Sudan: Massive Atrocities in Darfur (HRW Release)

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04-03-2004, 00:39 AM

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Sudan: Massive Atrocities in Darfur (HRW Release)



    Sudan: Massive Atrocities in Darfur
    Almost One Million Civilians Forcibly Displaced in Government’s
    Scorched-Earth Campaign

    (New York, April2 ,2004 ) — The Sudanese government is complicit in
    crimes against humanity committed by government-backed militias in
    Darfur, Human Rights Watch said today in a new report. In a
    scorched-earth campaign, government forces and Arab militias are
    killing, raping and #####ng African civilians that share the same
    ethnicities as rebel forces in this western region of Sudan.

    The report, “Darfur in Flames: Atrocities in Western Sudan,” describes a
    government strategy of forced displacement targeting civilians of the
    non-Arab ethnic communities from which the two main rebel groups—the
    Sudan Liberation Movement/Army (SLM/A) and the Justice and Equality
    Movement (JEM)—are mainly drawn. Human Rights Watch found that the
    military is indiscriminately bombing civilians, while both government
    forces and militias are systematically destroying villages and
    conducting brutal raids against the Fur, Masaalit and Zaghawa ethnic
    groups.

    “The Sudanese military and government-backed militias are committing
    massive human rights violations daily in the western region of Darfur,”
    said Georgette Gagnon, deputy director for the Africa division of Human
    Rights Watch. “The government’s campaign of terror has already forcibly
    displaced one million innocent civilians, and the numbers are increasing
    by the day.”

    Human Rights Watch called on the government of Sudan to immediately
    disarm and disband the militias, and allow international humanitarian
    groups access to provide relief to the displaced persons.

    The government has recruited and armed over20 , 000militiamen of Arab
    descent and operates jointly with these militias, known as “janjaweed,”
    in attacks on civilians from the Fur, Masaalit, and Zaghawa ethnic
    groups. In the past year, nearly one million civilians have fled their
    rural villages. Most are displaced into towns and camps where they
    continue to be murdered, raped and looted by the militias.

    Although Arab and African communities in Darfur for decades have
    intermittently clashed over land and scarce resources, the current
    conflict began 14 months ago when two new rebel groups emerged. The
    Sudan Liberation Movement/Army (SLM/A) and the Justice and Equality
    Movement (JEM) demanded that the Sudanese government stop arming the
    Arab groups in Darfur and address longstanding grievances over
    underdevelopment in the region.

    In response, the government launched a massive bombing campaign which,
    combined with the raids of the marauding militias, have forced more than
    800, 000people from their homes and sent an additional110 , 000people
    into neighboring Chad.

    In a scorched-earth campaign, government forces and militias have killed
    several thousand Fur, Zaghawa and Masaalit civilians, routinely raped
    women and girls, abducted children, and looted tens of thousands of head
    of cattle and other property. In many areas of Darfur, they have
    deliberately burned hundreds of villages and destroyed water sources and
    other infrastructure, making it much harder for the former residents to
    return.


    “The militias are not only killing individuals, they are decimating the
    livelihoods of tens of thousands of families,” Gagnon said. “The people
    being targeted are the farmers of the region, and unless these abuses
    are stopped and people receive humanitarian relief, we could see famine
    in a few months’ time.”

    U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan should request the Office of the High
    Commissioner on Human Rights to immediately dispatch a mission of
    inquiry to investigate the situation in Darfur, Human Rights Watch said.
    The mission should report back to the U.N. Commission on Human Rights,
    currently meeting in Geneva, before the end of its session on April23 .
    Human Rights Watch urged the U.N. Commission on Human Rights to adopt a
    resolution—under item9 —to appoint a special rapporteur for human rights
    in Sudan.

    The report describes how government forces allow the janjaweed to
    operate with full impunity. Government forces fail to protect civilians
    even when these unarmed people have appealed to the military and police
    forces, warning that their villages were about to be attacked.
    Government forces and janjaweed have also obstructed the flight of
    civilians escaping to Chad.

    “The Khartoum government has tried to repress this rebellion with
    lightning speed in hope that the international community wouldn’t have
    time to mobilize and press the government to halt its devastation of
    Darfur,” added Gagnon, “But the Sudanese government will still have to
    answer for crimes against humanity that cannot be ignored.”

    The Sudan peace talks in Kenya convened by the Inter-Governmental
    Authority on Development (IGAD), an intergovernmental body of East
    African countries, are limited to the two main parties to the20 -year
    conflict in Southern Sudan. The peace talks do not include Darfur or the
    Darfurian rebels. Taking advantage of the internationally regulated
    ceasefire in the south, the Sudanese government has shifted its attack
    helicopters and other heavy weapons, purchased with oil revenue from the
    south, to the western region of Darfur.

    The government’s indiscriminate bombing, scorched-earth military
    campaign, and denial of access to humanitarian assistance in Darfur
    reflects the same deadly strategy employed in the south, with yet more
    rapid dislocation and devastation than witnessed or experienced there.

    “Darfur in Flames: Atrocities in Western Sudan” is available at:
    http://hrw.org/reports/2004/sudan0404/








                  


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