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From: John Ashworth <[email protected]>
To: "Group" <[email protected]>
Date: Friday, September 30, 2011 1:57:27 PM GMT+0300
Subject: [sudan-john-ashworth] Fwd: Bashir seeks military solution in Blue Nile

1. Bashir says Sudan’s army to “liberate” rebels’ bastion in Blue Nile

September 28, 2011 (KHARTOUM) – Sudan’s president Omer al-Bashir has
escalated warfare rhetoric, vowing that the country’s army will soon
conquer the stronghold of the rebels Sudan People’s Liberation
Movement-North (SPLM-N) in Blue Nile State.

Battles between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and SPLM-N forces in
Blue Nile erupted on 1 September as each side accused the other of
starting the fighting.

The following day, Bashir called a state of emergency in Blue Nile,
sacked the state’s governor Malik Aggar, who is also the SPLM-N’s
chairman, and later shut down SPLM-N’s offices in the country.

While SAF gained control of the state’s capital al-Damazin, Malik Agar
and SPLM-N forces firmly held control of their mainstay in Al-Kurmuk
town near Sudan’s borders with Ethiopia.

Recently, there have been reports of fighting in and around the area
of Dondoro south of Blue Nile. SAF said it captured Dondoro, stressing
it now eliminated the last obstacle before the advance of its troops
towards Al-Kurmuk.

The military situation on the ground remains difficult to verify
independently due to lack of media access to the area.

Addressing a public rally in al-Butana locality in the eastern state
of Al-Qadarif on Wednesday, al-Bashir said that SAF would soon pray in
Al-Kurmuk and expel “the rebels and outlaws.”

He further pledged that those who “committed crimes against citizens”
and “violated human rights” would be held accountable.

Blue Nile, which borders the newly independent state of South Sudan,
is home to communities who largely sided with the south during Sudan’s
north-south second civil war.

Under the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), which ended more than
two decades of war in 2005, Blue Nile was given a vote called “popular
consultation” to gauge local satisfaction with the implementation of
the agreement.

The plebiscite took place in January this year amid calls for autonomy
to be given to the area, but the results are yet to be released.

In his address, the Sudanese president sought to refute claims of
“marginalization” of Blue Nile, saying that the government had
instituted Malik Agar as a governor but the latter rebuffed authority
and returned to rebellion.

Al-Bashir also reiterated his rejection to the SPLM-N’s demands for
negotiations through a third party, saying his government is done
negotiating with “outlaws” abroad.

“There will be no more negotiations abroad…and we will not allow
international organizations to intervene under the blanket of
humanitarian assistance. Any force that wants to oppose [the
government] and impose protocols of Khawajat [an Arabic word used to
refer to Westerners] will not be allowed to do so” he told the crowd.

Earlier this week, Bashir said his government was still willing to
negotiate a peaceful settlement to the strife with the SPLM-N but
stressed that such recourse must overstep the provisions already
existing in the CPA.

(ST)

END1

2. Al-Bashir vows to defend Sudan against “traitors”

September 27, 2011 (KHARTOUM) – The Sudanese president Omer Hassan
Al-Bashir has vowed to show no laxity in defending the country against
“traitors”, urging fighters in the war-hit states of South Kordofan
and Blue Nile to lay down arms.

Sudan’s border states of South Kordofan descended into violence since
early June and late August respectively after clashes erupted between
the country’s army (SAF) and forces of the Sudan People’s Liberation
Movement North (SPLM-N) which was aligned with the independent state
of South Sudan.

The Sudanese government insists that SPLM-N combatants who fought
alongside the south in Sudan’s north-south civil war be disarmed or
move to the south as stipulated by the security arrangements protocol
of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) which ended the war.

After the outbreak of war in Blue Nile, the Sudanese government
officially banned the SPLM-N as a political party and closed its
offices in the north.

Al-Bashir, who was addressing a graduation ceremony in the capital
Khartoum on Tuesday, said that there would be no compromise in the
country’s security or in dealing with traitor.

“There will be no neglect in dealing with traitors because Sudan is
protected by strong hands and an army that does not know defeat,” he
said, according to reports by Sudan’s official news agency.

Al-Bashir stressed that the government was still committed to the
CPA’s security arrangement in Blue Nile and South Kordofan, adding
that the doors were wide open for anyone who wants to return.

Furthermore, Al-Bashir called on the people fighting in South Kordofan
and Blue Nile to renounce arms and return to participate in the
development, saying that Khartoum will not “sanction the existence of
two armies in one country.”

He also added that the constitution and rules of political activities
state that no political party is allowed to have an army, in reference
to the SPLM-N.

The Sudanese president this week said his government was willing to
negotiate a peaceful settlement to the crisis in Blue Nile and South
Kordofan but stressed that his government would not negotiate on any
terms other than those already existing in the CPA.

(ST)

END2

3."Blue Nile: The Next Imminent Crisis in Sudan's War on Its Own People"

The New Republic, September 28, 2011

http://www.tnr.com/article/world/95409/sudan-genocide-khartoum-blue-nile-ethiopia-darfur-civil-war

   by Eric Reeves

In a matter of days, or hours, the northern Sudanese state of Blue
Nile seems likely to be the scene of the most violent military
confrontation in Sudan for almost a decade. The Satellite Sentinel
Project (SSP) released a highly alarming report on September 23, based
on substantial satellite photography, indicating that armed forces of
Khartoum's National Islamic Front/National Congress Party regime are
mobilizing in a massive formation of armor, troops, and military
aircraft: "heavily camouflaged, mechanized units comprising at least a
brigade---3,000 troops or more;" "these forces appear to be equipped
with heavy armor and artillery, supported by helicopter gunships."

The apparent target of this huge assault is the town of Kurmuk---on
the border with Ethiopia---which is the primary stronghold of the
Sudan People's Liberation Army/Movement-North (SPLA/M-N) in Blue Nile.
These are the northern military units and political cadres of the
broader movement known during the civil war (1983-2005) simply as the
Sudan People's Liberation Army/Movement; their homes and base of
support lie not within the newly formed South Sudan but in the
northern parts of the country still ruled by Khartoum. Following South
Sudan's declaration of independence, the increasingly militant
Khartoum regime has felt obliged to respond with force to what
threatens to become a "new South," a source of resistance to the
regime's 22-year stranglehold on national wealth and power. Focusing
first on the nearby states of Abyei and South Kordofan, Khartoum has
now turned its destructive attention to the rebel strongholds in Blue
Nile. In the absence of increased international pressure on the
regime, a bloody and protracted military confrontation appears
imminent.

MOST PEOPLE IN Sudan's southern states of Abyei, South Kordofan, and
Blue Nile feel that they were short-changed by the North/South
Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) in 2005, but they expected, at
least, "popular consultations"---discussions promised by the CPA
through which the people of these warn-torn areas would negotiate
their relationship with the central government. Instead, Khartoum's
first act---even before Southern secession---was to rig the election
of Ahmed Haroun as governor of South Kordofan (Haroun is under
indictment for 42 counts of crimes against humanity and war crimes in
Darfur). Then, on June 5, the regime launched a military campaign
against both political and military elements of the SPLA/M-N in South
Kordofan, an operation overseen by Haroun and the state military and
intelligence leadership. Unspeakable atrocity crimes marked the
military and security effort, which continues to this day in the form
of a relentless bombing of the African peoples of the Nuba Mountains,
a tribal group known collectively as the Nuba. Without humanitarian
access, which Khartoum continues to deny, the threat to human life is
enormous. Valerie Amos, the head of UN humanitarian operations,
declared on August 30 that:

"[M]ore than 200,000 people affected by the fighting in South Kordofan
faced 'potentially catastrophic levels of malnutrition and mortality'
because of Khartoum denying access to aid agencies. Also this week,
two leading human rights groups said that deadly air raids on
civilians in rebel-held areas of the Nuba Mountains may amount to war
crimes."

Like the military seizure of Abyei (May 20) and the assault on the
Nuba and SPLA/M-N in South Kordofan (June 5), the current campaign in
Blue Nile was well prepared for, with troops and armor poised to move
quickly and decisively. The regime's regular and militia forces moved
preemptively, launching an attack on September 1 by bombing the home
of the elected governor of Blue Nile, Malik Agar; Malik is also the
political head of the SPLA/M-N. And as in South Kordofan, human
displacement in Blue Nile has quickly become massive and suffering by
civilians acute. More than 50,000 have been displaced since the
beginning of Khartoum’s campaign on September 1, and 25,000 have fled
to Ethiopia. Khartoum is denying all humanitarian access, both to
prevent foreign observers and as a savage weapon of war.

Even so, resistance by the SPLA-N has proven stiff. Khartoum controls
Damazin, the capital of Blue Nile, and Rosaries to the north---but
almost nothing else in the state beyond the vast corridor of men and
armaments moving southeast to Kurmuk. The movement of Khartoum's
troops has already been halted once in fierce fighting, but many
thousands of civilians in Kurmuk are deeply at risk. This is in large
part because Khartoum has increasingly resorted to "stand-off"
military tactics, using artillery, tanks, and aircraft to do the
fighting that regular troops are increasingly resisting. Such tactics
are inherently indiscriminate, and civilians are much more often the
victims than soldiers.

In addition, although military violence will likely capture whatever
news attention the crises in Abyei, South Kordofan, and Blue Nile
receive, the real story is in the dying that will come this fall.
Normally, people in these regions would be looking forward to an
October first harvest with the end of the rains. But this year vast
tracts of land were too dangerous to cultivate in the Nuba Mountains,
and starvation will begin soon without humanitarian access. In Blue
Nile the UN's World Food Program is desperate to get food supplies in
to hundreds of thousands of people either displaced or food insecure.
Khartoum’s denial has been adamant. Human mortality will soon
skyrocket.

WHAT HAS PROMPTED such brutal actions by Khartoum? What is the
thinking within the regime? Here it's important to see, in the run-up
to South Sudan's secession, that the army has become increasingly
assertive, and the civilian cabal that heads the NIF/NCP more
yielding. President Omar Al Bashir accommodates the army out of
necessity, since it is the one constituency he can't afford to lose.
But there are clear signs of discord within the cabal, as well as
evidence of a creeping military coup. Julie Flint, an especially
well-informed observer of Sudan, cites a source in Khartoum who makes
clear that the "hour of the soldiers" has arrived. Her account is
harrowing:

"[A] well-informed source close to the National Congress Party reports
that Sudan's two most powerful generals went to [Sudanese President
Omar Al] Bashir on May 5, five days after 11 soldiers were killed in
an SPLA ambush in Abyei, on South Kordofan's southwestern border, and
demanded powers to act as they sought fit, without reference to the
political leadership."

"'They got it,' the source says. 'It is the hour of the soldiers---a
vengeful, bitter attitude of defending one's interests no matter what;
a punitive and emotional approach that goes beyond calculation of
self-interest. The army was the first to accept that Sudan would be
partitioned. But they also felt it as a humiliation, primarily because
they were withdrawing from territory in which they had not been
defeated. They were ready to go along with the politicians as long as
the politicians were delivering---but they had come to the conclusion
they weren't. Ambushes in Abyei ... interminable talks in Doha keeping
Darfur as an open wound ... Lack of agreement on oil revenues ...'
'It has gone beyond politics,' says one of Bashir's closest aides. 'It
is about dignity.'"

In addition, Khartoum has been emboldened in these ruthless military
campaigns by the lack of any effective response from the UN, the
African Union, or international actors of consequence, including the
United States and the EU. There have been no meaningful responses to
authoritative reports of large-scale extrajudicial executions, to
satellite photography of mass gravesites, or to eyewitness accounts
(many from UN human rights investigators in June) of house-to-house
searches and roadblocks set up to kill or capture Nuba. Indiscriminate
aerial bombardment of civilians---including a growing use of
inherently inaccurate night attacks---has been repeatedly and
authoritatively chronicled, and photographed, by news organizations
and relief workers who have chosen to remain despite the dangers.
Estimates of the number of displaced range as high as 500,000; some
8,000 people have now fled to a remote region of South Sudan, and
according to the most recent UN figures, approximately 500 new
refugees are now arriving daily.

To be sure, there have been familiar and dutiful international demands
for a thorough and independent investigation of atrocity crimes in
South Kordofan, especially since a UN human rights report, with
devastating findings, was leaked in early July; but nothing has
happened, and nothing will. Demands for humanitarian access have been
greeted by Khartoum with contempt, which declares that relief
organizations, including those of the UN, "trade on human misery,"
"win … financial support in favor of their vested interests," and work
on the basis of a "hidden agenda." Instead, the regime touts its own
humanitarian organizations, especially the Sudanese Red Crescent
(SRC). It is worth recalling that SRC uniforms were worn by military
intelligence personnel in South Kordofan when, on June 20, they forced
some 7,000 civilians from UN protective custody. These civilians
remain unaccounted for and the SRC denies any knowledge of the event.

Most of this goes unacknowledged by President Obama's special envoy
for Sudan, Princeton Lyman. Instead, Lyman indulges in a facile moral
equivocation between Khartoum and its adversaries, including the
SPLA/M-N, and declares there is nothing the Obama administration is
prepared to do beyond facilitating talks and "promot[ing]
negotiations." Lyman has consistently been skeptical about the scale
of atrocities committed by Khartoum's regular and militia forces,
about the existence of mass gravesites, and about the deliberation
with which the regime attacked first Abyei (after months of
conspicuous preparation) and then South Kordofan. He is again far
behind the curve on Blue Nile.

Lyman's moral and diplomatic agnosticism has two effects: It convinces
the men in Khartoum that they will continue to suffer no consequences
for their broadening military actions and continuing denial of relief
to desperate civilians---and it convinces the SPLA/M-N that they are
on their own, and that their only hope lies in military victory and
regime change. A coalition involving rebel groups from Darfur, the
SPLA/M-N, and forces in the restive eastern provinces seems
increasingly likely; this would create a military front-line running
from eastern Chad to the Ethiopian border and up to Sudan's border
with Eritrea. The potential for spillover violence is extremely high.

U.S. diplomacy needs more than Lyman's chattering; it must be
bolstered by clear threats against Khartoum's military apparatus
itself and, in particular, its air force. As a first step, the Obama
administration should declare that all aircraft identified as
targeting civilians will be destroyed on the ground by U.S. military
assets. This minimizes the chance of collateral damage and would
quickly get the attention of the military leaders presently so willing
to lead Sudan into yet another war. It would serve, in short, to
create a de facto "no-fly zone."

The assault on Kurmuk is just beginning; it can be halted only if
Khartoum quickly comes to understand that there will be significant
consequences---from the U.S., from the EU, and from regional actors
such as Kenya, Ethiopia, and Uganda. Given the tenor of Lyman's recent
comments, there is little reason to believe Khartoum has any fears on
this score; Kurmuk could be a bloodbath.

 [Eric Reeves is a professor at Smith College and author of A Long
Day's Dying: Critical Moments in the Darfur Genocide.]

END3
______________________
John Ashworth

Sudan Advisor

[email protected]

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