africA
- DARFUR Arabs MOVE into Darfur to take land
'cleansed' by janjaweed *
By Steve Bloomfield, Africa Correspondent Published: 14
July 2007
Independent Newspapers
Arabs from Chad and Niger are crossing into Darfur in
"unprecedented" numbers, prompting claims that
the Sudanese government is trying systematically to
repopulate the war- ravaged region.
An internal UN report, obtained by The Independent, shows
that up to 30,000 Arabs have crossed the border in the
past two months. Most arrived with all their belongings
and large flocks. They were greeted by Sudanese Arabs who
took them to empty villages cleared by government and
janjaweed forces. One UN official said the process
"appeared to have been well planned". The
official continued: "This movement is very large. We
have not seen such numbers come into west Darfur
before."
The UN refugee agency, UNHCR, sent a team to the border
with Chad at the end of May to interview the new
arrivals. Fighting in eastern Chad has been steadily
increasing and it was thought that many could be
refugees. But only a very small number have required
support from UNHCR. "Most have been relocated by
Sudanese Arabs to former villages of IDPs (internally
displaced people) and more or less invited to stay
there," said the UN official. The arrivals have been
issued with official Sudanese identity cards and awarded
citizenship, and analysts say that by encouraging Arabs
from Chad, Niger and other parts of Sudan to move to
Darfur the Sudanese government is making it
"virtually impossible" for displaced people to
return home. James Smith, chief executive of the Aegis
Trust, said the revelations proved that the Sudanese
government was "cynically trying to change the
demographics of the whole region", adding: "If
the ethnic cleansing has been consolidated because the
land has been repopulated it will become irreversible.
The peace process will fall to pieces."
Repopulation has also been happening in south Darfur
where Arabs from elsewhere in Sudan have been allowed to
move into villages that were once home to local tribes.
Aid agency workers said the Arabs were presented as
"returning IDPs". Before the conflict started
in 2003, Darfur was home to seven million people, mainly
from three African tribes, Fur, Marsalit and Zargahwa.
Darfur literally translates as "Land of the
Fur". But some 2.5 million have now been forced to
flee their homes after attacks by Sudanese troops and
planes, and Arab militia on horseback known as janjaweed.
Most are now in camps around Darfur's main towns, relying
on handouts from international aid agencies. About
250,000 have become refugees in Chad. A further 1.5
million have been affected by the conflict, meaning at
least four million people are now reliant on the 80 or so
international aid agencies in the region.
More than 200,000 people are believed to have been killed
so far during the four-and-a-half-year conflict. And if
Khartoum is moving Arabs from abroad to replace them,
diplomats fear that Darfur rebels may try to remove them
forcibly. "It could be quite explosive," said
one western diplomat. "It is a very serious
situation." Nomadic Arab tribes have been crossing
the border between Chad and Sudan for centuries, long
before lines were drawn on a map. It is normal for tribes
to follow the rains from west to east and back again,
searching for fertile grazing land for their cattle.
Straight lines carve out the northern borders of the five
countries which spread across the Sahel, taking no notice
of traditional tribal links and nomadic routes. In
Mauritania and Sudan, both countries long ruled by Arabs,
black African tribes have suffered most.
In Mali, Niger and Chad, the Arab and Tuareg nomads have
been suppressed. Towards the end of last year, Niger
announced that it planned forcibly to remove more than
150,000 Arab nomads into Chad. Many of the Arabs, known
as Mahamid, moved from Chad in the 1970s after a serious
drought. Although the government later rescinded the
order, it is thought that many decided to return to Chad
voluntarily. Apart from the 30,000 Arabs from Chad and
Niger cited in the UNHCR report there have been
consistent rumours that a further 45,000 Arabs from Niger
have also crossed over.
For most nomads citizenship means very little; the lines
that separate the countries of the Sahel have not created
a sense of nationality. But for the Khartoum regime it
could be pivotal. Elections are to be held in two years,
the first since President Omar al-Bashir seized power in
a coup in 1989. Although opinion polling is not very
advanced, it is thought that no party is likely to win an
overall majority. By providing citizenship for the new
arrivals, one Khartoum-based diplomat said, President
Bashir could be hoping to bolster his election chances.
For the Arabs who have crossed into Darfur there are both
push and pull factors. Drought in parts of northern
Africa has forced nomads to look further afield for
fertile land. Although the spread of desert is rapidly
reducing the amount of land available for farmers and
nomads in Darfur, much of the area cleared by the
janjaweed and government forces is fertile.
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