An edited version of this was published in todays i newspaper. See link below:
https://inews.co.uk/opinion/united-nations-must-investigate-chemical-weapon-charges-sudan/
The first genocide this century is underway in Darfur. Despite it being acknowledged as such a decade ago, it continues – unfettered by UN intervention.
https://inews.co.uk/opinion/united-nations-must-investigate-chemical-weapon-charges-sudan/
The first genocide this century is underway in Darfur. Despite it being acknowledged as such a decade ago, it continues – unfettered by UN intervention.
An Amnesty International
report published today presents overwhelming evidence that the Government of
Sudan, emboldened by international indifference, is using chemical weapons on
its own civilians. The report, which makes for harrowing reading, documents
interviews with 184
survivors. It
seems that the Khartoum regime is primarily targeting Fur civilians, living in
the Jebel Marra region, not rebel forces. These attacks include the aerial
bombardment of villages, ground assaults on civilians and the frequent use of
chemical weapons that have killed more than 250 people, perhaps many more.
The Jebel
Marra region in Darfur has been under siege by Sudanese government militias
since mid-January. Some 34,000 people were displaced in the first 10 days
alone. Since the genocide
began 13 years ago, 4 million people have been displaced. Forced from their
villages into camps, they are now dependent on aid, meagre though it is, for
survival.
Amnesty reports that as many as 250,000
people have been displaced in the region with a death toll thought to be many
thousands. Rapes and violent attacks are rampant.
That the Sudanese government is now
allegedly using chemical weapons should come as no surprise to UN officials. Here’s
why.
Firstly, the
minutes of a meeting with senior Sudanese officials, including President
Bashir, were leaked to renowned US Sudan expert, Eric Reeves, last year. One
official was reported as saying, "We shall expel UNAMID from Darfur…We shall
make it hell for them”. This would pave the way to forcibly repatriate IDPs [international
displaced persons] so that “the job can
be finished off”. The document contained an alarming reference to
"dirty" chemical weapons. One of the officials allegedly said, “We have started to transport radioactive
materials containers to Jabel Um-Ali, with the aim of using them to make bombs
and missiles for aerial bombardment and artillery shelling".
But aerial
bombardments never stopped (the UN no-fly zones were never actually
implemented). They abated for a short time when satellite images captured
evidence of bombed villages and mass graves. Aid agencies were expelled so that
starvation and mass rape were increasingly deployed as preferred weapons of
war. With most of the rebels now deployed to protect territories in the South
and the world’s media focused on Syria, Khartoum has once again intensified its
genocidal campaign in Darfur.
Secondly,
this is not the first time Khartoum has been accused of using chemical weapons
against civilians. In 1999 Medicine Sans Frontiers (MSF)
raised concerns when the villages of Lainya and Loka were bombed with chemical
weapons. The UN
took samples, the results of which were never disclosed. MSF expressed concern
at the non-disclosure and the fact that the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW)
was not asked to investigate the alleged use of chemical weapons. Although the
OPCW has the powers, in order to act, it requires an official request from
another party state. None was forthcoming.
Having failed to act on
the warning flagged in the recent leaked minutes, the UN must not allow
Khartoum to evade the OPCW scrutiny that should be triggered now in light of
Amnesty’s revelations.
Instead of leading the
charge, the British envoy to Sudan, Christopher Trott, was shamefully silent
today. Having visited Sudan last week, Trott’s trip notes make no mention of
the Darfur genocide. The obsequious language seeks to legitimise what is a
known genocidal regime, whose president is wanted in The Hague for crimes
against humanity and genocide.
British and UN officials,
whose lack of resolve is as reprehensible as it is irrefutable, are being
outplayed by the barbaric Bashir, who interprets their silence as tacit
approval. There are two decisive actions that the UK could, and should, take in
response to Amnesty’s revelations.
Firstly, request an immediate,
unfettered investigation by the OPCW, ensuring that the findings are publicly
disclosed. Secondly, sustaining a genocidal campaign is expensive. Sudan has
accrued a $46 billion debt which it can’t repay, much of which is held by Paris
Club creditors, one of whom is the UK. As Foreign minister, Boris Johnson could
work with European colleagues to terminate talks of debt relief until attacks
on civilians stop, aid is allowed through and threats of repatriation are
removed.
Beleaguered Darfuri civilians have been failed by successive British and
US leaders. Promises of “never again” long abandoned to political expediency. For
every broken promise there are countless broken bodies, And still we bury our heads in the[oil rich] sand.
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