly, but the costs can be absorbed by the huge budget
now commanded by the intelligence community, directly and indirectly.

Very few in the Congress have had the courage and insight displayed years
ago by then *Senator Russ Feingold*, as he saw U.S. Sudan policy from his
position as chair of the Africa subcommittee of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee and a member of the Intelligence Committee. In the
intervening years, Feingold’s words have proved continually accurate and
prescient:

"I take serious issue with the way the report [on international terrorism
by the U.S. State Department] overstates the level of cooperation in our
counterterrorism relationship with Sudan, a nation which the U.S.
classifies as a state sponsor of terrorism. *A more accurate assessment is
important not only for effectively countering terrorism in the region, but
as part of a review of our overall policy toward Sudan, including U.S.
pressure to address the ongoing crisis in Darfur and maintain the fragile
peace between the North and the South."* (emphasis added)  *(Statement by
Senator Russell Feingold,
<http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/Sudan/story?id=7649377&page=1> Chair of the
Africa Subcommittee of the Senate Foreign Relations, **May 1, 2009**)*

No Senate contest in the *November 2016 elections* was more dispiriting or
consequential for Sudan than the defeat of Feingold in his bid to reclaim
his Senate seat from Wisconsin.
[
<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/GettyImages-106463732.jpg>

*Former Senator Russ Feingold*
Appendix A:

Reporting on humanitarian conditions in Eastern Sudan is almost
non-existent, aside from reporting by *Sudan Tribune* and Radio Dabanga
about water shortages and the spread of cholera. There is an explanation.

In *May of 2012* the regime expelled, without meaningful explanation, seven
international humanitarian organizations working in eastern Sudan, one of
the poorest and most severely marginalized of all the regions in Sudan.  *Sudan
Tribune *reported at the time:

*Sudan’s Humanitarian Aid Commission (HAC) [Suleiman Abdel Rahman] has
ordered seven foreign aid groups to suspend their humanitarian activities
in eastern Sudan following the findings of an assessment study reporting
infractions they allegedly committed.* [The decision ended] the
humanitarian activities of the seven aid groups in the three states of
Eastern Sudan region: Kassala; Red Sea and Gadaref states.  [The seven
organizations are] *Accord, Goal, Triangle, Save the Children, Plan Sudan,
Malo, a British demining group, and a Japanese aid group*.  [The charge was
that] the groups exceeded their license and roles.

We were able to get a chilling sense of Khartoum's attitude toward foreign
humanitarian assistance from words of *Nafie Ali Nafie* earlier that month,
also from *Sudan Tribune:*

Earlier in May [2014], addressing a rally organised in Port Sudan to
provide support to the Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) Sudanese presidential
assistant *Nafie Ali Nafie denounced calls for the return of NGOs to South
Kordofan and described them [as] "trumpeters of conspiracy." "Those who
covet that foreign aid groups [secure] a foothold in the East (Sudan) …
should know there is no place for them," he further said.*

This absurd propaganda—part of a long-term campaign to demonize
international aid organizations as fronts for spies, Zionist infiltrators,
and self-enriching opportunists—was designed to cover the regime's real
motives, which include a primary desire that there be as few foreign eyes
on the ground in Sudan as possible bearing witness to gross negligence and
the most egregious violations of international law.  There was also a
desire to punish and weaken the people of eastern Sudan for their support
of the South during the long civil war.

This is what lay behind the subsequent and further suspension of
humanitarian activities in eastern Sudan, in this case a UN jobs and
assistance project ("UN aid programmes suspended in east Sudan," Agence
France-Presse [Khartoum], March 26, 2014):

The programme's beneficiaries are among 6.1 million people—18% of the
population—needing humanitarian assistance in Sudan.

-- 

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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