---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "John Ashworth" <[email protected]>
Date: 27 Jan 2017 18:35
Subject: [sudans-john-ashworth] Did Sudan use chemical weapons in Darfur
last year?
To: "Group" <[email protected]>
Cc:

Did Sudan use chemical weapons in Darfur last year?

Jonathan Loeb | 7 JANUARY 2017
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

[Arabic version attached]

After nearly 14 years of war, the most recent violence to ravage the
western Sudanese region of Darfur came in the form of a large-scale
military offensive last year in the area of Jebel Marra, a
5,000-square-kilometer volcanic massif that’s home to about 1,500
villages. Ostensibly aimed at members of an armed opposition group,
the nine-month operation mostly victimized civilians, and the
government in Khartoum has been very successful in hiding these
violations. Journalists, human rights investigators, humanitarian
actors, and even international peacekeepers have been denied all
meaningful access to the area.

Yet starting last February, a month after the offensive began, Amnesty
International conducted a remote investigation and found overwhelming
evidence of war crimes and possibly crimes against humanity—of
indiscriminate bombings, the unlawful killing of civilians, the
abduction and rape of women, the looting and destruction of entire
villages, and the forced displacement of an estimated quarter-million
civilians. The probe also unearthed credible evidence that strongly
suggests Sudanese government forces used chemical weapons during their
campaign.

Since we published our report in September, Amnesty has gone on to
advocate that members of the Chemical Weapons Convention take action
regarding the chemical-warfare allegations. This is, after all, why
the treaty exists. But while a number of nations have expressed
interest in the findings, none has taken formal steps to press for
more information. This is mainly because the existing evidence has
been gathered from afar and, as a result, no physical samples could be
collected, which is admittedly not ideal. But given how the Sudanese
government has blocked access to the affected area, the lack of an
on-site investigation should be no excuse for doing nothing. Amnesty
International’s detailed information was credible enough that two
separate experts, independently of each other, have concluded that
chemical weapons were likely used in Jebel Marra. Inaction in the face
of these findings sends a terrible signal to the government of Sudan
and threatens the standing of the chemical convention itself.

Parsing the evidence. Amnesty International interviewed, by phone, 57
residents of Jebel Marra—47 civilians and 10 members of the armed
opposition group, the Abdul Wahid faction of the Sudan Liberation
Army—who provided firsthand accounts of exposure to alleged
chemical-weapons agents. Amnesty also interviewed several caregivers
who, in total, looked after several hundred survivors of the alleged
chemical attacks. These caregivers described signs they observed on
the bodies of their patients and, often, what they observed to be the
proximate cause of death. Both the survivors and the caregivers also
provided substantial photographic evidence of visible injuries.

According to these witnesses, the suspected chemical-weapons agents
were delivered by bombs and rockets, which released a noxious smoke or
gas that often changed color after it was discharged. Survivors and
caregivers described a wide variety of ailments that victims
experienced during the hours and days after exposure. These included:
severe, often bloody, vomiting and diarrhea; severe dermatological
problems such as blisters, rashes, and skin falling off; ocular
problems such as changes to eye color, bulging eyes, constant
discharge of liquid, and a reduction or total loss in vision; and
severe coughing and difficulty breathing, which often resulted in
suffocation. Extraordinarily bloody miscarriages were also commonly
reported, and numerous victims were said to be rendered unconscious by
exposure to agents. Witnesses mentioned dramatic changes to the smell
of breath as well, and to the color and smell of urine and stool, and
many victims experienced involuntary muscle contractions and seizures,
which were often fatal.

Two chemical-weapons experts, Keith Ward of George Mason University
and Jennifer Knaack of Mercer University, separately evaluated this
evidence for Amnesty International. Their analysis had certain obvious
constraints brought on by the remote nature of the investigation,
which did not permit a direct examination of victims by medical
professionals with access to modern medical technology. They had no
soil samples, weapons remnants samples, or physiological specimens
like blood or urine, which would be required to obtain definitive
proof of exposure to a chemical agent. Instead they based their
conclusions on what was available from detailed interviews with
survivors and caregivers and a small sample of photographs—often taken
days or weeks after the attack—of the visible wounds, which frequently
had been left untreated.

After analyzing environmental descriptions of the attacks, along with
photographic evidence and reported symptoms and clinical signs, and
after extensive discussions with medical doctors familiar with the
effects of chemical and biological warfare agents, both experts
determined that the wounds of these victims were not due simply to the
effects of conventional explosive or incendiary weapons of war, and
that many victims suffered injuries that can only be explained by
exposure to chemical agents delivered by weapons used in the attacks.

Some of the most telling evidence came from the testimony of the many
victims who had escaped bomb, rocket, and gun attacks without any
injuries, only to develop wounds hours or days later. These wounds
often developed on areas that were covered by clothing during the
attacks, indicating that chemical exposure occurred and that toxicity
could have come from chemicals that entered the bloodstream.
Conventional weapon injuries will not be present on clothed regions of
the body without destroying the clothing, which was not described in
any testimony.

The experts also analyzed specific details in photographs, as well as
descriptions of signs and symptoms, to determine which chemicals, or
classes of chemicals, were used in the attacks. The absence of
physical evidence made firm conclusions impossible, but both experts
independently came to the same conclusion: that clinical signs and
symptoms of many of the victims were most consistent with exposure to
a class of chemical-warfare agents called vesicants or blister agents,
which include lewisite, sulfur mustard, nitrogen mustard, and phosgene
oxime.

It is worth noting as well that both experts said many of the
observations reported were not those normally associated with exposure
to vesicants. So it is possible that victims of these attacks had been
exposed to other chemicals instead of, or in addition to, blister
agents. In addition to vesicants, for example, which might account for
long-term effects like blistering that doesn’t heal and persistent
coughs, victims could have also encountered vomiting agents, which
could account for immediate symptoms such as nausea and vomiting. The
experts considered a variety of other common chemical-warfare
agents—as well as things like white phosphorus, tear gas, and
biological toxins—but could not conclude that any of them were used.

Demanding action. In response to these findings, Amnesty International
has called on members of the Chemical Weapons Convention to press
Sudan for answers. Specifically, we have asked members of the
convention to formally request the Executive Council of the
Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, the body that
polices the chemical treaty, to obtain “clarification” from Khartoum
about the allegations. Such a request is a recommended (though not
mandatory) first step, under Article IX of the convention, that allows
any nations who have signed the treaty to request an on-site
“challenge inspection” into alleged violations by any other party
nation—a request that can only be denied if three-quarters of the
40-member Executive Council votes to overrule it.

While the government of Sudan, a signatory to the convention, has
denied the allegations and dismissed Amnesty’s report, responses by
other members has been relatively tepid. The United States and France
have publicly stated they are taking the report seriously and are
examining the evidence; other countries have made similar statements
in private. Elected officials from several countries have taken a more
forceful stance, including 32 US lawmakers who wrote to Secretary of
State John Kerry calling for Washington to request an investigation.
Still, no country has yet made the formal request.

>From a historical perspective, the reluctance to initiate an
investigation is not surprising. The standard for triggering a
challenge inspection, although technically left up to the discretion
of individual treaty members, appears to be set quite high. Since the
convention came into force in 1997, there has not once been a call for
such an inspection. For example, in response to the recent allegations
of chemical-weapons use in Syria, member states did not trigger the
investigative mechanism; rather, they launched a Joint Investigative
Mechanism between the United Nations and the Organisation for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons—an act that required a Security
Council resolution.

Based on discussions between Amnesty International and treaty members
who claim to find the report credible and are seriously examining the
possibility of asking for “clarification,” the reason for deciding not
to take any formal steps under Article IX is the absence of physical
evidence. Yet while physical evidence is undeniably necessary to
conclusively prove the use of chemical weapons, its absence is no
excuse for the lack of an investigation, especially considering the
reality of the situation unfolding in Sudan and the credibility of the
evidence already documented.

For example, the international peacekeeping mission in Darfur is
jointly mandated by the UN Security Council and the African Union
Peace and Security Council to use force to protect civilians and to
report on violations of human rights. The mission has a
status-of-forces military agreement with Khartoum entitling it to full
and unrestricted movement throughout Darfur, including the areas where
the alleged chemical-weapons attacks occurred. Yet the mission has
been unable to fulfill its mandate to protect civilians in Jebel Marra
or report on human rights violations that have taken place in the
area, including the alleged use of chemical weapons, because the
government has denied all access. Local residents who attempt to enter
or leave certain parts of Jebel Marra face grave, often fatal, risks,
as do those who attempt to report information to investigators. By
refusing to trigger the Article IX investigative mechanism, the
nations of the world are essentially rewarding the government of Sudan
for creating an environment that makes gathering physical evidence
nearly impossible.

There already exists substantial, credible evidence suggesting
widespread use of chemical weapons by Sudanese government forces
during its military offensive in Jebel Marra. This evidence should, at
the very least, prompt other nations to request that Sudan provide
formal clarification. If it does not, the international community not
only encourages the government of Sudan to violate the chemical
convention with impunity but also calls into question the credibility
of the treaty itself.

Jonathan Loeb is senior crisis adviser with Amnesty International. He
has been researching conflict in Darfur and supporting
conflict-resolution efforts for the past decade.

http://thebulletin.org/did-sudan-use-chemical-weapons-darfur-last-year10402

END
______________________
John Ashworth

[email protected]

+254 725 926 297 (Kenya mobile)
+211 919 695 362 (South Sudan mobile)
+44 787 976 8030 (UK mobile)
+88 216 4334 0735 (Thuraya satphone)
Skype: jashworth1

PO Box 52002 - 00200, Nairobi, Kenya

This is a personal e-mail address and the contents do not necessarily
reflect the views of any organisation

--
--
The content of this message does not necessarily reflect John Ashworth's
views. Unless explicitly stated otherwise, John Ashworth is not the author
of the content and the source is always cited.

You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
"sudan-john-ashworth" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to sudan-john-ashworth-
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.co.za/
group/sudan-john-ashworth
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
"sudans-john-ashworth" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an
email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/sudans-john-ashworth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

-- 
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/d/forum/southsudankob
View this message at 
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/southsudankob/topic-id/message-id
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"South Sudan Info - The Kob" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/SouthSudanKob.
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/SouthSudanKob/CAJb14oo9JguosCDv77hKSTbA4r1Mq2JXdh5M02wQU%3Dcf%3Drht6w%40mail.gmail.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Attachment: هل استخدم السودان السلاح الكيميائي في دارفور في العام الماضي؟.doc
Description: MS-Word document

Reply via email to