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Jihad
and Slavery in Sudan
The
longest war of this centuary is still in progress and is
intensifying - in the largest country in Africa, Sudan.
The Muslim Arab North has been attacking the Christians
in the Black South. The death toll since 1955 is estimated
at 2 million.
The atrocities have been the most severe in the Nuba Mountains.
Most of the villages and churches have been destroyed, hundreds
of Christians crucified, and over one million people have
been forced into concentration camps. Christian soldiers,
who are literally fighting for their lives, point out that
the Christians in Sudan have a heritage of standing firm
as a bulwark against the expansion of militant Islam into
Central Africa - for 14 centuries.
The
Nuba - A Nation at Risk
The Nuba mountains lie in the centre of Sudan, covering
about 30 000 square miles in South Kordofan. The rocky mountains
rise sharply 500 to 1 000 metres above the surrounding clay
plains. The land - some of it forested and some farmed -
is amongst the most fertile land in Sudan. That is both
a blessing and a curse to the Nuba.
The
Nuba are a cluster of 50 ethnic groups estimated to number
1 200 000 people. There is more linguistic diversity within
the Nuba than in the rest of Sudan combined. The Nuba possess
a wide cultural diversity - all of which share a love of
music and dancing. Many of the tribes are also known for
their body painting, elaborate scarification, wrestling
and stick fighting. Most of the Nuba are farmers cultivating
the hills in elaborate terraces or the clay plains. Their
main crops are sorghum, beans and sesame.
Over
the centuries many powerful states have raided the Nuba
for slaves. The Nuba retreated to the mountains in order
to better resist external invaders. They successfully resisted
the Turko-Egyptian armies and the Mahdi's forces. The Nuba
also resisted the British vigorously. Between 1900 and 1945
there were over 30 uprisings and rebellions in the Nuba
mountains. The first aerial bombardments of the Nuba were
carried out on 4 Feb. 1926 at Tima and Julud.
Some
of the Nuba date their Christianity back to the early centuries.
Modern Christian missionary activity began in the Nuba in
1874 with some groups such as the Kawalib and Otoro embracing
Christianity. While the mystical Sufi sect of Islam has
spread widely amongst the Nuba, Christianity has also been
on the increase. Christianity has become very attractive
to the Nuba youth in particular - precisely because it has
been opposed by the government!
Church
Burning
The Muslim government began their campaign of church burning
in the Nuba in August 1985. The church at Um Derdu was destroyed
and 4 Christians killed. The most prominent Christian village,
Lubi, was burned down in July 1988. The destruction of churches
has become so commonplace that people interviewed by an
African Rights delegation seldom even mentioned it. When
asked if their church was burned during any specific attack
the answer always was "Of course!".
The leaders of the Episcopal Church in the Nuba Mountains
reported to a CSI delegation in April 1996 that the Government
of Sudan (GOS) troops had burned down 26 Episcopal Churches
during the past years. At the beginning of 1996 the churches
in Toror and Berera were also razed to the ground. Five
Episcopal clergymen had been murdered by the GOS forces:
Rev Koko from Heiban, Rev Haroun Fadil, Rev John Fadil,
Rev Bolis Al Marcus and Rev Anyarko El Haraba from Omdurain.
There still remained 7 Episcopalian pastors and 72 churches
in the SPLA controlled areas of the Nuba Mountains.
A
leader of the Evangelical Church reported that his church,
with 2 000 members, has no ordained clergy left in the Nuba
Mountains. Two Evangelical catechists, Kamal in Dere and
Kabugi in Agar El Ful have been executed by the GOS. The
church was also without Bibles.
Gun
Control Precedes Genocide
One Christian leader described the process leading up to
the wholesale destruction of church buildings and slaughter
of Christians:
"In 1985 we were told to register our arms so we could
be given ammunition. But it was a trick. All the ammunition
was given to the Arabs. And in 1987 the government came
and confiscated all the rifles."
From
1985 the military council began to arm the Baggaras (literally
"cattle people") - Arab Muslims who live in the
Nuba area. This seemed to be a charter for the Arab nomads
to become more aggressive and violent towards the Nuba.
Sudden attacks, theft of cattle and abductions of the Nuba
escalated. A Muslim force called the Murahaliin began to
forcibly disarm the Nuba population, stealing as many cows
as possible in the process.
One
Christian described the process:
"They had modern guns. We had old guns, marmatons,
but we still chased them. The Arabs left and brought the
army, and armed themselves more. The government began to
attack us and continued attacking us. The problems never
stopped."
Resistance
In 1986 a tiny "Jebels Task Force" entered the
Nuba to recruit for the Sudanese Peoples Liberation Army
(SPLA). The harsh oppression of the Arabs led many Nuba
to join the SPLA. In 1987 the first SPLA fighting force
- the "Volcano Battalion" entered the Nuba mountains.
They won several important battles and secured a substantial
area. Nuba youth flocked to join the SPLA and in 1989 the
"New Cush Division" (six battalions of freshly
trained new recruits) were mobilised in the Nuba.
The systematic violence of the Muslim government against
the Nuba had forced many to turn to the SPLA for protection.
After the 1989 coup, the extremist National Islamic Front
(NIF) government unleashed a ferocious scorched earth campaign.
In February 1990 the government called all the chiefs to
assemble at Lagowa. All the 14 chiefs who came were arrested,
bound, and shot by the GOS.

Frontline
Fellowship conducts chaplaincy services amongst SPLA
soldiers |
In
1992 the GOS declared that Jihad (Holy War) officially
existed against the Nuba. Iranian military advisors
flew in to assist in the training and deployment of
the Mujahidiin. First they instituted a vicious purge
within the army, removing all officers who were not
considered supportive. Then they unleashed an unprecedentedly
large military offensive against the Nuba.
Helicopter
gunships, MIG-23 fighter bombers and Antonov aircraft
began the aerial bombardment of market places and villages.
A massive ground assault on Jebel Tullishi was repeatedly
repelled by the SPLA and finally the GOS forces withdrew.
Forced
Removals
A
massive campaign of forced removals was then launched.
Hundreds of thousands of Nuba people were forced at
gunpoint to abandon their villages - which were burnt
- and they were marched to concentration camps (euphemistically
called "peace camps"). These unfortunate people
suffered dreadful hardships without adequate food or
medical care over the long forced marches and in the
camps where they were finally dumped. |
Military
Stalemate
By the middle of 1992, the SPLA and the GOS had fought
one another to a standstill. The SPLA had repeatedly
repulsed the largest series of offensives ever mounted
by the GOS. However, the massive deployment of GOS forces
had also halted the expansion of the SPLA. The Jihad
was not abandoned, however, never again did the GOS
attempt such massive conventional military assaults.
They had lost too many soldiers and such a vast amount
of weaponry had fallen into the hands of the SPLA.
For their part the SPLA also had their own problems,
mainly due to the August 1991 split in the SPLA where
much of the Upper Nile had defected to the Machar/Nasir
(SSIM) faction. This cut off the SPLA supply routes
to the Nuba. Resupply now had to take the much longer
and more hazardous route through Bahr-el-Ghazal. One
expedition through this waterless wasteland ended in
disaster when half of the 400 men died of thirst. During
the rainy season another such supply column lost a hundred
men drowned in floods. |

Peter
ministering with SPLA soldiers.
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Scorched
Earth
In February 1993 the worst massacre occurred when the Muslims
attacked el Abyad. Over 1 900 civilians were massacred,
12 000 cows were stolen and the village and crops were burned
down.
From late 1993, however, the sheer scale of human suffering
had exhausted all concerned. There were no more frontal
assaults on SPLA positions and there were fewer large massacres.
The vicious "ethnic cleansing" of 1992 had been
modified to the "tamshit" - "combing"
- strategy of depopulating the rebel controlled areas by
scorched earth and forced removals ("draining the sea
to catch the fish" as one put it). Everything necessary
to sustain life was destroyed or removed. "Pseudo-
guerillas" were also infiltrated for arson, assassination
and abduction.
A
CSI delegation to the Nuba in April 1996 documented the
destruction of three villages: Toror, Teberi and Tendri.
The attacks were at midday and were supported by heavy bombardments
with artillery and aircraft. As the civilians fled the bombardments,
the GOS troops arrived in 8 trucks (3 of them with mounted
machine guns) and 1 tank. One eye-witness, Noah, gave this
account: "The enemy first came to Toror, shelling
with heavy artillery and then shelled our village, terrorising
the people to flee. When they reached the stream, they opened
fire intensively and the grass began to catch fire. Some
advanced to the market, others remained stationed behind
trees or in the river bed, so they surrounded the whole
village. The tank patrolled around. They took our food and
burnt what they could not take. They slaughtered the goats,
leaving them as carcasses."

SPLA
soldiers studying God's Word
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Another
victim, Isaac, described what happened:
"When we heard the enemy coming, we scattered
our belongings before escaping. But the enemy collected
them and burnt everything: All our 4 granaries, all
our 12 sacks of maize . . . the whole village was ablaze.
We have no food left. But the neighbouring communities
are giving us food. We cannot, we will not move away.
This is our village. We are rebuilding before the rainy
season starts. We know the intention of the GOS: they
want us to go to their Peace Camps. But we will not
go. I will stay and rebuild my home and fight if they
come again!"
The
GOS is now pursuing a policy of avoiding military
engagements with the SPLA guerrillas. It concentrates
all its efforts on attacking defenceless villages
and kidnapping, or killing, unarmed civilians. Under
the name "combing", the GOS army
are engaging in the systematic destruction of all
villages. Furniture, clothes and household goods are
looted. Livestock is stolen. Whatever cannot be carried
away is destroyed. Many people have been killed or
injured in "combing" operations.
The GOS forces kill with complete impunity. Old or
disabled people who cannot run away are generally
shot or burned to death with the village.
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"Peace
Camps"
Central to the GOS strategy is attracting international
assistance to the garrison towns and "peace camps".
Since the war began there have been no humanitarian programmes
in the SPLA held areas. In contrast, since 1993, some international
relief agencies began operating in Kadugli and other government
held towns, enticing the Nuba people to leave the liberated
areas and surrender themselves to be interned in the concentration
camps.
In these camps an aggressive Islamisation and Arabisation
indoctrination campaign seeks to force inmates to convert
to Islam. Children as young as twelve - though most are
fifteen or over - are forcibly conscripted into the Popular
Defence Force (PDF). The "Peace Camps" are also
used as labour camps - providing a pool of slave labour
for the government "communal " farms and
military projects. Christians have been warned not to gather
for prayer or worship. "If you pray again - you
will be killed" is the common threat. Those who
attempt to escape have been subjected to a whole range of
penalties from confiscation of all property, including clothes,
to torture and summary execution.
The
entire "Peace camp" programme is dominated
by the objective of converting the internees to Islam and
the Arab culture. The only schools allowed are Khalwas (Quranic
schools).
The
GOS strategy is to depopulate the rural areas and provide
a captive civilian population in their concentration camps.
At present there are an estimated 200 000 Nuba in the SPLA
"liberated areas" and about 1 million under GOS
control in the "peace camps". These are
concentration camps in the truest sense of the word: the
rural population has been forcibly concentrated in these
camps to control their movements, to provide a captive population
for indoctrination, forced acculturation, forced labour
and conscription.
A
central component of the genocide is the Sudan government's
policy of mass rape. Every Nuba woman who has been in a
"peace camp" has either been raped or threatened
with rape. Girls as young as 9 years old have been raped
- with the soldiers justifying this child abuse from the
Hadith - that Mohammed had married Aisha at 9 years old!
Woman have been raped as they were abducted, gang raped
on arrival at garrisons and repeatedly raped in "peace
camps" or labour camps, or forcibly "married"
to Muslim soldiers for the duration of their tours of duty.
The aim of this sexual and slavery policy has been to destroy
the social fabric of Nuba society.
Cut
of from Aid
Another component of GOS policy is the strict blockade of
SPLA areas. No trade is permitted and no relief agencies
have operated there. So far the United Nations and other
humanitarian agencies have failed to effectively challenge
this exclusion.
When cease-fires have been called in the South the war has
always carried on relentlessly in the Nuba Mountains.
So
far this year Frontline missionaries have managed to smuggle
over 500 Arabic Bibles into the Nuba Mountains. Many more
are needed along with medicines, clothing and blankets.
The
exceptionally severe human suffering, human rights abuses
and persecution of Christian communities in the Nuba mountains
must be the very worst experienced anywhere in the world
today. At this critical time the Nuba need the prayers,
solidarity, and practical support of Christians worldwide.
"Is
it nothing to you all you who pass by?" Lamentations
1:12
Dr
Peter Hammond
For
further documentation of the incredible atrocities perpetrated
against the Nuba write to: African Rights, 11 Marshalsea
Road, London SE1 1EP, England (or Fax: 44-171-717-1240)
and purchase a copy of their book "Facing Genocide:
The Nuba People of Sudan".
Related Resources:-
Terrorism
and Persecution (video)
Sudan,
the Hidden Holocaust (video)
Faith under
Fire in Sudan (book)
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