Sub Saharan mercenaries or African freedom fighters in Libya and the
return of Dr Khalil Ibrahim – By Pieter Tesch

September 21, 2011
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A 'sub saharan mercenary' is captured by Libyan anti-Gadaffi troops

It may be safer when discussing the impact and consequences of the
‘Arab spring’ in northern Africa to quote Mao Zhe Dong when asked to
comment on either Paris 1789 or Paris 1968, ‘too early to say.’
However, the question of the imagery and narrative of black African
people in the media coverage of the anti Gaddafi insurgency begs
urgent questions.

When the international press pack of ‘world affairs’ (war)
correspondents descended on Libya in February, they began to repeat
uncritically and unquestioning  the Libyan insurgents’ claim that it
was only the bloody thuggery of so called ‘black sub Saharan African
mercenaries’ that prevented the collapse of the Gaddafi regime. There
are now appearing some dissenting voices highlighting the apparent
collective victimisation of what are still called ‘black sub Saharan
Africans’ by the Libyan insurgents on the cusp of their victory.

Back in February I felt the need to write to the Guardian’s ‘Response’
column to point out the apparent contradiction between the description
of how the allegedly ‘black sub Saharan mercenary’ hardcore of Gaddafi
loyalist storm troopers terrorised the majority of Libya’s Arab
population, and the continuous imagery and narrative fed by Western
self styled ‘advocacy’ groups such as ‘Waging Peace’ of Darfur rebel
movements such as the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) as ‘African
freedom fighters’ against ‘Arab oppression in Sudan.’ In the case of
JEM and its leader Dr Khalil Ibrahim one actually does talk about the
same kind of people (more on him later).

>From Tripoli we get reports of mass graves of supposedly loyalist
Gaddafi fighters, mostly of whom are described as ‘black Africans’,
without any independent verification whether they were killed in
battle or after they were captured, or whether they had been
‘fighters’ in the first place.

On the one hand, there can be no doubt that there were, and still are
(fighting as Gaddafi dead-enders,) those who can described as ‘sub
Saharan black Africans.’ They originate from neighbouring countries to
the south of Libya in the Sahel and beyond, easily distinguished by
their non Libyan Arabic or French tongues. On the other hand, the
majority of ‘sub Saharan black Africans caught up in the insurgency
were more likely than not just migrants working in Libya and/or
looking to make it into Europe, who were caught up in the fighting
after the insurgency erupted.

The likely origins of the fighters in the Gaddafi loyalist forces are
as members of Gaddafi’s old Arab and Islamic Legions recruited in the
Sahara/Sahel from Mauritania in the west to Sudan in the east. Gaddafi
caused mayhem and havoc in his own backyard since he seized in power
in Libya with his idiosyncratic ‘revolutionary’ mixture of pan
Arabism, and when that did not work, pan Africanism, Islamism and
pseudo Marxism. This may have appealed to some ambitious men eager to
further their own cause and make an impact among their various ethnic
groups and own countries in the region, though its majority was
probably more attracted by the Libyan petro dollars Gaddafi was doling
out.

However, what even the ‘world affairs’ correspondents of the quality
print and broadcast media seem not to know, or appear to ignore, is
that the southern Libyan region of the Fezzan is largely populated by
peoples such as the Toubou and Zaghawa who are regarded as ‘African,’
as in non-Arab in origin, (though Muslim for centuries), who have also
a history of discrimination in modern Libya.

These same ethnic groups also live across the borders in Chad and
western Sudan (Darfur). Like so many other ethnic groups in the
southern Sahara and Sahel belts, whether they are ‘Arab’, or ‘non
Arab’ in origin, either being ‘Berber’, such as the Tuareg (whose
relationship with Libya and Gaddafi has already been touched already
on African Arguments), or ‘African’ as in ‘black African’ but who are
all Muslim and to varying degrees Arabised and speaking various
dialects of colloquial Arabic as a common regional language. They have
as camel nomads of the Sahara, or cattle pastoralists of the Sahel,
migrated through the region – lands became known to Mediaeval Arab
geographers as the Bilad al Sudan, or Land of the Black peoples as
distinct form the peoples on the Mediterranean littoral of Africa.

Lack of knowledge or understanding of the region’s history, cultures
and anthropology, make it difficult on the ground to distinguish
between ‘Arab’ and ‘non Arab’ or ‘African’. This has not however
prevented journalists or NGOs generalising in reports and analysis,
suggesting that ‘black Africans’, either as ‘mercenaries’ or
‘migrants’ are in fact strangers or aliens to Libya and linked to
Gaddafi as the ‘bad guys’ or ‘villains’ of the story.

Dr Khalil Imbrahim - leader of the Darfuri rebel group JEM

Dr Khalil Ibrahim returns

We now learn that Dr Khalil Ibrahim, in exile and protected in Tripoli
since May 2010 after his former protector and Zaghawa kinsman Chad’s
President Idriss Deby refused to allow him to return, has managed to
escape from Tripoli, and is reportedly back in Darfur evading a force
of Chadian and Sudanese troops in the Libyan, Chadian and Sudanese
desert border lands.

Dr Khalil Ibrahim is typical of the Sahelian educated man with
traditional status and influence who would be attracted to Gaddafi’s
brand and mixture of Islamism, Arabism and Africanism in order to
pursue his own ambitions against the established order. Belonging to
the Zaghawa people, Dr Khalil Ibrahim has been able to draw support
from his ethnic Zaghawa connections as well his modern ideological
affiliates, switching in and out modern Sudan, Chad and Libya.

Dr Khalil Ibrahim’s link, and others like him, to Gaddafi has damaged
the reputation of the Zaghawa, Tuareg or similar ethnic groups in the
eyes of the Arabic Libyans on the Mediterranean littoral. As a
combination of secularists, liberals and Islamists launched their Arab
spring in February inspired by events in Tunisia and Egypt, they have
had to reflect on their historical attitudes of superiority towards
non Arabs and in particular ‘black Africans’. But on the other hand
JEM and its supporters in the West such as ‘Waging Peace’ or Dr Anne
Bartlett on Sudan Tribune (15 September) should reflect seriously that
it is not ‘Khartoum’ but Dr Khalil Ibrahim himself and people like him
who have endangered the lives of Darfuri and other ‘black African’
people and ethnic groups because of the close association of Dr Khalil
Ibrahim with Gaddafi and his regime!

Pieter Tesch is a historian and business man who specialises on Sahelian Africa
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