Beware Human Rights Fundamentalism!
MAHMOOD MAMDANI:COMMENT - Mar 20 2009 09:24
When former South African president Thabo Mbeki makes the African case for a 
postponement of the International Criminal Court's (ICC) indictment of 
President Omar al-Bashir of Sudan, what can he say with dignity and foresight?

To begin with, he should remind his audience that nowhere in the world have 
rights existed outside an enabling political context. No democracy enforces a 
fixed standard of rights regardless of the country's political context. Few can 
forget how the Bush administration diluted the Bill of Rights in the interest 
of pursuing Homeland Security. In the relation between law and politics, 
politics is always paramount. Precisely because the struggle for rights is a 
political struggle, enforcers of rights -- and not just its violators -- need 
to be held politically accountable lest they turn rights enforcement into a 
private vendetta.

Mbeki can then share with his audience the lessons Africans have learned in the 
struggle for peace and justice over the past several decades. Contrary to what 
many think, this lesson is not that there needs to be a trade-off between peace 
and justice. The real trade-off is between different forms of justice. This 
became evident with the settlement to end apartheid. That settlement was 
possible because the political leadership of the anti-apartheid struggle 
prioritised political justice over criminal justice. The rationale was simple: 
where there was no victor, one would need the cooperation of the very leaders 
who would otherwise be charged with war crimes to end the fighting and initiate 
political reforms. The essence of Kempton Park can be summed up in a single 
phrase: forgive but do not forget. Forgive all past crimes -- in plain words, 
immunity from prosecution -- provided both sides agree to change the rules to 
assure political justice for the
 living.

The South African lesson has guided African practice in other difficult 
situations. In Mozambique Renamo sits in Parliament instead of in jail or in 
the dock. In South Sudan, too, there would have been neither peace nor a reform 
of the political system without an agreement not to pursue criminal justice. 
Why not in Darfur?

Mbeki would also be well advised to keep in mind that in the court of public 
opinion -- unlike in a court of law -- the accused is considered guilty until 
proven innocent.

The public needs to be reminded that when the justices of the ICC granted the 
prosecutor's application for a warrant to arrest the president of Sudan, they 
were not issuing a verdict of guilty. The justices were not meant to assess the 
facts put before them by the prosecutor, but to ask a different question: if 
those facts were assumed to be true, would the president of Sudan have a case 
to answer? Unlike court, which took the facts for granted at the pre-trial 
stage, we need to ask: to what extent are these facts true? And, to the extent 
they are true, are they the whole truth?

The prosecutor's case
The prosecutor's application charged President al-Bashir with (a) polarising 
Darfuri tribes into two races (Arab and Zurga or Black), (b) waging a violent 
conflict (2003-2005) leading to the ethnic cleansing of Zurga ethnic groups 
from their traditional tribal lands, and (c) and planning the malnutrition, 
rape and torture of internally displaced persons (IDPs) so as to "slow death" 
in the camps -- a process that the prosecutor claimed went on from 2003 to the 
time the application was submitted in 2008.

The racialisation of identities in Darfur had its roots in the British colonial 
period. As early as the late 1920s, the British tried to organise two 
confederations in Darfur: one "Arab", the other "Zurga" or black. Racialised 
identities were incorporated in the census and provided the frame for 
government policy and administration. In spite of official policy, Arabs never 
constituted a single racial group. Contemporary scholarship has shown that the 
Arab tribes of Sudan were not migrants from the Middle East but indigenous 
groups that became Arabs starting in the 18th century. This is why there can be 
no single history of Arab tribes of Sudan. Little unites privileged sedentary 
tribes of riverine Sudan and impoverished nomads of Western Sudan. Unlike the 
Arabs of riverine north, who have tended to identify with power, the Arabs of 
Darfur are the most marginalised group in a marginalised province.

The largest of the Arab tribes in Darfur, the cattle nomads of the south, were 
never involved in the government-organised counterinsurgency. Those involved -- 
the camel nomads of the north and refugees from Chad -- were from among the 
poorest of the poor. The idea that the Arabs of Darfur were part of a single 
cohesive "Arab" bloc facing "black Africans" is a recent invention driven 
mainly by an external media, and now by the ICC. Its main effect has been to 
demonise "Arabs" and to obscure the real causes of the conflict.


Who, then, has been fighting whom in Darfur, and why? The short answer is that 
this has been a conflict over land, triggered by four different but related 
causes: the land system, environmental degradation, the spillover of the four 
decade-long civil war in Chad and the brutal counterinsurgency waged by the 
al-Bashir government in 2003 and 2004.



The deep cause was the colonial system, which reorganised Darfur as a 
discriminatory patchwork of tribal homeland where settled peasant tribes were 
granted large homelands in which they were considered natives. In contrast, 
camel nomads with no settled villages found themselves without a homeland and 
so were not acknowledged as natives anywhere. When it came to granting access 
to land, participating in local administration and the resolution of local 
disputes, homeland administrations favoured so-called native over non-native 
tribes.


The second cause of the conflict was desertification. Studies from the United 
Nations Environment Programme show that the Sahara expanded by 100km in four 
decades, and that this process reached its high point in the mid-1980s, pushing 
all tribes of North Darfur to more fertile lands further south. The resulting 
land conflict was not between races, Arab and Zurga, but between tribes with 
homelands and those without. Contemporary observers such as the Darfuri 
anthropologist Sharif Harir traced the unprecedented brutality of the violence 
in the 1987-1989 war to the fact that sheer survival was at stake.


The third was the Cold War, with its two sides -- the tripartite alliance of 
Reaganite United States, France and Israel on the one hand, and Libya backed up 
by the Soviet Union on the other -- arming different factions in neighbouring 
Chad. As successive armed groups took turns ruling Chad, opposition groups took 
shelter in Darfur, where they mobilised and armed. The easy availability of 
arms rapidly militarised the inter-tribal conflict in Darfur. Regional and 
international powers got involved in the Darfur conflict long before the 
Khartoum government did, but no one reading the prosecutor's application would 
be aware of this fact.


The final cause that aggravated the land conflict in Darfur was the brutal 
counterinsurgency unleashed by the al-Bashir regime in 2003 to 2004 in response 
to an insurgency led by three major tribes in the region: the Fur, the Masalit 
and the Zaghawa.


Four wrong assumptions
The prosecutor's application makes four erroneous assumptions, all of them so 
he can pin the full blame of the violence on al-Bashir. This is how the 
prosecutor put it to journalists at The Hague: "What happened in Darfur is a 
consequence of al-Bashir's will."

The first error is to identify the duration of the conflict in Darfur with the 
presidency of al-Bashir. Yet, the conflict in Darfur began as a civil war in 
1987, before al-Bashir and his group came to power, and long before the cycle 
of insurgency and counterinsurgency that began in 2003. The civil war has 
become entangled with the counterinsurgency, though they have separate causes. 
Whereas the insurgency was a rebel challenge to power in Khartoum, the civil 
war was triggered by the effects of drought and desertification, and 
intensified by two factors, one internal, the other external, one the failure 
to reform the system of tribal homelands and the other an effect of the ongoing 
civil war in Chad.

The second error is to assume that excess deaths in Darfur are the result of a 
single cause: violence. But the fact is that there have been two separate if 
interconnected causes: drought and desertification on the one hand, and direct 
violence on the other. World Health Organisation sources -- considered the most 
reliable source of mortality statistics by the US Government Accountability 
Office in its 2006 evaluation -- trace these deaths to two major causes: about 
70% to 80% to drought-related diarrhoea and 20% to 30% to direct violence.

The third error is to assume a single author of violent deaths and rape. In his 
eagerness to make the prosecution's case, Moreno-Ocampo not only obscured the 
origins of the violence in Darfur, he also went on to portray life in the 
internally displaced persons camps in Darfur as a contemporary version of life 
in Nazi concentration camps in Europe, with al-Bashir cast in the role of the 
Führer. At the press conference announcing the case against the president of 
Sudan, the prosecutor said: "Al-Bashir organised the destitution, insecurity 
and harassment of the survivors. He did not need bullets. He used other 
weapons: rape, hunger and fear. As efficient, but silent."

To be sure, there were ongoing incidents of rape in Darfur, as there are indeed 
in most conflict situations where armed young men confront unarmed young women. 
This much was recognised by the US special envoy to Sudan, Andrew S Natsios, in 
his testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on April 11 2007: 
"The government has lost control of large parts of the province now. And some 
of the rapes, by the way, that are going on are by rebels raping women in their 
own tribes. We know in one of the refugee camps, it's now controlled by the 
rebels, formally. There have been terrible atrocities committed by the rebels 
against the people in the camps."

Rebels, like government soldiers and the paramilitary Janjaweed, have authored 
both rape and the killing of civilians. Take figures newly released by the 
United Nations-African Union Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) in Khartoum. UNAMID, 
which keeps a count of each individual death, including its circumstance, 
calculates the total number of conflict-related civilian deaths in the year 
2008 at 1 520. Of these, 600 are said to be the result of conflicts over 
grazing lands among Arab tribes. When it comes to the remaining 920, UNAMID 
says that more civilians were killed by rebel movements than by 
government-organised counterinsurgency forces.

The fourth erroneous assumption is that the situation has not changed in Darfur 
since the onset of the counterinsurgency in 2003. In Moreno-Ocampo's own words: 
"In April 2008, the United Nations estimated the total number of deaths since 
2003 at 300 000." This estimate came from John Holmes, UN under-secretary 
general for humanitarian affairs. This is how Holmes put it in the first place: 
"A study in 2006 suggested that 200 000 had lost their lives from the combined 
effect of the conflict. That figure must be much higher now, perhaps half as 
much again." There are two qualifications here, and Moreno-Ocampo glossed over 
both. The first was that these mortality figures were said to be the result of 
"a combined effect", referring to direct violence and drought. The second 
qualification was explained by Reuters: "United Nations cautioned reporters 
that the number was not a scientific estimate but a 'reasonable 
extrapolation'." The assumption underlying the
 extrapolation -- that the level of mortality has not changed in Darfur from 
2003 on -- was contradicted by the UN's own technical staff in Sudan. As Julie 
Flint explained in the New York Times of July 6 2007 and the Independent 
(London) of July 31 2007, UN sources spoke of a sharp drop in mortality rates 
in Darfur from early 2005, so much so that these sources report mortality 
estimates had dipped to as low as below 200 per month, lower than the number 
that would constitute an emergency.

That the ICC has politicised the issue of justice is no reason to sidestep the 
question of accountability. The kernel of truth in the prosecutor's application 
concerns 2003-04, when Darfur was the site of mass deaths. This was mass 
murder, but not genocide. Its authors were several, not just the government of 
Sudan. There is no doubt that the perpetrators of violence should be held 
accountable, but when and how is a political decision that cannot belong to the 
ICC prosecutor. More than the innocence or guilt of the president of Sudan, it 
is the relationship between law and politics -- including the politicisation of 
the ICC -- that poses an issue of greater concern to Africa.

The debate has hitherto focused on the need to have the same rules for all war 
criminals, regardless of national origin or political orientation. Only then 
can the rules claim to be just, so that justice may act as deterrence. If, 
however, justice masquerades as selective punishment, only to those who dare 
transgress American power, critics have pointed out that the exercise will not 
be a deterrent to potential war criminals, but only to those who dare challenge 
American power.

I have suggested that the more important question is that of the larger 
political consequences of a fundamentalist pursuit of criminal justice by those 
determined to enforce criminal justice regardless of its political context or 
consequence. Take one example. If the ICC were to have the political will and 
courage to try war criminals in the US War on Terror, we can say with 
confidence that the American political system is strong enough to contain its 
political fallout. There is little chance of "red states" going to war against 
"blue states". But can one say with any confidence that the price of 
single-mindedly pursuing criminal justice in Sudan will not be a renewed civil 
war? Such a fundamentalist pursuit should be named vengeance, not justice. This 
is why we need to subordinate criminal accountability to a larger pursuit, that 
for political reform.

Mahmood Mamdani is Herbert Lehman Professor of Government Columbia University
 

Source: Mail & Guardian Online

Web Address: 
http://www.mg.co.za/article/2009-03-20-beware-human-rights-fundamentalism




      

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