Peace mission in Sudan’s Darfur ends, stoking fears of new clashes

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NYALA, Sudan, Jan 1, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – The United Nations and African Union
on Thursday ended a 13-year mission to keep the peace in the vast Sudanese
region of Darfur, even as recent violent clashes leave residents fearful of
renewed fighting.

Fighting erupted in Darfur in 2003, when ethnic minority rebels rose up
against the Arab-dominated government in Khartoum, which responded by
recruiting and arming notorious Arab-dominated militia known as the
Janjaweed.

A total of 300,000 people were killed and 2.5 million displaced, according
to the United Nations.

“The peacekeeping mission ended on Thursday December 31 at midnight in
Darfur,” UNAMID’s spokesman Ashraf Eissa said.

“As of 1 January 2021, UNAMID’s troops and police personnel will focus on
providing security for the mission’s drawdown activities, personnel, and
assets.”

He said the phased withdrawal of the mission’s approximately 8,000 armed
and civilian personnel will be completed inside six months.

The Sudanese government “will take over responsibility for the protection
of civilians in the area,” UNAMID said.

Darfur’s bitter conflict has largely subsided in recent years and longtime
autocrat Omar al-Bashir — wanted by the International Criminal Court for
genocide and other alleged crimes in the western region — was deposed last
year.

But the country’s transitional government is fragile, and ethnic and tribal
clashes still periodically flare, including clashes last week that left at
least 15 people dead and dozens wounded.

Darfuris, many of whom remain in camps years after they fled their homes,
have held protests in recent weeks against the mission’s imminent departure.

“The lives of Darfuri people are at stake, and the United Nations should
reconsider its decision,” Mohamed Abdelrahman told AFP on Wednesday at Kalma
camp in Nyala, the capital of South Darfur.

He is among hundreds who staged a sit-in outside the mission’s headquarters
at the camp.

– ‘Big trouble’ ahead –

Protesters held up banners reading: “We trust UN protection for IDPs
(internally displaced people),” and “we reject UNAMID’s exit.”

Longtime Kalma resident Othman Abulkassem fears the troops’ departure
signals “big trouble” for Darfuris, leaving them at risk of further violence.

UNAMID spokesman Ashraf Eissa sought to allay those fears.

“We understand the concerns of the Darfuri population especially IDPs and
other vulnerable groups, but the situation has improved a great deal over the
past few years,” Eissa told AFP.

“The responsibility now lies with the transitional government and the
Sudanese people themselves to enhance peace and security in Darfur.”

A UN political mission — the United Nations Integrated Transition
Assistance Mission in Sudan (UNITAMS) — will be installed in Darfur after
UNAMID’s departure.

It will be tasked with assisting Sudan’s transition, peace-building, and
aid disbursement.

Following last week’s clashes, Sudanese authorities said government troops
will be deployed to the region to contain any violence.

On Thursday, acting foreign minister Omar Qamareddine said UNAMID
“contributed to acheiving peace.”

“It’s true that its tenure was marred by some obstacles but it was,
overall, good,” the minister told a Khartoum press conference, adding that
the deployment of government troops across the region will be completed by
March.

But many are sceptical.

“If the protection of internally displaced people is assigned to the
government forces, it will be like handing Darfuris to the forces that
committed massacres and rape against them,” said 25-year-old Darfuri Intisar
Abdelhay.

Thousands of Janjaweed militiamen were incorporated into Sudan’s powerful
paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, whose head Mohamed Hamdan Daglo is a key
figure in the transitional government.

The Janjaweed stand accused by human rights groups of carrying out
widespread killings and rapes as part of a broader campaign of “ethnic
cleasing” in the early years of the conflict.

– ‘No peace yet’ –

Bashir was deposed by the army in April last year following unprecedented
mass protests against his iron-fisted rule.

In August 2019, the military rulers who ousted him agreed a precarious
power sharing transition with civilians.

The transition government has pushed to build peace with rebel groups in
all three of Sudan’s main conflict zones, including Darfur.

But two rebel groups refused to join the deal, including the Sudan
Liberation Movement (SLM) faction led by Abdelwahid Nour, which is believed
to maintain considerable support in Darfur.

Clashes still flare in the region over land and access to water, mainly
pitting nomadic Arab pastoralists against settled farmers from non-Arab
ethnic groups.

“There is not yet full and comprehensive peace in Sudan,” said Kalma
resident Mohamed Hassan.

“And until there is, we are against the end of the UNAMID mission.”