Urged for August 30 Deadline Janjaweed Camps Still Active

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08-27-2004, 03:35 AM

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Urged for August 30 Deadline Janjaweed Camps Still Active

    Sudan: Janjaweed Camps Still Active
    Sanctions Urged for August 30 Deadline

    (New York, August 27, 2004) — The government of Sudan is permitting
    abusive Janjaweed militia to maintain at least 16 camps in the western
    region of Darfur, Human Rights Watch said today. The U.N. Security
    Council set a deadline of Monday, August 30, for Khartoum to comply with
    its commitments to stop atrocities in Darfur.

    Despite repeated government pledges to neutralize and disarm the
    Janjaweed, Human Rights Watch investigators in West and North Darfur
    were able to gather information on the militias’ extensive network of
    bases. Human Rights Watch said the U.N. Security Council must impose
    sanctions on Sudanese government officials for their failure to disarm
    and neutralize the Janjaweed militia, including those in the militia
    camps.

    The Human Rights Watch mission to investigate recent abuses returned
    from Darfur on August 19.

    “Throughout the time Khartoum was supposedly reining in the Janjaweed,
    these camps have been operating in plain sight,” said Peter
    Takirambudde, executive director of the Africa division of Human Rights
    Watch. “These Janjaweed camps should be immediately investigated by the
    U.N. and the African Union ceasefire monitors, then disbanded.”

    Human Rights Watch said that any militia members found in the camps
    should be investigated for war crimes, crimes against humanity and
    ethnic cleansing.

    Five of the 16 camps, according to witnesses, are camps the Janjaweed
    share with the Sudanese government army. Even more ominous, the Sudanese
    government has incorporated members of the Janjaweed militia and its
    leaders into the police and the Sudanese army, including Islamist
    militia the Popular Defense Forces (PDF), which is under army
    jurisdiction.

    The Sudanese government has disclaimed responsibility for arming the
    Arab nomadic ethnic groups in Darfur to fight against the two largely
    African rebel groups there. Khartoum denies responsibility for the
    actions of these ethnic militias that are known by their victims as
    “Janjaweed.” As Human Rights Watch has documented thoroughly, the
    Sudanese government has armed, recruited and supported the Janjaweed
    militias that have participated with government forces and government
    aircraft in campaigns attacking civilians and villages in Darfur since
    early 2003. These attacks constitute crimes against humanity and “ethnic
    cleansing.”

    Human Rights Watch said the United States and other countries with
    satellite capacity should make available past and present satellite
    photographs of the locations of these Janjaweed camps to confirm their
    existence, and to search for other such militia installations.

    “If the United Nations is serious about seeing the Janjaweed disarmed,
    they’ve got to know where these militias are based,” said Takirambudde.
    “Janjaweed and government forces take over villages they’ve driven
    people out of and from those bases continue their #####ng and killing.”

    Human Rights Watch called on the U.N. Security Council to mandate the
    African Union to protect civilians in Darfur, consistent with the
    African Union Peace and Security Council’s July 27, 2004 Communiqué. The
    African Union has already fielded 100 ceasefire monitors pursuant to a
    ceasefire agreement signed in N’djamena, Chad on April 8 between the
    government and the two rebel groups, the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) and
    the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM).

    Human Rights Watch said that, as a logical part of their duties under
    the ceasefire agreement of April 8, the African Union ceasefire monitors
    should list the names and ranks of all individuals in those camps, and
    catalogue the weapons and other war materiel such as vehicles. This
    should form the basis for verifying that none of the individuals listed
    participates in any government law enforcement or other job in the
    future, and that the weapons are not used again.

    Despite its many pledges to disarm the militia, the government has
    produced no list of Janjaweed militia who have been disarmed or serial
    numbers of confiscated weapons, for verification by the African Union
    ceasefire monitors or others, including U.N. officials.

    Human Rights Watch urged the U.N. Security Council, which on July 30 set
    a deadline of 30 days for the Sudanese government to comply with its
    commitments, to impose sanctions on government officials for failure to
    disarm and neutralize the Janjaweed militias.

    “The existence of these Janjaweed camps shows clearly that Khartoum is
    not at all serious about ending atrocities and providing security,” said
    Takirambudde. “The fact that there are still armed camps filled with
    killers terrorizing civilians in Darfur makes it impossible for people
    to go home.”

    In its Resolution 1556, article 6, the Security Council “demands that
    the Government of Sudan fulfill its commitments to disarm the Janjaweed
    militias and apprehend and bring to justice Janjaweed leaders and their
    associates who have incited and carried out human rights and
    international humanitarian law violations and other atrocities.” (U.N.
    Security Council Resolution 1556, July 30, 2004)

    “Real, targeted sanctions will bring home to Khartoum that the world
    will not let their ethnic cleansing in Darfur stand,” said Takirambudde.

    Human Rights Watch said that the possible sanctions for the Security
    Council to consider include a Security Council arms embargo on sale or
    trade of weapons to the Sudanese government and an embargo on all oil
    transactions with Sudan.

    The Sudanese government promised in four separate agreements outlined
    below in the past four months to “neutralize” and disarm the Janjaweed,
    but the Janjaweed camps described to Human Rights Watch apparently have
    not been touched. All were set up in the last 14 months since the armed
    conflict in Darfur began, the earliest in June 2003.

    The heavily-armed camps, as described by witnesses, include three that
    were allegedly opened as late as July 2004, after the July 3 date when
    Sudanese President Omar El Bashir promised U.N. Secretary-General Kofi
    Annan in a joint communiqué to “immediately start to disarm the
    Janjaweed and other armed outlaw groups.” These camps appear to have
    been established in the wake of the government offensive in South Darfur
    in June that violated the ceasefire agreement of April 8, 2004.

    Several of the Janjaweed bases are located within kilometers of
    internally displaced persons (IDP) camps, such as those at Masry, Kutum
    and Um Sayala in North Darfur, and near Nyala in South Darfur. The
    displaced in government IDP camps have been targeted by Janjaweed and
    government soldiers for further rape, robbery, extortion and killings,
    according to testimonies of displaced persons. Human Rights Watch said
    that measures under discussion for protection of civilians contemplate
    identifying “safe areas,” to be secured by Sudan police forces that
    include members of the Janjaweed militias who may have been responsible
    for crimes against humanity now redeployed to protect the same civilians
    they forcibly and violently displaced. Real protection of civilians can
    only occur when the Janjaweed—believed to number some 20,000— are placed
    under guard instead of being used to guard more than one million
    internally displaced persons in 140 sites registered by the World Food
    Program.

    Human Rights Watch called for restitution for the victims of the
    Janjaweed-Sudanese government attacks and #####ng. A sequential study of
    satellite images should establish movements in and out of the camps of
    vast quantities of stolen property, including furniture, vehicles and
    livestock.

    “The livestock is many Darfurians’ livelihood,” said Takirambudde. “The
    theft and destruction of homes, furniture, vehicles, crops and livestock
    is absolutely devastating.”

    Human Rights Watch said that no militia, army or police force has any
    business possessing, trading or warehousing such goods. All items in
    each Janjaweed camp should be inventoried and preserved under neutral
    control, for eventual return to their rightful owners.

    NAMES AND DETAILS OF JANJAWEED CAMPS IN DARFUR

    Listed below are the 16 camps (camp names are given by victims and
    rebels). Human Rights Watch noted that the list is not exhaustive and
    refers mainly to camps in West and North Darfur.

    Other Janjaweed camps, not in the list below, that have been identified
    include Mistiriyah, the main base for Janjaweed militia leader Musa
    Hilal located outside Kebkabiya town, and new camps that have been
    established over the past three months, including at Saraf Omra in North
    Darfur; Mercoondi in South Darfur; and Um Dukhun, Buram, and Abugradil
    in West Darfur.

    USTANI
    Location: west of Serif Omra (also the location of an IDP camp), near
    Hashaba, on the road between Geneina and Kebkabiya, West Darfur
    Opened: June 2003
    Composition: Janjaweed commanders (very few fighters) and not less than
    200 Sudanese government troops
    Name of Janjaweed commander: Ahmed Jeladi
    Structure: Houses and tents, airstrip for helicopter (only the Sudan
    government has helicopters and aircraft)
    Notable for: First Janjaweed camp opened; Janjaweed headquarters for all
    North Darfur (Darfur was previously divided into North and South Darfur,
    and this headquarters has jurisdiction over the old North Darfur,
    including most of an area that is now West Darfur)

    JEBEL KAYA
    Location: 30 kilometers east of Geneina, between Geneina and Hashaba,
    West Darfur, in the mountains
    Opened: June 2003
    Composition: Janjaweed only, number unknown
    Structure: airstrip for helicopter
    Notable for: Janjaweed headquarters for West Darfur; livestock stolen in
    North and West Darfur kept here. Most Janjaweed camps are provided with
    sheep from this location, and the sheep are sometimes transported by
    helicopter to other camps.

    GIRGIGIRGI
    Location: 85 kilometers northeast of Geneina, West Darfur
    Opened: September 2003
    Composition: Janjaweed only, number unknown (this was the base of the
    now-deceased Janjaweed leader Shurkutallah)
    Structure: old village, civilians driven out

    DAMRA SHEIKH ABDEL BAGUI
    Location: 10 kilometers west of Kutum (location of IDP camp), North
    Darfur
    Opened: November 2003
    Composition: Eighty Janjaweed; unknown number of Sudanese government
    and/or police
    Names of Janjaweed commanders: Omda Adam Abdel Jalli, Jedou Adam Abdel
    Nabi
    Structure: Tents

    MASRY
    Location: 7 kilometers southwest of Kutum (location of IDP camp), North
    Darfur
    Opened: August 2003
    Composition: Janjaweed and Sudanese government army troops, 500
    altogether (majority Janjaweed)
    Names of Janjaweed commanders (three brothers): Abdel Jabar Abdallah
    Gibrin
    Georgi Abdallah Gibrin
    Hassan Abdallah Gibrin
    Structure: Old occupied village
    Equipment: Well equipped, all types of weapons

    MILLA (30 villages)
    Location: 75 kilometers northeast of Kebkabiya, North Darfur
    Composition: Janjaweed only, more than 300
    Name of Janjaweed commander: Abdul Wahid (retired government army
    soldier)
    Structure: occupied villages, civilians (Fur, Tunjur, Zaghawa) driven
    out
    Equipment: six vehicles

    UM SAYALA (Lumlum, Alku, Hilla Khater, El Haj Oulad Babay, Um Hamnoki
    villages) (Um Sayala is the location of an IDP camp)
    Location: 20 kilometers east of Kutum, 5 kilometers west of Um Hiaye,
    North Darfur
    Opened: late 2003
    Composition: Janjaweed and Sudanese government army troops together
    totaling 300
    Names of Janjaweed commanders: Yohanes Abdallah Jadallah (Itefat tribe)

    Illei Ahmed Taher (Jallul tribe)
    Abdelhazim Ibrahim Abdallah Jadallah (Itefat)
    Mohamad Saleh Ibrahim Abdallah
    Structure: occupied villages, civilians (Tunjur, Mima) driven out
    Notable for: More than one hundred villagers reportedly were killed when
    the camp was installed, sixty-nine in Lumlum alone.
    Note: visited by African Union ceasefire monitors on July 11, 2004 (the
    government of
    Sudan complained of an attack on their forces at Um Sayala on July 3,
    but the A.U. ceasefire monitors after investigation concluded that no
    such attack could be verified)

    FUNU
    Location: west of Kutum (location of IDP camp), West Darfur
    Opened: January 2004
    Composition: Janjaweed and Sudanese government army troops (separated by
    a wadi or seasonal riverbed)
    Numbers: The number of Janjaweed varies but never less than 200;
    Sudanese government troops, 300.
    Structures: No tents during the dry season, Janjaweed camp under the
    trees
    Equipment: well equipped, most types of weapons the Sudanese government
    possesses (sometime brought by helicopter)
    Notable for: Stolen livestock kept here

    UM HEGLIG
    Location: northeast of Mellit (east of Kutum; both locations of IDP
    camps), North Darfur
    Opened: January 2004
    Composition: Janjaweed only, number unknown but high rotation

    KUMA
    Location: 60 kilometers east of El Fasher, North Darfur
    Composition: Janjaweed only, number unknown
    Structure: camp installed outside the village of Kuma

    ABU JIDAD
    Location: 60 kilometers south of Karnoi, West Darfur
    Opened: May 2004
    Composition: Janjaweed only, no less than 500
    Structure: Occupied farms (farmers cannot access their houses or fields)

    Equipment: many weapons and five vehicles provided by the Sudanese
    government

    ISHARAYA
    Location: 75 kilometers south of Nyala, 3 kilometers north of Buram,
    South Darfur
    Opened: May 15, 2004
    Composition: Janjaweed only, number unknown
    Structure: occupied farm villages, civilians (Binga, Mima, Kretch, some
    Masalit) driven out
    Equipment: three or four cars and horses

    KURGUE (15 villages), extension of Funu camp
    Location: 85 kilometers west of Kutum, east of Funu camp, West Darfur
    Opened: June 2004
    Composition: Janjaweed only, about 200
    Structure: old occupied villages (well, mosque), civilians (Fur,
    Zaghawa, Tunjur) driven out
    Equipment: well equipped by Sudanese government; trucks, horses, and
    camels

    ASSALAYA
    Location: east of Nyala, 40 kilometers west of Ed Da’ein, 5 kilometers
    north of an Sudanese government army base, South Darfur
    Opened: July 2004
    Composition: Janjaweed and Sudanese government army troops, numbers
    unknown
    Structure: airstrip for helicopter
    Equipment: same as government army troops

    RAZALLAH JAWAZAT
    Location: east of Nyala, 8 kilometers west of Ed Da’ein, South Darfur
    Opened: July 2004
    Composition: Janjaweed only, 200
    Structure: occupied villages, civilians (Borgo, Bergid, Sam Tama, Berti)
    driven out
    Equipment: vehicles, horses, and some camels

    TAISHA
    Location: 17 kilometers east of Nyala (IDP camps in Intifida and Kalma,
    east of Nyala), west of Labadu, South Darfur
    Opened: July 2004
    Composition: Janjaweed only, number unknown
    Structure: occupied villages, civilians (Dayo ethnic group) driven out

    The Sudanese government promised to disarm and neutralize the
    Janjaweed—also referred to as “militias”—in the following agreements:

    1. Agreement on Humanitarian Ceasefire on the Conflict in Darfur, April
    8, 2004

    Article 6: “The parties shall ensure that all armed groups under their
    control comply with this agreement. The Sudanese Government shall commit
    itself to neutralize the armed militias.”

    2. Agreement Between the Government of Sudan, The Sudan Liberation
    Movement, and the Justice and Equality Movement, April 25, 2004

    Article 4 (d): “the Government of Sudan shall ensure that armed militia
    are neutralized and disarmed in the framework of a programme to be
    determined”.

    3. Joint Communiqué between the Government of Sudan and the United
    Nations, July 3, 2004

    Article 3: On Security commits the government of Sudan to “Immediately
    start to disarm the Janjaweed and other armed outlaw groups.”

    4. Darfur Plan of Action signed by the Government of Sudan and the U.N.
    Special Representative of the Secretary-General Jan Pronk, August 6,
    2004

    Article 4: Control and restrain activities by armed militias. “The
    Government of Sudan would identify and declare those militias over whom
    it has influence and instruct them to cease their activities forthwith
    and lay down their weapons”.

    For further information, please contact:

    In New York, Jemera Rone: +1-202-368-5414
    In Amsterdam, Leslie Lefkow: +31-20-486-2881


    The following Human Rights Watch reports are available online:

    “Empty Promises? Continuing Abuses in Darfur Sudan”
    http://hrw.org/backgrounder/africa/sudan/2004/

    “Darfur Documents Confirm Government Policy of Militia Support”
    http://hrw.org/english/docs/2004/07/19/darfur9096.htm

    “Darfur Destroyed”
    http://hrw.org/reports/2004/sudan0504/

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


    --
    Jemera Rone
    Sudan/Uganda researcher, East Africa/Horn coordinator
    Human Rights Watch, 1630 Connecticut Ave NW, # 500, Washington, DC 20009

    202-612-4328; Nicholas Galletti, associate, 202-612-4347; reception
    202-612-4321; fax 202-612-4333
    email: [email protected]
    Darfur page: http://hrw.org/doc?t=africa&c=darfur
    Sudan page: http://www.hrw.org/africa/sudan.php
    Sudan, Oil, and Human Rights: http://www.hrw.org/reports/2003/sudan1103/
                  

08-27-2004, 03:41 AM

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<aelhilayla
تاريخ التسجيل: 02-05-2002
مجموع المشاركات: 5551

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Re: Urged for August 30 Deadline Janjaweed Camps Still Active (Re: Roada)


    Quote:

    Sudan: Janjaweed Camps Still Active
    Sanctions Urged for August 30 Deadline

    (New York, August 27, 2004) — The government of Sudan is permitting
    abusive Janjaweed militia to maintain at least 16 camps in the western
    region of Darfur, Human Rights Watch said today. The U.N. Security
    Council set a deadline of Monday, August 30, for Khartoum to comply with
    its commitments to stop atrocities in Darfur.

    Despite repeated government pledges to neutralize and disarm the
    Janjaweed, Human Rights Watch investigators in West and North Darfur
    were able to gather information on the militias’ extensive network of
    bases. Human Rights Watch said the U.N. Security Council must impose
    sanctions on Sudanese government officials for their failure to disarm
    and neutralize the Janjaweed militia, including those in the militia
    camps.

    The Human Rights Watch mission to investigate recent abuses returned
    from Darfur on August 19.

    “Throughout the time Khartoum was supposedly reining in the Janjaweed,
    these camps have been operating in plain sight,” said Peter
    Takirambudde, executive director of the Africa division of Human Rights
    Watch. “These Janjaweed camps should be immediately investigated by the
    U.N. and the African Union ceasefire monitors, then disbanded.”

    Human Rights Watch said that any militia members found in the camps
    should be investigated for war crimes, crimes against humanity and
    ethnic cleansing.

    Five of the 16 camps, according to witnesses, are camps the Janjaweed
    share with the Sudanese government army. Even more ominous, the Sudanese
    government has incorporated members of the Janjaweed militia and its
    leaders into the police and the Sudanese army, including Islamist
    militia the Popular Defense Forces (PDF), which is under army
    jurisdiction.

    The Sudanese government has disclaimed responsibility for arming the
    Arab nomadic ethnic groups in Darfur to fight against the two largely
    African rebel groups there. Khartoum denies responsibility for the
    actions of these ethnic militias that are known by their victims as
    “Janjaweed.” As Human Rights Watch has documented thoroughly, the
    Sudanese government has armed, recruited and supported the Janjaweed
    militias that have participated with government forces and government
    aircraft in campaigns attacking civilians and villages in Darfur since
    early 2003. These attacks constitute crimes against humanity and “ethnic
    cleansing.”

    Human Rights Watch said the United States and other countries with
    satellite capacity should make available past and present satellite
    photographs of the locations of these Janjaweed camps to confirm their
    existence, and to search for other such militia installations.

    “If the United Nations is serious about seeing the Janjaweed disarmed,
    they’ve got to know where these militias are based,” said Takirambudde.
    “Janjaweed and government forces take over villages they’ve driven
    people out of and from those bases continue their #####ng and killing.”

    Human Rights Watch called on the U.N. Security Council to mandate the
    African Union to protect civilians in Darfur, consistent with the
    African Union Peace and Security Council’s July 27, 2004 Communiqué. The
    African Union has already fielded 100 ceasefire monitors pursuant to a
    ceasefire agreement signed in N’djamena, Chad on April 8 between the
    government and the two rebel groups, the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) and
    the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM).

    Human Rights Watch said that, as a logical part of their duties under
    the ceasefire agreement of April 8, the African Union ceasefire monitors
    should list the names and ranks of all individuals in those camps, and
    catalogue the weapons and other war materiel such as vehicles. This
    should form the basis for verifying that none of the individuals listed
    participates in any government law enforcement or other job in the
    future, and that the weapons are not used again.

    Despite its many pledges to disarm the militia, the government has
    produced no list of Janjaweed militia who have been disarmed or serial
    numbers of confiscated weapons, for verification by the African Union
    ceasefire monitors or others, including U.N. officials.

    Human Rights Watch urged the U.N. Security Council, which on July 30 set
    a deadline of 30 days for the Sudanese government to comply with its
    commitments, to impose sanctions on government officials for failure to
    disarm and neutralize the Janjaweed militias.

    “The existence of these Janjaweed camps shows clearly that Khartoum is
    not at all serious about ending atrocities and providing security,” said
    Takirambudde. “The fact that there are still armed camps filled with
    killers terrorizing civilians in Darfur makes it impossible for people
    to go home.”

    In its Resolution 1556, article 6, the Security Council “demands that
    the Government of Sudan fulfill its commitments to disarm the Janjaweed
    militias and apprehend and bring to justice Janjaweed leaders and their
    associates who have incited and carried out human rights and
    international humanitarian law violations and other atrocities.” (U.N.
    Security Council Resolution 1556, July 30, 2004)

    “Real, targeted sanctions will bring home to Khartoum that the world
    will not let their ethnic cleansing in Darfur stand,” said Takirambudde.

    Human Rights Watch said that the possible sanctions for the Security
    Council to consider include a Security Council arms embargo on sale or
    trade of weapons to the Sudanese government and an embargo on all oil
    transactions with Sudan.

    The Sudanese government promised in four separate agreements outlined
    below in the past four months to “neutralize” and disarm the Janjaweed,
    but the Janjaweed camps described to Human Rights Watch apparently have
    not been touched. All were set up in the last 14 months since the armed
    conflict in Darfur began, the earliest in June 2003.

    The heavily-armed camps, as described by witnesses, include three that
    were allegedly opened as late as July 2004, after the July 3 date when
    Sudanese President Omar El Bashir promised U.N. Secretary-General Kofi
    Annan in a joint communiqué to “immediately start to disarm the
    Janjaweed and other armed outlaw groups.” These camps appear to have
    been established in the wake of the government offensive in South Darfur
    in June that violated the ceasefire agreement of April 8, 2004.

    Several of the Janjaweed bases are located within kilometers of
    internally displaced persons (IDP) camps, such as those at Masry, Kutum
    and Um Sayala in North Darfur, and near Nyala in South Darfur. The
    displaced in government IDP camps have been targeted by Janjaweed and
    government soldiers for further rape, robbery, extortion and killings,
    according to testimonies of displaced persons. Human Rights Watch said
    that measures under discussion for protection of civilians contemplate
    identifying “safe areas,” to be secured by Sudan police forces that
    include members of the Janjaweed militias who may have been responsible
    for crimes against humanity now redeployed to protect the same civilians
    they forcibly and violently displaced. Real protection of civilians can
    only occur when the Janjaweed—believed to number some 20,000— are placed
    under guard instead of being used to guard more than one million
    internally displaced persons in 140 sites registered by the World Food
    Program.

    Human Rights Watch called for restitution for the victims of the
    Janjaweed-Sudanese government attacks and #####ng. A sequential study of
    satellite images should establish movements in and out of the camps of
    vast quantities of stolen property, including furniture, vehicles and
    livestock.

    “The livestock is many Darfurians’ livelihood,” said Takirambudde. “The
    theft and destruction of homes, furniture, vehicles, crops and livestock
    is absolutely devastating.”

    Human Rights Watch said that no militia, army or police force has any
    business possessing, trading or warehousing such goods. All items in
    each Janjaweed camp should be inventoried and preserved under neutral
    control, for eventual return to their rightful owners.

    NAMES AND DETAILS OF JANJAWEED CAMPS IN DARFUR

    Listed below are the 16 camps (camp names are given by victims and
    rebels). Human Rights Watch noted that the list is not exhaustive and
    refers mainly to camps in West and North Darfur.

    Other Janjaweed camps, not in the list below, that have been identified
    include Mistiriyah, the main base for Janjaweed militia leader Musa
    Hilal located outside Kebkabiya town, and new camps that have been
    established over the past three months, including at Saraf Omra in North
    Darfur; Mercoondi in South Darfur; and Um Dukhun, Buram, and Abugradil
    in West Darfur.

    USTANI
    Location: west of Serif Omra (also the location of an IDP camp), near
    Hashaba, on the road between Geneina and Kebkabiya, West Darfur
    Opened: June 2003
    Composition: Janjaweed commanders (very few fighters) and not less than
    200 Sudanese government troops
    Name of Janjaweed commander: Ahmed Jeladi
    Structure: Houses and tents, airstrip for helicopter (only the Sudan
    government has helicopters and aircraft)
    Notable for: First Janjaweed camp opened; Janjaweed headquarters for all
    North Darfur (Darfur was previously divided into North and South Darfur,
    and this headquarters has jurisdiction over the old North Darfur,
    including most of an area that is now West Darfur)

    JEBEL KAYA
    Location: 30 kilometers east of Geneina, between Geneina and Hashaba,
    West Darfur, in the mountains
    Opened: June 2003
    Composition: Janjaweed only, number unknown
    Structure: airstrip for helicopter
    Notable for: Janjaweed headquarters for West Darfur; livestock stolen in
    North and West Darfur kept here. Most Janjaweed camps are provided with
    sheep from this location, and the sheep are sometimes transported by
    helicopter to other camps.

    GIRGIGIRGI
    Location: 85 kilometers northeast of Geneina, West Darfur
    Opened: September 2003
    Composition: Janjaweed only, number unknown (this was the base of the
    now-deceased Janjaweed leader Shurkutallah)
    Structure: old village, civilians driven out

    DAMRA SHEIKH ABDEL BAGUI
    Location: 10 kilometers west of Kutum (location of IDP camp), North
    Darfur
    Opened: November 2003
    Composition: Eighty Janjaweed; unknown number of Sudanese government
    and/or police
    Names of Janjaweed commanders: Omda Adam Abdel Jalli, Jedou Adam Abdel
    Nabi
    Structure: Tents

    MASRY
    Location: 7 kilometers southwest of Kutum (location of IDP camp), North
    Darfur
    Opened: August 2003
    Composition: Janjaweed and Sudanese government army troops, 500
    altogether (majority Janjaweed)
    Names of Janjaweed commanders (three brothers): Abdel Jabar Abdallah
    Gibrin
    Georgi Abdallah Gibrin
    Hassan Abdallah Gibrin
    Structure: Old occupied village
    Equipment: Well equipped, all types of weapons

    MILLA (30 villages)
    Location: 75 kilometers northeast of Kebkabiya, North Darfur
    Composition: Janjaweed only, more than 300
    Name of Janjaweed commander: Abdul Wahid (retired government army
    soldier)
    Structure: occupied villages, civilians (Fur, Tunjur, Zaghawa) driven
    out
    Equipment: six vehicles

    UM SAYALA (Lumlum, Alku, Hilla Khater, El Haj Oulad Babay, Um Hamnoki
    villages) (Um Sayala is the location of an IDP camp)
    Location: 20 kilometers east of Kutum, 5 kilometers west of Um Hiaye,
    North Darfur
    Opened: late 2003
    Composition: Janjaweed and Sudanese government army troops together
    totaling 300
    Names of Janjaweed commanders: Yohanes Abdallah Jadallah (Itefat tribe)

    Illei Ahmed Taher (Jallul tribe)
    Abdelhazim Ibrahim Abdallah Jadallah (Itefat)
    Mohamad Saleh Ibrahim Abdallah
    Structure: occupied villages, civilians (Tunjur, Mima) driven out
    Notable for: More than one hundred villagers reportedly were killed when
    the camp was installed, sixty-nine in Lumlum alone.
    Note: visited by African Union ceasefire monitors on July 11, 2004 (the
    government of
    Sudan complained of an attack on their forces at Um Sayala on July 3,
    but the A.U. ceasefire monitors after investigation concluded that no
    such attack could be verified)

    FUNU
    Location: west of Kutum (location of IDP camp), West Darfur
    Opened: January 2004
    Composition: Janjaweed and Sudanese government army troops (separated by
    a wadi or seasonal riverbed)
    Numbers: The number of Janjaweed varies but never less than 200;
    Sudanese government troops, 300.
    Structures: No tents during the dry season, Janjaweed camp under the
    trees
    Equipment: well equipped, most types of weapons the Sudanese government
    possesses (sometime brought by helicopter)
    Notable for: Stolen livestock kept here

    UM HEGLIG
    Location: northeast of Mellit (east of Kutum; both locations of IDP
    camps), North Darfur
    Opened: January 2004
    Composition: Janjaweed only, number unknown but high rotation

    KUMA
    Location: 60 kilometers east of El Fasher, North Darfur
    Composition: Janjaweed only, number unknown
    Structure: camp installed outside the village of Kuma

    ABU JIDAD
    Location: 60 kilometers south of Karnoi, West Darfur
    Opened: May 2004
    Composition: Janjaweed only, no less than 500
    Structure: Occupied farms (farmers cannot access their houses or fields)

    Equipment: many weapons and five vehicles provided by the Sudanese
    government

    ISHARAYA
    Location: 75 kilometers south of Nyala, 3 kilometers north of Buram,
    South Darfur
    Opened: May 15, 2004
    Composition: Janjaweed only, number unknown
    Structure: occupied farm villages, civilians (Binga, Mima, Kretch, some
    Masalit) driven out
    Equipment: three or four cars and horses

    KURGUE (15 villages), extension of Funu camp
    Location: 85 kilometers west of Kutum, east of Funu camp, West Darfur
    Opened: June 2004
    Composition: Janjaweed only, about 200
    Structure: old occupied villages (well, mosque), civilians (Fur,
    Zaghawa, Tunjur) driven out
    Equipment: well equipped by Sudanese government; trucks, horses, and
    camels

    ASSALAYA
    Location: east of Nyala, 40 kilometers west of Ed Da’ein, 5 kilometers
    north of an Sudanese government army base, South Darfur
    Opened: July 2004
    Composition: Janjaweed and Sudanese government army troops, numbers
    unknown
    Structure: airstrip for helicopter
    Equipment: same as government army troops

    RAZALLAH JAWAZAT
    Location: east of Nyala, 8 kilometers west of Ed Da’ein, South Darfur
    Opened: July 2004
    Composition: Janjaweed only, 200
    Structure: occupied villages, civilians (Borgo, Bergid, Sam Tama, Berti)
    driven out
    Equipment: vehicles, horses, and some camels

    TAISHA
    Location: 17 kilometers east of Nyala (IDP camps in Intifida and Kalma,
    east of Nyala), west of Labadu, South Darfur
    Opened: July 2004
    Composition: Janjaweed only, number unknown
    Structure: occupied villages, civilians (Dayo ethnic group) driven out

    The Sudanese government promised to disarm and neutralize the
    Janjaweed—also referred to as “militias”—in the following agreements:

    1. Agreement on Humanitarian Ceasefire on the Conflict in Darfur, April
    8, 2004

    Article 6: “The parties shall ensure that all armed groups under their
    control comply with this agreement. The Sudanese Government shall commit
    itself to neutralize the armed militias.”

    2. Agreement Between the Government of Sudan, The Sudan Liberation
    Movement, and the Justice and Equality Movement, April 25, 2004

    Article 4 (d): “the Government of Sudan shall ensure that armed militia
    are neutralized and disarmed in the framework of a programme to be
    determined”.

    3. Joint Communiqué between the Government of Sudan and the United
    Nations, July 3, 2004

    Article 3: On Security commits the government of Sudan to “Immediately
    start to disarm the Janjaweed and other armed outlaw groups.”

    4. Darfur Plan of Action signed by the Government of Sudan and the U.N.
    Special Representative of the Secretary-General Jan Pronk, August 6,
    2004

    Article 4: Control and restrain activities by armed militias. “The
    Government of Sudan would identify and declare those militias over whom
    it has influence and instruct them to cease their activities forthwith
    and lay down their weapons”.

    For further information, please contact:

    In New York, Jemera Rone: +1-202-368-5414
    In Amsterdam, Leslie Lefkow: +31-20-486-2881


    The following Human Rights Watch reports are available online:

    “Empty Promises? Continuing Abuses in Darfur Sudan”
    http://hrw.org/backgrounder/africa/sudan/2004/

    “Darfur Documents Confirm Government Policy of Militia Support”
    http://hrw.org/english/docs/2004/07/19/darfur9096.htm

    “Darfur Destroyed”
    http://hrw.org/reports/2004/sudan0504/

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


    --
    Jemera Rone
    Sudan/Uganda researcher, East Africa/Horn coordinator
    Human Rights Watch, 1630 Connecticut Ave NW, # 500, Washington, DC 20009

    202-612-4328; Nicholas Galletti, associate, 202-612-4347; reception
    202-612-4321; fax 202-612-4333
    email: [email protected]
    Darfur page: http://hrw.org/doc?t=africa&c=darfur
    Sudan page: http://www.hrw.org/africa/sudan.php
    Sudan, Oil, and Human Rights: http://www.hrw.org/reports/2003/sudan1103/[/QUOTE]







    To be translated for the general benefit
    Later

                      


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