-Caveat Lector-

The European-Sudanese Public Affairs Council
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Date of Publication: March 2001



THE REALITY OF "SLAVE REDEMPTION" IN SUDAN


Civil war has raged in Sudan off and on between the Sudanese government
and rebels in southern Sudan since 1955. After a ten year period of
peace the conflict reignited in1983, and the war in the south has been
fought since then by the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA). (1)
Since the mid-1990s several organisations and anti-Sudanese activists
have claimed that as a consequence of this war there is a flourishing
"slave trade" in Sudan in which the Sudanese government and its northern
forces raid southern villages and "enslave" Dinka tribesmen, women and
children.  Groups such as Christian Solidarity International (CSI) and
British activists such as Baroness Cox claim that the people involved in
the "slave trade" are governments forces including northern Arab "slave
traders" and "militiamen". These groups and activists then further
allege that in the course of visits to parts of southern Sudan they have
engaged in "slave redemptions" whereby southern Sudanese tribesmen,
women and children are supposedly "bought back" from northern Sudanese
tribesmen said to have abducted them.  These groups claim to have
"bought" back or "redeemed" thousands of slaves, often several hundred
at a time, from Arab traders. (2)

There is a considerable body of independent opinion that finds these
claims deeply questionable. It should perhaps firstly be noted that the
claims made by Baroness Cox and CSI have long been criticised by human
rights organisations and activists. Amongst these have been the United
Nations and its agencies such as UNICEF. (3) The respected human rights
expert, and Sudan specialist, Alex de Waal, while co-director of the
human rights group African Rights, has also said of the claims made by
Baroness Cox that:

"(O)vereager or misinformed human rights advocates in Europe and the US
have played upon lazy assumptions to raise public outrage. Christian
Solidarity International, for instance, claims that "Government troops
and Government-backed Arab militias regularly raid black African
communities for slaves and other forms of booty". The organization
repeatedly uses the term "slave raids", implying that taking captives is
the aim of government policy. This despite the fact that there is no
evidence for centrally-organized, government-directed slave raiding or
slave trade." (4)

De Waal further observed:

"the issue is a slippery one: slavery slides off into issues such as
hostage taking. The difference between a hostage and a slave is
important. It shows how Sudanese history must be seen in its local
context, and how it is a mistake to impose stereotypes from elsewhere.
It also points to solutions: intertribal negotiations rather than
indiscriminate 'buying back' - which runs the risk of inflating the
ransom beyond what families can afford and, even worse, creating an
incentive for further raiding and abductions." (5)

Peter Verney, the author of an official 1997 Anti-Slavery International
report on allegations of Sudanese slavery, has also commented on
allegations of government involvement in slavery:

"[T]he charge that government troops engage in raids for the purpose of
seizing slaves is not backed by the evidence." (6)

The claims made by CSI and Baroness Cox have also clearly been of
concern to groups such as Anti-Slavery International, the world's oldest
human rights organisation. In a submission to the United Nations
Commission on Human Rights in Geneva, Anti-Slavery International
publicly stated:

"There is a danger that wrangling over slavery can distract us from
abuses which are actually part of government policy - which we do not
believe slavery to be. Unless accurately reported, the issue can become
a tool for indiscriminate and wholly undeserved prejudice against Arabs
and Muslims. [WE] ARE WORRIED THAT SOME MEDIA REPORTS OF "SLAVE
MARKETS", STOCKED BY ARAB SLAVE TRADERS - WHICH [WE] CONSIDER DISTORT
REALITY - FUEL SUCH PREJUDICE." (7)  (emphasis added)

The judgement of some of those most vocal in allegations of "slavery"
and "slave redemption" in Sudan has been called into question. As a
general view on Baroness Cox's reliability on Sudan, it is worth nothing
that in Andrew Boyd's sympathetic biography of her, 'Baroness Cox: A
Voice for the Voiceless', Dr Christopher Besse of Medical Emergency
Relief International (Merlin), a humanitarian aid organisation with
which Cox is closely associated (Dr Besse and Baroness Cox are both
trustees of Merlin), is quoted as saying:

"She's not the most popular person in Sudan among the humanitarian aid
people. She has her enemies, and some of them feel she is not well-
enough informed. She recognizes a bit of the picture, but not all that's
going on." (8)

For someone who is even said by her friends to only recognise "a bit of
the picture, but not all that's going on" to be making the sort of
claims she has on Sudan is regrettable. The Times newspaper was perhaps
somewhat unkinder when in reviewing her activities in Sudan it stated
that "Cox means well but looks ever so slightly unhinged". (9)

It is not just Baroness Cox's judgement that has been called into
question. The veteran southern Sudanese politician Bona Malwal directly
challenged claims made by Baroness Cox to have "redeemed slaves". In a
letter to her Malwal stated that:

"On at least three different occasions, you have come into Twic County
without the permission of the local leadership, using Messrs Stephen
Wondu and Martin Okeruk [SPLA officials] as your license to do so. You
then say each time that your mission was to redeem slaves and that
indeed you have done so, when in each instance this had not been the
case. The latest episode was in October [1999] when you landed at Mayen
Abun without even the courtesy of informing the local area
representative....

I know that you have put out for propaganda, and maybe for fundraising
purposes as well, that you redeemed slaves at Mayen Abun in October when
nothing of the sort happened. I sincerely hope that this type of game
stops...I sincerely hope that you do see the harm that could be caused
and that you will refrain from this activity in the future. " (10)

Malwal's standing within the southern Sudanese community is
unassailable. Malwal is the publisher of the 'Sudan Democratic Gazette'.
He is a former Minister of Information and Culture and was the editor of
the 'Sudan Times', the largest English-language newspaper in Sudan
before 1989. He went into exile when the present government in Sudan
came to power a decade ago, and teaches international affairs at Oxford
University. Baroness Cox has herself previously described him as "one of
the well-respected elders of the Dinka tribe". (11) The implications of
Bona Malwal's letter to Baroness Cox are clear and it is for the reader
to draw his or her own conclusions.


"SLAVE REDEMPTION" CHALLENGED BY INDEPENDENT SOURCES

With regard to the specific issue of "slave redemption", one of the few
neutral sources against which the claims made by Christian Solidarity
International and Baroness Cox can be assessed is the report by the
Canadian government's special envoy to Sudan, John Harker, into human
rights abuses in Sudan. The Harker report, 'Human Security in Sudan: The
Report of a Canadian Assessment Mission', was commissioned by the
Canadian government and published in February 2000. One of the two
missions with which John Harker was tasked was to:

"independently investigate human rights violations, specifically in
reference to allegations of slavery and slavery-like practices in
Sudan." (12)

While Harker was critical of many human rights abuses in Sudan, he
clearly questioned claims of large scale redemption. He specifically
touched on the credibility of claims of large-scale "slave redemption"
made by Christian Solidarity International:

"[R]eports, especially from CSI, about very large numbers were
questioned, and frankly not accepted. Mention was also made to us of
evidence that the SPLA were involved in "recycling" abductees...

"Serious anti-abduction activists...cannot relate the claimed
redemptions to what they know of the reality. For example we were told
that it would be hard not to notice how passive these "slave" children
are when they are liberated or to realize how implausible it is to
gather together so many people from so many locations so quickly - and
there were always just the right number to match redemption funds
available!"

The Harker Report also detailed how fraudulent "slave redemptions" were
being used to raise money for the SPLA, money which he stated is used to
purchase arms and ammunition:

"Several informants reported various scenarios involving staged
redemptions. In some cases, SPLM officials are allegedly involved in
arranging these exchanges, dressing up as Arab slave traders, with
profits being used to support the SPLM/A, buy weapons and ammunition..."

The Harker Report documented the deliberately fraudulent nature of many
"slave redemptions":

"Sometimes a "redeeming group" may be innocently misled, but other
groups may be actively committed to fundraising for the SPLM/A &
deliberately use "slave redemption" as a successful tactic for
attracting Western donors.

"We did speak with an eyewitness who can confirm observing a staged
redemption and this testimony conformed with other reports we had from a
variety of credible sources. The "redeeming group" knew they were buying
back children who had not been abducted or enslaved. The exchange was
conducted in the presence of armed SPLA guards. The "Arab" middle
man/trader delivering the children for "redemption" was recognized as a
member of the local community even though he was dressed up in
traditional Arab costume for the event."  (13)

Evidence of staged "slave redemptions" had started to emerge several
months earlier. In a July 1999 article entitled 'The False Promise of
Slave Redemption', published by 'The Atlantic Monthly', American
journalist Richard Miniter provided unambiguous first hand evidence that
there was fraud and corruption in the process of "slave redemption" in
Sudan. (14)  He had visited southern Sudan accompanied in the company of
James Jacobson, the president of Christian Freedom International to
investigate the "redemption" process. Jacobson, a former Reagan
Administration official, had previously served as Christian Solidarity
International's Washington representative. In 1998, the American branch
of Christian Solidarity International USA went its own way as Christian
Freedom International, with Jacobson at its head. He was an enthusiastic
supporter of "slave redemption" until he actually visited southern Sudan
to see the "slave redemption" situation for himself. Jacobson
subsequently publicly disowned "slave redemption" because the financial
incentives involved encouraged both the taking of captives as well as
fraud and corruption.


CLEAR SPLA INVOLVEMENT IN "SLAVE REDEMPTION" FRAUD

Miniter and Jacobson made contact with the "Sudanese Relief and
Rehabilitation Association" (SRRA), an arm of the SPLA.  Miniter's
article unambiguously documented the involvement of what he terms
"middle level" SPLA/SRRA officials in fraudulently presenting "slaves"
to visiting Western would-be "redeemers".

The following is a direct quote from Miniter's article:

Quote:

"I witnessed an attempted slave redemption that was unquestionably
problematic during a recent visit to Nyamlell, a large settlement about
fifty miles south of the Bahr al Arab river, in southern Sudan. Nyamlell
has been the location of many slave redemptions covered by the U.S.
media. The night before my visit officials from the local branch of the
Sudanese Relief and Rehabilitation Association in Lokichokio, Kenya,
asked for a meeting with James Jacobson, who had been hoping to redeem
the slaves in Nyamlell. After half an hour of small talk the officials
got down to business. "How much money are you bringing for slave
redemption?"

"Four thousand dollars," Jacobson said.

"Ah, that is very helpful. There are forty slave children to be
redeemed."

"Forty children? That would be a hundred dollars each. Don't other
groups pay fifty dollars each?"

"No. Everyone pays a hundred."

"What about Christian Solidarity International?"

"Ah, they are different. They buy in much larger quantities."...

"Jacobson exchanged no money, but two mid-level SRRA officials insisted
on accompanying him and me to Nyamlell. When we landed on the dirt
runway, a local commissioner named Alev Akechak Jok met our plane. He
refused to make eye contact with the SRRA officials, and was adamant
about meeting privately with Jacobson and me...The commissioner offered
tea and an admission: "There are no slaves here for you to
buy."....Hadn't the SRRA radioed his village the previous day and
learned that there were forty children to be freed? He shook his head
no.

"As we returned to the airstrip, the SRRA officials rejoined us. One
said that he had just found a trader and ten children to be redeemed.
Jok suddenly became angry and pulled me aside: the officials could not
hear us over the whirling propeller. "You must leave now!" he demanded.
Are the children slaves? I asked. "No," he said, "they are the children
of the village." Jok has since been removed from his post, probably in
retaliation for his honesty."

Unquote.

The simple fact that Alev Akechak Jok was punished for his actions would
clearly indicate continuing SPLA involvement in this fraud, a fraud
which has obvious propaganda and financial advantages to the rebels.
Miniter also documented a further way SPLA officials are involved in
fraud with regard to "slave redemption":

"Corrupt officials set themselves up as bankers and insist that
redeemers exchange their dollars for Sudanese pounds, a nearly worthless
currency...The officials arrange by radio to have some villages play
slaves and some play slave-sellers, and when the redeemers arrive, the
Sudanese pounds are used to free the slaves. When the redeemers are
gone, the pounds are turned back over to the corrupt officials, who hand
out a few dollars in return. Most of the dollars stay with the
officials, who now also have the Sudanese pounds with which to play
banker again."

This is not the first time that an American journalist has questioned
SPLA involvement in the whole issue of "slavery" and "slavery
redemption". William Finnegan, in his article 'The Invisible War', which
appeared in 'The New Yorker' in January 1999, tells of having himself
come across a "slave trader" at Nyamlell similar to the one spoken of by
Miniter:

"To me, perhaps the most disturbing aspect of the mystery surrounding
Nyamlell's slaver rescuer was his relationship with the S.P.L.A. If he
was in fact a double-dealer, running a nefarious business, could the
local rebels be in league with his operation? They certainly seemed to
endorse his work." (15)

That the SPLA/SRRA officials have a clear propaganda or financial
interest in presenting these Western visitors with "slaves" to be bought
back is clear. Yet it is the SPLA that continues to "facilitate" the
"slave redemptions" for groups such as Christian Solidarity and people
such as Baroness Cox.

Several points should be made with regard to the SPLA and these
activists. Firstly, Baroness Cox is an unabashed political supporter of
the SPLA, eager to assist their cause, and there is no doubt that the
allegations of "slavery" in Sudan advances the SPLA's propaganda
campaign against the Khartoum government. Secondly, one should place on
record the SPLA's capacity to deceive. Dr Peter Nyaba, a SPLA national
executive council member, has described the SPLA's "sub-culture of lies,
misinformation, cheap propaganda and exhibitionism" vividly: "Much of
what filtered out of the SPLM/A propaganda machinery...was about 90%
disinformation". (16)  Thirdly, it is also important to put the SPLA
into perspective. The 'New York Times', a vigorous critic of the
Sudanese government, states that the SPLA: "[H]ave behaved like an
occupying army, killing, raping and pillaging."  (17)  It has also
described the SPLA leader John Garang as one of Sudan's "pre-eminent war
criminals". (18)  Given the SPLA's track record there is no reason to
doubt that they might also engage in fraud for financial or propaganda
reasons.


FRAUD AND CORRUPTION CONFIRMED BY REUTERS

Interviewed after his visit to Nyamlell with Miniter, James Jacobson
told the 'Denver Post' of his clear reservations about "redemption":

"I just felt everything was not as it appeared to be. You don't know if
after several days these groups of people get reabducted."

The 'Denver Post' reported that the leaders of major human-rights
organizations were stating that abductions are "not only...increasing
but that the increases almost certainly are related to the sudden
availability of Western money for buybacks":

"It's like paying hostage takers ransom, they say, arguing that any
payment lends credibility to the notion of buying and selling human
beings. They say the money encourages scams..." (19)

Speaking to Reuters, Jacobson stated that:

"It has turned into a circus. The problem now is that Western dollars
are making the situation worse, both in terms of abductions and in terms
of corruption." (20)

A Reuters report in July 1999 confirmed the "massive corruption"
reported by Jacobson:

"Local aid workers...say that they have seen children who they have
known for months passed off as slaves...And Reuters interviewed one boy
in Yargot who told a completely implausible story of life in the north,
a story which he changed in every respect when translators were
swapped." (21)

In May 1999, the 'Christian Science Monitor' also clearly stated:

"There are increasingly numerous reports that significant numbers of
those 'redeemed' were never slaves in the first place. Rather, they were
simply elements of the local populations, often children, available to
be herded together when cash-bearing redeemers appeared."  (22)

The German current affairs magazine Der Spiegel has also reported that
Dutch, South African and German journalists being taken to a CSI-
arranged "slave redemption" in southern Sudan noticed that all the
villages in the vicinity of the "redemption" were totally deserted. CSI
and SPLA attempts to explain this away were said to have been less than
convincing. (23)

It should also perhaps be noted that Jacobson subsequently revealed that
following his exposure of the "slavery redemption" scandal, the SPLA
banned him from travelling to certain parts of southern Sudan. (24)

It is clear, therefore, that there are at least three direct concerns
with regard to "slave redemptions" in Sudan.

Firstly, are the people said to be "slaves" not more accurately
described as victims of inter-tribal abduction or kidnapping? Given that
there has clearly been a history of intertribal raiding and abduction
between the northern tribes and the Dinka within the areas in question -
southern Kordofan and northern Bahr al-Ghazal - why has this been
described as "slavery" when almost identical patterns of inter-tribal
raiding and abduction between the Dinka and Nuer, two black southern
Sudan tribes, two or three hundred kilometres to the south, have not
been described as "slavery?  (25)  Is it possible that the label "slave"
has been used either as the result of what African Rights described as
lazy assumptions or as a propaganda weapons against the Sudanese
government?

Secondly, assuming that the people being presented at these
"redemptions" have indeed been the victims of abduction or kidnapping,
is there not the danger, as pointed out by several human rights groups,
that if, for whatever reason, naïve Westerners  introduce vast amounts
of cash into the process, this may well fuel further abductions for
precisely that new Western market? It is sadly all too possible that
hundreds if not thousands, of Sudanese civilians may have been abducted
specifically to cater for those Western organisations who, for political
and religious reasons, have been willing to pay large amounts of money
in order to project anti-Sudanese propaganda.

Thirdly, it is now clear that many "slave redemptions" are staged.
Independent sources have stated that while some of those outside groups
involved in these "redemptions" may have been innocently misled, other
outside groups may be purposefully using "slave redemptions" in order to
raise money for the SPLA.

These "slave redemptions" therefore fuel the Sudanese conflict in at
least two ways. They echo inaccurate and stereotyped propaganda images
of Sudan and the Sudanese conflict which serve only to misinform the
international community, which in turn can distort positions taken by
countries such as the United States. And, if what credible outside
commentators have said is true, the money raised through fraudulent
"slave redemptions" is actually used to procure weapons for the SPLA
which are then used to prolong the war.

And, just as in Northern Ireland where much of the resistance to a peace
settlement has come from those paramilitaries involved in organised
crime as part of that conflict, those SPLA war lords involved in
widespread "slave redemption" fraud worth several hundred thousand
dollars have little reason to embrace any peace process.

Perhaps the final word on the "redemption" of abductees should be given
to those closest to the issue. Referring to the CSI/SPLA -arranged
purchase of "slaves" by the 'Baltimore Sun' in 1996, a source close to
the Dinka retrieval committee - the Dinka community's own  grouping
which exists in the affected areas to secure the return of abductees -
was quoted by Anti-Slavery International as saying that they were
concerned that:

"Such outside intervention with big sums of money may make matters worse
and can encourage others to capture and "facilitate" the retrieval of
more children for economic motives." (26)

Writing in 1998, de Waal echoed what would come to be very justified
concerns about the process of "buying back" slaves when he stated that:

"It is easy to envisage how this could be manipulated by traders and
local officials, and could even create incentives for kidnapping
children for ransom." (27)

Peter Verney, the author of the 1997 Anti-Slavery report on Sudan has
stated:

"It is not clear what impact hundreds of dollars are having. Maybe it's
even maintaining the set-up. Market forces mean that you can probably
buy a child if you want one." (28)

There is every reason to believe that everything warned about by de
Waal, Anti-Slavery International and the Dinka retrieval committees, and
worse, has come to pass. It is clear that exactly the very situation
warned of above has come about, fuelled by partisan and naïve groups
such as Christian Solidarity International and activists such as
Baroness Cox.


Notes

1       The SPLA is sometimes also referred to as the SPLM/A, a
reference to the Sudan People's Liberation Movement.
2       See, for example, 'Five Thousand Sudanese Slaves "Freed"', News
Article by BBC World Africa Online on 22 December 1999 at 18:24 GMT and
'Swiss NGO Buys Freedom for 4,000 Sudanese Slaves', News Article by
Agence France Presse on 1 February 2000.
3       See, 'UN condemns aid group for buying slaves', 'The Times' July
9, 1999, 'UNICEF slams buying freedom for Sudan slaves', News Article by
Reuters on Feburary 5, 1999 at 12:42:37.
4       Alex de Waal, 'Sudan: Social Engineering, Slavery and War',
'Covert Action Quarterly', Spring 1997.
5       Alex de Waal, 'Sudan: Social Engineering, Slavery and War',
'Covert Action Quarterly', Spring 1997.
6       Peter Verney, 'Slavery in Sudan', Sudan Update and Anti-Slavery
International, London, May 1997.
7       The reference number of this submission to the United Nations
Commission on Human Rights is TS/S/4/97, and is available to view on the
Anti-Slavery International web-site at http://www.charitynet.org/asi/sub
mit5.htm
8       Andrew Boyd, 'Baroness Cox: A Voice for the Voiceless', Lion
Publishing, Oxford, 1998,  p.324.
9       'The Times', 30 January 2001, p.27
10       Letter from Bona Malwal to Baroness Cox, 23 January 2000 posted
on South Sudan Net (http://southsudanet.net/baroness_caroline_cox_1_arne
llan.htm).
11       'A Response to the Sudan Foundation' s "Questions" and
Criticisms of CSI's Work in Sudan', CSI Magazine, Issue 90, December
1997 available at http://home.clara.co.uk/csiuk/90page4.html.
12      John Harker, 'Human Security in Sudan: The Report of a Canadian
Assessment Mission', Prepared for the Minister of Foreign Affairs,
Ottawa, January 2000, available at http://www.dfait-maeci.gc-foreignp-
3110186-e.pdf, p. 1.
13      Ibid., pp.39-40.
14      The article was published in two parts in 'The Atlantic Monthly'
and is also available online in two parts. Part one is available at
http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/99jul/9907sudanslaves.htm and part two
at http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/99jul/9907sudanslaves2.htm.
Miniter's work has previously appeared in The New York Times, The Wall
Street Journal and Reader's Digest.
15      William Finnegan, 'The Invisible War', The New Yorker, 25
January 1999.
16      Peter Nyaba, The Politics of Liberation in South Sudan: An
Insider's View, Fountain Publishers,  Kampala, 1997.
17      'Misguided Relief to Sudan', Editorial, New York Times, 6
December, 1999.
18      Ibid.
19      Rescue of slaves backfiring', 'The Denver Post' August 22, 1999.
20      'Aid group tries to break Sudan slavery chain', News Article by
Reuters on July 11, 1999 at 23:40:58.
21      'Aid group tries to break Sudan slavery chain', News Article by
Reuters on July 11, 1999 at 23:40:58.
22      "Slave 'Redemption' won't save Sudan", 'Christian Science
Monitor', 26 May 1999.
23      'Sklavenhandel am Gazellenfluss ', Der Spiegel, Number 30, 24
July 2000.
24      Jim Jacobson, 'A Bad Ultimatum', 'Frontline News ', Christian
Freedom International website at http://www.christianfreedom.org
25      This contradiction is examined in more detail in ' "Slavery" in
Sudan. When is a "Slave" not a "Slave": An Examination of the 1999
Wunlit Accords' The British-Sudanese Public Affairs Council, London,
December 1999, available at http://www.espac.org
26      Peter Verney, 'Slavery in Sudan', Sudan Update and Anti-Slavery
International, London, May 1997, p.20.
27      Alex de Waal, 'Exploiting Slavery: Human Rights and Political
Agendas in Sudan', 'New Left Review', No 227, 1998, p.145
28      'Indecent interest in genocide', 'The Observer', (London), 26
July 1998.


ENDS


--
European-Sudanese Public Affairs Council
1 Northumberland Avenue, London, WC2N 5BW
Tel: 0207 872 5434   Fax: 0207 753 2848

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