Sudan: International community must act now to stop the war

May 4, 2023
Issue 
Hoyam Abbas
Inset: Hoyam Abbas. Background photo: sudancoup.com

Fighting broke out in Sudan's capital, Khartoum, between the Sudanese Armed Forces and a powerful paramilitary faction, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), on April 15. Clashes quickly spread across the country.

As at the time of writing, more than 550 people have been killed, more than 4000 injured and more than 100,000 displaced.

I spoke with Hoyam Abbas from the United Sudanese Revolutionary Forces Abroad on April 29 about the crisis in Sudan.

Abbas explained that the war has its origins in the fact that the previous Islamist regime under the dictator Omar al Bashir created the militias that are now fighting the military for power and control of resources in Sudan. 鈥淣owhere in the world does a country have two militaries and not one government.鈥

Abbas said there are more than 87 militias across Sudan, 鈥渂ut the biggest one is the Rapid Support Forces鈥, also known as the Janjaweed聽鈥 a tribal militia led by Muhammad Hamdan Dagalo, also known as Hemeti.

鈥淚t was created by [Abdel Fattah Abdelrahman] al-Burhan, who is in the government right now, as the President. He created those militias who are now coming back at him,鈥 she said.

Both the military and the RSF are to play major roles in the country, under a law that would integrate the RSF into Sudan鈥檚 armed forces.

Abbas stressed that the current situation in Sudan is not a civil war.

鈥淚 would call it a resources war ... There is another player outside this circle, outside of Sudan and they are looking for resources in Sudan, involved or interfering in the policies of Sudan and playing secret games that are not clear to everyone.鈥 For example, people are asking how and from where the factions are getting their weapons, Abbas said.

It is becoming clearer through media coverage that the big powers are behind this, Abbas said. The United States and Russia are still playing a big role in North East Africa and trying to get access to Sudan鈥檚 resources through indirect means, she explained.

Sudan is also very important from a geostrategic point of view. 鈥淪udan is surrounded by eight countries. Sudan has a port in the Red Sea and all the trade comes through this point.

鈥淪o it is very complicated.鈥

Attempts by the US to influence the situation in Sudan are 鈥渧ery clear鈥 Abbas said. 鈥淰olker [Perthes, Head of the United Nations Integrated Transition Assistance Mission in Sudan] has tried to step in. IGAD [the Intergovernmental Authority on Development] has tried to step in, and Sudan鈥檚 neighbouring countries like Saudi Arabia and Egypt have tried to step in and make an agreement,鈥 but there is a lot going on 鈥渦nder the table鈥.

Abbas said there were some early warning signs of conflict as the two coup factions manoeuvred for leadership in the negotiations.

鈥淲e noticed six months ago, that Hamdan started making some strange moves, because a lot of soldiers came into Khartoum and at Marawi military airport there were forces there. This was a red flag,鈥 Abbas said. People started asking what the military were doing and why there were so many troop movements.

At the time, both sides announced that things were peaceful and there was nothing to worry about, Abbas said. 鈥淪uddenly people woke up to bombing 鈥 without any warning.鈥

The outbreak of war is anathema to the peaceful, non-violent struggle of the pro-democracy forces. 鈥淧eople back home have been protesting on the street, they want to go for democracy 鈥 and they are working very hard, but nobody holds a gun,鈥 Abbas said.

Now, men, women and children are being shot in the streets and the people are surrounded by war and desperately trying to escape the violence.

鈥淓ven before the war started, we didn鈥檛 have enough resources. We don鈥檛 have clean water, enough electricity 鈥 enough medicine or food,鈥 Abbas said. 鈥80% of the people live below the poverty line. Day by day they don鈥檛 have any savings, any food.鈥

Sudan is facing a humanitarian disaster. Hospitals have been bombed and power outages mean there is no access to electricity. People are drinking river water to survive, raising the risk of disease. 鈥淥rphanages are calling for help because they can鈥檛 feed the babies,鈥 Abbas said.

鈥淭here are dead bodies all around 鈥 They kill people and leave them on the streets.鈥

World Health Organization (WHO) Director General Tedros Ghebreyesus briefed the media on April 26, and said that in Khartoum, 61% of health facilities are closed, and only 16% are 鈥渙perating above their usual capacity鈥.

鈥淢any patients with chronic diseases, such as kidney disease, diabetes and cancer, cannot access healthcare facilities or medicines they need.

鈥淚n the coming weeks, an estimated 24,000 women will give birth, but they are currently unable to access maternal care.鈥

Programs to prevent the transmission of dengue fever and malaria have also stopped. Power outages are also threatening blood supplies and 50,000 children are in real danger of starvation and malnutrition.

Militia members are forcing people out of their homes, robbing people at gunpoint, robbing factories and even freeing criminals from Khartoum鈥檚 prisons, Abbas told me. The militia, which are aligned with the former al Bashir dictatorship, are trying to create an unsafe and lawless environment. On the other side, the Sudanese military should be protecting the people, but aren鈥檛. 鈥淏urhan and Hemeti are in hiding. No one has heard from them,鈥 said Abbas.

There have been calls for safe corridors to be opened to enable people to escape the fighting, but these depend on a ceasefire being negotiated and for it to hold long enough for people to travel safely.

On the border, the situation is very uncertain, Abbas said. To the north, people can only cross the border into Egypt if they have an entry visa. To the south, the South Sudanese government has said it will open the borders, but it is very hard to cross at this point, unless you have family over the border or carry a South Sudanese passport.

In the east, people are seeking to leave via the Red Sea port, which is relatively safe from bombing so far, but it takes seven hours to drive there from Khartoum, Abbas said. The road is unsafe and criminals and gangsters are robbing and shooting people on the road.

To the west the situation is terrible because of the war still raging there, Abbas said.

Egyptian officials are delaying Sudanese from crossing over into Egypt on the pretext that there may be 鈥渢errorists鈥 hiding among the refugees and they need to undergo security screening, Abbas said. 鈥淲hen you go north to Egypt, it takes four days to cross the border. They leave people waiting in the desert, without food and water, without anything. And that area is full of scorpions.鈥 This is despite a longstanding agreement between Egypt and Sudan that anyone holding a Sudanese passport has a right of entry into Egypt.

People being evacuated by air have also come under fire, Abbas said. Aid coming into the country has also been blocked by the militia.

Sudanese have taken to social media to share information with each other about safe roads to travel on and to support each other. Abbas told GL that the grassroots forces are trying to organise support and aid in the hospitals and on the streets, but they don鈥檛 have enough resources.

鈥淪udanese people live together in social solidarity and they are very cooperative with each other,鈥 Abbas said. 鈥淚f you don鈥檛 have food they will share their food with you. If you don鈥檛 have shelter, people will open their doors, spontaneously. Even if they don鈥檛 know you.

鈥淏ut unfortunately the grassroots forces don鈥檛 have support, don鈥檛 have money. We cannot send money back home. The banking system is shut down. There is no electricity.

鈥淧eople are looking for cash. But if you hold cash, it is dangerous, because you may get robbed and killed for it.

鈥淧eople donate blood as much as they can but there is no water to drink.

鈥淭he Resistance Committees, which are new grassroots organisations, don鈥檛 have enough resources to support people on the ground,鈥 Abbas said. 鈥淭hey share everything but they do not have enough medicine to give people. They cannot provide electricity or transportation 鈥 We have heard unverified reports that people are paying up to US$80 for a gallon of gasoline.鈥

For the diaspora, this means that funds being raised to help the Sudanese people cannot reach them because of the banking collapse.

In terms of immediate demands on the international community, Abbas said the priority is taking action to stop this war and allow aid into Sudan: food, water and medication. To organise food drops, if necessary.

Abbas said the international community can do a lot. 鈥淭hey evacuated people from Ukraine and supported the Ukrainian people 鈥 why not do this for Sudan?

鈥淎ustralian people could provide aid, and open doors for people evacuating from Sudan.鈥

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