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SPLA
Offensive Overwhelms Muslim Forces
A
series of co-ordinated military assaults launched by the
Sudan Peoples Liberation Army (SPLA) in March has succeeded
in capturing 24 garrison towns previously held by the National
Islamic Front (NIF) government forces. The spectacularly
swift offensive swept all opposition aside and killed, wounded
or captured a total of 16 000 enemy soldiers. By the end
of March the strategic towns of Kaya, Yei, Lainya and Kajokeji
had been captured by the victorious SPLA forces.
The
entire border with Uganda is now effectively under SPLA
control (as is the Zaire, Kenyan and Ethiopian borders with
Sudan). The SPLAs dramatic new offensive has, therefore,
broken the stranglehold of the NIF blockade on Western Equatoria
and opened the road for relief supplies to be driven through
Uganda into Western Equatoria. The SPLA is now also able
to link its liberated territories in Eastern Equatoria to
Western Equatoria and onto Bahr El Ghazal.
The
SPLA offensive began at the end of the dry season, in March,
with co-ordinated attacks on Government of Sudan (GOS) garrisons
between Kaya (on the Ugandan border) and Yei (the heart
of the agricultural belt) in central Equatoria. Just four
days later, by 12 March, the SPLA had routed the GOS forces
and captured seven GOS garrisons (at Kaya, Bazi, Morobo,
Gumini, Limbe, Loka and Yei).
The
scale and ferociousness of the SPLA offensive clearly took
the NIF regime by surprise. Five days into the offensive
and three days after the capture of Yei, the GOS was persisting
in promoting the propaganda that they were warding off an
invasion by Ugandan troops at Kaya, but no mention
had been made of the SPLA offensive. The GOS vigorously
denied that the strategic town of Yei had been captured.
The garrison town of Yei was considered so important by
the GOS that it was reputed to have had an even larger defensive
force than the Southern capital of Juba.
The
refusal by the NIF regime to acknowledge that they had lost
Yei led to another catastrophic defeat for the GOS. The
fleeing GOS garrison from Morobo was informed by radio that
Yei was secure and that they needed to break through the
SPLA siege of the town. Nearly one thousand GOS troops were
killed and a further thousand were taken prisoner by the
SPLA in an intensely fierce battle south of Yei as the fleeing
GOS force tried desperately to fight their way through to
the Yei garrison which no longer existed.
The
SPLA captured a vast quantity of equipment from the GOS
forces. Seventeen tanks were captured intact at Yei along
with an anti-aircraft battery. An Antonov bomber which was
sent to bomb Yei was later shot down by this AA battery.
The high flying Antonov exploded in mid air.
When
finally the GOS admitted that they had lost radio
contact with their garrison in Yei, the NIF leader,
Lt. Gen Omar Hassan Ahmad Al Bashir, sought to draw attention
away from their humiliating defeat at Yei by claiming that
Lainya was his chosen line of defence for Juba. Lainya was
so heavily fortified that Gen. Al-Bashir even issued a public
challenge on TV and radio daring the SPLA to try to take
Lainya. However, as he left the TV studios, Al-Bashir was
informed that Lainya had already fallen to the SPLA. Lainya
had fallen after only a 5 hour battle! The visibly shaken
dictator then ordered that all remaining garrisons outside
Juba should withdraw into the town itself for the defence
of the Southern capital and its air base.
The
effect of the news of the unbroken series of SPLA victories
was devastating upon the GOS garrisons. As the last remaining
garrison town of Kajokeji was surrounded, GOS troops began
to desert in large numbers. When the GOS garrison began
its retreat to Juba, it was ambushed and captured along
with all their weapons, supplies and equipment. Predictably,
the GOS continued to try to cover up yet another catastrophic
defeat with another tissue of lies. The official statement
from Khartoum claimed that their tactical withdrawal
from Kajokeji was successful and all had reached Juba safely.
The fall of Kajokeji on 24 March brought to 19 the number
of GOS garrisons captured by the SPLA in Central Equatoria
since 9 March.
In
less than three weeks, the entire military situation had
shifted. Now it was not the SPLA controlled Western Equatoria
which was being besieged, but the GOS controlled Southern
capital of Juba! At the time of writing this report, the
SPLA forces were a mere 40 kilometres from Juba and a wave
of panic was sweeping through Juba. Morale amongst the GOS
troops hit an all time low. Reportedly, many GOS troops
simply threw down their weapons and ran or surrendered at
the beginning of any firefight.
To
compensate for their crushing losses in Equatoria, the GOS
mobilised a massive mechanised column in the Upper Nile
to capture Maban and Shali on 15 March. To celebrate this
victory, the NIF regime announced that a million men would
march on the streets of Khartoum to celebrate this great
victory. Interestingly, when the SPLA had initially captured
Maban two months previously, the GOS radio had informed
the public that no such garrison post existed and Maban
was merely the name of one of the small tribes living in
Upper Nile. By March 15, it had been officially converted
into a strategically important town. The mass demonstration
in Khartoum, however, failed to materialise.
In
fact, the GOS consolation in taking Maban and Shali proved
to be rather embarrassingly short lived. On 19 March the
SPLA retook both of the towns, captured the garrisons and
seized all of the equipment and supplies which had been
brought in by the GOS forces. The Commander in Chief of
the SPLA, Dr John Garang, reportedly observed that the NIF
regime had now taken upon itself the task of re-supplying
the SPLA. Another leader quipped that Al-Bashir was now
acting as quartermaster-general for the SPLA!
Presumably
now that the GOS have once again lost Maban, it will be
returned to its previous inconsequential status.
By
the end of March, over 16 000 GOS soldiers had been either
killed, wounded or captured and Amadi, Lui, Lazoti and Jambo
had also been captured by the SPLA. The strategic equilibrium
in this war between the Muslim Arab North and the mainly
Christian Black South had dramatically changed with the
initiative having been decisively seized by the SPLA.
In
that time a present will be brought to the Lord of hosts
from a people tall and smooth of skin, and from a people
terrible from their beginning onward, a nation powerful
and treading down, whose land the rivers divide . . .
Isaiah 18:7
Related Resources:-
Terrorism
and Persecution (video)
Sudan,
the Hidden Holocaust (video)
Faith under
Fire in Sudan (book)
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