-Caveat Lector-

The European-Sudanese Public Affairs Council
1 Northumberland Avenue
London
WC2N 5BW
England

Tel:    020 7872 5434
Fax:    020 7753 2848

Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Date of Publication: April 2001




THE INTER-CHURCH COALITION ON AFRICA AND SUDAN:
ISSUES OF CONCERN


It is disappointing to note that Inter-Church Coalition on Africa
(ICCAF) continues to misinform the Canadian public with regard to events
in Sudan. ICCAF's clearly selective and unbalanced activity on Sudan has
already been commented upon in 'Turning a "Blind Eye and a Deaf Ear to
Crimes Against Humanity": The Inter-Church Coalition on Africa and
Sudan'. (1)

It is sad to relate that ICCAF continues to serve as the Canadian
extension of the American anti-Sudan lobby tenaciously wedded to the
failed Sudan policies of the previous Clinton Administration. In so
doing it continues to echo questionable claims made by equally
questionable, often right-wing Christian fundamentalist groups and
others in the United States. Even a cursory review of ICCAF's recent
positions and statements on Sudan illustrates the disjointed and
distorted image it projects of the country - projections based on
questionable claims.

In April 2001, for example, ICCAF published as part of its 'Sudan News'
a report entitled 'Sudan: Oil Before Food'. Amongst other things this
report alleged, on second hand accounts, that Sudanese government forces
have left "the areas around oil installations and supply roads virtually
empty of the original population...Tens of thousands have been forced to
flee their homesteads." The report also spoke of "continued expulsions
of the people living in 'promising' oil fields". (2)  In a February 2001
letter to Canadian Parliamentarians, ICCAF Coordinator Gary Kenny had
similarly asserted that the Sudanese government has used "scorched-earth
warfare to secure the oil fields for development. Thousands have been
brutally driven off their lands." (3)

These particular claims can now be assessed. The focus of many of these
questionable allegations has been the Canadian oil company Talisman
Energy. In April 2001 Talisman released the results of a detailed
analysis of a series of satellite photographs taken of their oil
concession in Sudan. The images analysed by the leading British
satellite imagery analysis company, the Kalagate Imagery Bureau,
included civilian satellite images collected last year and images
acquired by U.S. military intelligence satellites in 1965, 1967, and
1969. Ground resolution in the images varied between about three feet
and 10 feet. There were additional lower resolution Landsat images from
the 1980s and Radarsat images from 2000. (4)  The images were analysed
by Geoffrey John Oxlee, a former head of the United Kingdom Joint Air
Reconnaissance Intelligence Centre and one of Britain's leading experts
in the field.

Mr Oxlee focused his analysis on the epicentres of the oil areas claimed
by ICCAF to have been subject to population displacement. Mr Oxlee
stated: "there is no evidence of appreciable human migration from any of
the seven sites examined." (5)  To the contrary, he further stated that
analysis revealed that "once the sites were developed, then people did
come into the area, and in fact it looked as if people developed around
the oil sites rather than going away from it." (6)  He further stated
that he would stand by his conclusions in court, if needed. It is
inconceivable that the "scorched earth" displacement of thousands of
civilians as claimed by Gary Kenny would not have been immediately
noticeable in the satellite pictures studied.

When asked if there was any possibility of interference with the
pictures he analysed, Mr Oxlee stated that the satellite photographs
examined "are genuine pictures. Having looked at hundreds of thousands
of satellite pictures, there's no way these pictures have been doctored.
Absolutely none. We check these things out." (7)

ICCAF's third or fourth-hand disinformation about Sudanese oil fields
would appear to have been partly displaced by first-hand state-of-the-
art science.

Mr Kenny's reliance on questionable disinformation on Sudan is a matter
of record. His gullibility is perhaps nowhere better displayed than in
ICCAF's 'Sudan Urgent Action Bulletin #5 August 31, 2000'. In it ICCAF
states that "A very critical situation is developing in Sudan. China
appears poised to intervene militarily to protect its investment in the
oil fields". The 'Sudan Urgent Action Bulletin' urged Canadians to write
to the Canadian Prime Minister and Foreign Minister on this issue, and
included, as a model letter that written by ICCAF chairman Rodger Talbot
to the Canadian Foreign Minister. This letter claimed that "credible
reports indicate that China is worried that access to its premier off-
shore source of oil is at imminent risk as a result of advancing SPLA
forces. Under such circumstances it makes sense that China would want to
act to defend its strategic interests." ICCAF then sought to use these
"credible reports" as a weapon to demand Canadian government action
against Talisman Energy, the Canadian company involved in the Sudanese
oil project.

The "credible report" referred to by ICCAF was an outlandish article
which appeared in 'The Sunday Telegraph' of London. (8)  This story,
written by Christina Lamb, claimed that China was about to move 700,000
soldiers to Sudan to protect Chinese interests in the Sudanese oil
project. Even the Clinton Administration, as hostile as it was to the
Sudanese authorities, had to dismiss the claims, stating that even "the
figure of tens of thousands of troops is just not credible based on
information available to us".(9)  The British government was also
questioned in the British Parliament about the "allegations that 700,000
Chinese soldiers have been deployed in southern Sudan". The government
responded: "We have no evidence of the presence of any Chinese soldiers
in Sudan, let alone the figure of 700,000 alleged in one press report."
(10)  It should perhaps be pointed out to ICCAF that firstly, it has
been nine months since the "credible report" and there has been no sign
of the massive, unprecedented air or sea-bridge carrying 700,000 Chinese
soldiers to Sudan; and secondly, the "advancing" SPLA do not appear to
have encroached upon China's "strategic interests" within the oil
fields.

(Aficionados of disinformation and those with a sense of humour might be
interested to learn that Ms Lamb is also noted for having written a
similarly inventive 'Sunday Telegraph' article in which she alleged that
Saddam Hussein had sent belly-dancing assassins, led by a belly-dancing
teacher called "Maleen", to kill opponents in Britain. (11)  When asked
if there was any evidence to support this particular claim, the British
government stated that: "We have no evidence to corroborate this
report." (12) )

For the sake of ICCAF's already tarnished reputation, Mr Kenny should
choose his "credible" sources with regard to Sudan with a lot more
caution.

In his Parliamentary letter, Kenny claims that the Sudanese government
"has yet to address in good faith the key issues of separation of state
and religion and southern self-determination". He ignores the fact that
in 1991 the present Sudanese government exempted the largely non-Muslim
southern Sudan from the Islamic sharia law introduced by Washington's
ally General Nimeiri in late 1983. Even the Clinton Administration had
to admit that sharia law is not applied in the south. (13)  Kenny also
chooses to ignore the fact that the Sudanese government has since 1997
offered an internationally-supervised referendum whereby the people of
southern Sudan would be able to decide their own future. This offer was
incorporated into Sudan's new 1998 constitution and has been repeated on
several occasions. (14)

Mr Kenny also states in his letter that "aerial bombing" has doubled in
the past two years. What he does not reveal is that in June 2000, the
American-backed Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) rebel movement
broke the humanitarian ceasefire that had been in place throughout the
vast Bahr al-Ghazal region of southern Sudan since 1998. The United
Nations IRIN reported for example that in early July 2000 "the European
Union presidency issued a declaration...expressing its grave concern
regarding the offensive by the Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army
(SPLM/A) in the Bahr el Ghazal region".(15)  This deliberate action by
the SPLA resulted in renewed military activity in a very large,
previously peaceful part of southern Sudan. All forms of military
activity may very well have doubled as a result.   Mr Kenny also ignores
the fact that Khartoum continues to offer a comprehensive ceasefire.

He claims that the Sudanese government has doubled its military
expenditures between 1998-2000 as a result of oil revenues. In March
2001 the British government was asked whether it had any evidence that
Sudanese oil revenues were being spent on arms procurement. Their answer
was: "There is evidence to suggest that military expenditure has
remained stable". (16)

He claims that Canada's policy of constructive engagement with Sudan
since early last year has "fallen short on most counts". It is unclear
which counts he is referring to. Some key indicators present a different
story. Led by former prime minister Sadiq al-Mahdi, himself ousted from
power by the present government and its most vigorous critic, most of
the northern opposition parties have returned from exile because, as al-
Mahdi has stated, there "are now circumstances and developments which
could favour an agreement on a comprehensive political solution." (17)

Internationally, the European Union has also publicly stated that it has
"noticed signs of improvement" in Sudan's political situation. Sudan's
regional standing is at an all-time high. Agence France Presse reported
in February 2000 that Sudan was "Heading for Improved Ties with
Neighbours". From having been mired in regional conflicts, Sudan has
over the past three years emerged as a leader of its region, culminating
in Sudan's current presidency of the regional Intergovernmental
Authority on Development (IGAD) body made up of seven eastern and
central African countries. And in February 2001, Sudan was also elected
president of the sixteen-strong Community of Sahel-Saharan States.
Sudan's neighbours would seem to have believed that "constructive
engagement" has worked.

In June 2000 South Africa and Algeria, in their capacities as chairs of
the 114-member Non-Aligned Movement and the 22-member Arab Group of
states respectively, called on the United Nations to withdraw the
limited diplomatic sanctions in place on Sudan since 1996. The
Organisation of African Unity, representing 53 African countries has
also urged the Security Council to rescind the sanctions in question.
The OAU had also nominated Sudan for the Africa seat on the U.N.
Security Council. Ongoing economic reforms and progress have also seen
the restoration of Sudan' membership and voting rights with the
International Monetary Fund.

By any objective criteria constructive engagement with Sudan has been
successful. The Canadian government should rightly claim its part in
that process.

In conclusion, it is safe to say that the Inter-Church Coalition on
Africa's track record on Sudan is self-evidently a questionable one.
While possibly sincerely motivated they have unconsciously misinformed
many Canadians interested in Sudanese affairs. It is time that they took
stock of their clear short-comings on this issue.


Notes

1       See, 'Turning a "Blind Eye and a Deaf Ear to Crimes Against
Humanity": The Inter-Church Coalition on Africa and Sudan', The
European-Sudanese Public Affairs Council, London, April 2000, (a copy is
web-posted at http://www.londonmuslims.com/sudan/blind.htm); and 'A
Critique of ICCAF's Response to 'Turning a "Blind Eye and a Deaf Ear to
Crimes Against Humanity": The Inter-Church Coalition on Africa and
Sudan' at http://msanews.mynet.net/MSANEWS/20000704.22.html
2       See 'Sudan News April 2001' on Inter-Church Coalition on Africa
Web-site at http://www.web.net/~iccaf/humanrights/sudaninfo/newsapr01.ht
m
3       See 'Sudan NGO Letter to Member of Parliament (Canada)' on
Inter-Church Coalition on Africa Web-site at http://www.web.net/~iccaf/h
umanrights/sudaninfo/memparl0201.htm
4       'Talisman Fights Back on Sudan Displacement Claims Releases
Aerial Images', 'The Financial Post' (Canada), 19 April 2001.
5       'Talisman Energy Says Study Disproves Sudan Allegations', Dow
Jones Newswire, 18 April 2001.
6       'Talisman Fights Back on Sudan Displacement Claims Releases
Aerial Images', 'The Financial Post' (Canada), 19 April 2001.
7       'Talisman Fights Back on Sudan Displacement Claims Releases
Aerial Images', 'The Financial Post' (Canada), 19 April 2001.
8       Christina Lamb, 'China Puts "700,000 Troops" on Sudan Alert',
'The Sunday Telegraph' (London), 26 August 2000.
9       'U.S.: Reports of China's Role in Sudanese War Are Overstated',
News Article by UPI on 29 August 2000.
10      House of Lords 'Official Record', Written Answer, 5 March 2001,
column WA10.
11      Christina Lamb, 'Saddam Sends Female Assassins on London Murder
Mission', 'The Sunday Telegraph' (London), 30 July 2001.
12      House of Lords 'Official Record', Written Answer, 7 March 2001,
column WA31.
13      'Sudan Country Report on Human Rights Practices for 1995',
Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, United States Department of
State, Washington-DC, February 1996.
14      See, 'Sudan offers South secession', News Article by BBC, 22
February 1999 at 00:16:14 GMT; 'Southern secession better than more war:
Sudan's president', News Article by Agence France Presse, 22 February
1999, at 10:04:31; 'Referendum agreed at Sudan peace talks', News
Article by BBC World, 7 May 1998, at 11:06 GMT; 'Sudan Says Happy for
South to secede', News Article by Reuters, 7 May 1998.
15      'Sudan: EU Concern Over Break of Bahr el Ghazal Ceasefire',
Integrated Regional Information Networks, UN Office for the Coordination
of Humanitarian Affairs, 3 July 2000.
16      House of Lords 'Official Record', Written Answer, 5 March 2001,
column WA10.
17      'Developments in Sudan Favour National Reconciliation: Mahdi',
News Article by Agence France Presse on 25 December 1999 at 12:38:20.

ENDS





--
European-Sudanese Public Affairs Council
1 Northumberland Avenue, London, WC2N 5BW
Tel: 0207 872 5434   Fax: 0207 753 2848
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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