July 29, 2004

NEVER AGAIN?:

'We Want to Make a Light Baby': Arab Militiamen in Sudan Said to Use Rape as Weapon of Ethnic Cleansing (Emily Wax, June 30, 2004, Washington Post)

At first light on Sunday, three young women walked into a scrubby field just outside their refugee camp in West Darfur. They had gone out to collect straw for their family's donkeys. They recalled thinking that the Arab militiamen who were attacking African tribes at night would still be asleep. But six men grabbed them, yelling Arabic slurs such as "zurga" and "abid," meaning "black" and "slave." Then the men raped them, beat them and left them on the ground, they said.

"They grabbed my donkey and my straw and said, 'Black girl, you are too dark. You are like a dog. We want to make a light baby,' " said Sawela Suliman, 22, showing slashes from where a whip had struck her thighs as her father held up a police and health report with details of the attack. "They said, 'You get out of this area and leave the child when it's made.' "

Suliman's father, a tall, proud man dressed in a flowing white robe, cried as she described the rape. It was not an isolated incident, according to human rights officials and aid workers in this region of western Sudan, where 1.2 million Africans have been driven from their lands by government-backed Arab militias, tribal fighters known as Janjaweed.

Interviews with two dozen women at camps, schools and health centers in two provincial capitals in Darfur yielded consistent reports that the Janjaweed were carrying out waves of attacks targeting African women. The victims and others said the rapes seemed to be a systematic campaign to humiliate the women, their husbands and fathers, and to weaken tribal ethnic lines. In Sudan, as in many Arab cultures, a child's ethnicity is attached to the ethnicity of the father.

"The pattern is so clear because they are doing it in such a massive way and always saying the same thing," said an international aid worker who is involved in health care. She and other international aid officials spoke on condition of anonymity, saying they feared reprisals or delays of permits that might hamper their operations.

She showed a list of victims from Rokero, a town outside of Jebel Marra in central Darfur where 400 women said they were raped by the Janjaweed. "It's systematic," the aid worker said. "Everyone knows how the father carries the lineage in the culture. They want more Arab babies to take the land. The scary thing is that I don't think we realize the extent of how widespread this is yet."

Another international aid worker, a high-ranking official, said: "These rapes are built on tribal tensions and orchestrated to create a dynamic where the African tribal groups are destroyed. It's hard to believe that they tell them they want to make Arab babies, but it's true. It's systematic, and these cases are what made me believe that it is part of ethnic cleansing and that they are doing it in a massive way."

Secretary of State Colin L. Powell flew to the capital, Khartoum, on Tuesday to pressure the government to take steps to ease the humanitarian crisis in Darfur. U.S. officials said Powell may threaten to seek action by the United Nations if the Sudanese government blocks aid and continues supporting the Janjaweed. U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan is due to arrive on Khartoum this week.

The crisis in Darfur is a result of long-simmering ethnic tensions between nomadic cattle and camel herders, who view themselves as Arabs, and the more sedentary farmers, who see their ancestry as African. In February 2003, activists from three of Darfur's African tribes started a rebellion against the government, which is dominated by an Arab elite.

Riding on horseback and camel, the Janjaweed, many of them teenagers or young adults, burned villages, stole and destroyed grain supplies and animals and raped women, according to refugees and U.N. and human rights investigators. The government used helicopter gunships and aging Russian planes to bomb the area, the U.N. and human rights representatives said. The U.S. government has said it is investigating the killings of an estimated 30,000 people in Darfur and the displacement of the more than 1 million people from their tribal lands to determine whether the violence should be classified as genocide.

The New York-based organization Human Rights Watch said in a June 22 report that it investigated "the use of rape by both Janjaweed and Sudanese soldiers against women from the three African ethnic groups targeted in the 'ethnic cleansing' campaign in Darfur." It added, "The rapes are often accompanied by dehumanizing epithets, stressing the ethnic nature of the joint government-Janjaweed campaign. The rapists use the terms 'slaves' and 'black slaves' to refer to the women, who are mostly from the Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa ethnic groups."


Intolerable.

MORE:
African Union ready to send peacekeepers to Darfur (Sydney Morning Herald, July 30, 2004)

The prospect of foreign troops being sent to Darfur has moved closer after the African Union announced it was planning to send peacekeepers to Sudan.

But the Khartoum regime rejected outside military presence and vowed it would fight if it was attacked.

The African Union, a regional grouping of the continent's 53 countries, has broken with the tradition of solidarity between African governments by criticising human rights abuses in Darfur, where up to 1 million people have been displaced and about 50,000 killed.

Its observer team has already documented numerous atrocities, including the burning alive of villagers by Arab gunmen from the Janjaweed militia.

But the African Union's Peace and Security Council went further on Wednesday by asking the organisation's chairman to prepare a "comprehensive plan" that would "enhance the effectiveness" of its mission in Darfur.

"This includes the possibility of turning the mission into a full-fledged peacekeeping mission, with the requisite mandate and size," an official statement added.

The statement also brings the deployment of Western troops closer. African armies are poorly equipped and would almost certainly need foreign assistance.


-Crisis in Sudan (Ed O'Keefe and Jeffrey Marcus, July 1, 2004, washingtonpost.com)

Posted by Orrin Judd at July 29, 2004 2:59 PM
Comments

If the US military "indiscriminately" killed 30,000 Janjaweed in the next week, then there would truly be a new world order. And it would make the bungholes everywhere think twice about this sort of madness. But would the left defend the rapists?

Posted by: jim hamlen at July 29, 2004 3:26 PM

Pity we couldn't send in Canada's JTF 2 or any branch of your Special Forces and send a message.

Posted by: Steve Martinovich at July 29, 2004 4:06 PM

Not quite intolerable.

Even we are prepared to tolerate it for another month.

And after that, another, and then another.

You'll see.

Posted by: Harry Eagar at July 29, 2004 9:30 PM

He doesn't have the cojones to invade Iraq either.

Posted by: oj at July 30, 2004 12:25 AM

I would fear for the people of Darfur if the African Union were to go in. For example, over 30% of the South African police and armed forces have HIV. I doubt if many others of the Union's forces are much better off.

Posted by: genecis at July 30, 2004 10:08 AM

As the line goes, "some folks just need killin'."

Posted by: ratbert at July 30, 2004 12:25 PM

He used up all his infantry there.

If he'd had the cojones for it, he wouldn't have sent pantywaist Powell to plead, 'Pretty, pretty please, let my UN inspectors in. We only want five.'

The Sudanese, like the Chinese, have tested Bush and found him out.

Posted by: Harry Eagar at July 30, 2004 3:31 PM

Then why are the Chinese so steamed about US naval maneuvers near them ?
If Bush is such a wimp, and all...

Posted by: Michael Herdegen at July 30, 2004 7:44 PM

Because FDR might come back and teach them what's what.

Posted by: oj at July 30, 2004 7:48 PM

They've always been steamed about US maneuvers, going back to the '50s.

They faced Bush down as soon as he took office. They know he won't do anything to bother them.

Posted by: Harry Eagar at July 31, 2004 3:01 PM
« BE NOT AFRAID: | Main | CHIRP: »