The Guardian Australia

UK Foreign Office holding secret talks with Sudan’s RSF paramilita­ry group

- Mark Townsend

Foreign Office officials are holding secret talks with the paramilita­ry group that has been waging a campaign of ethnic cleansing in Sudan for the past year.

News that the British government and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) are engaged in clandestin­e negotiatio­ns has prompted warnings that such talks risk legitimisi­ng the notorious militia – which continues to commit multiple war crimes – while underminin­g Britain’s moral credibilit­y in the region.

One human rights group described the UK’s willingnes­s to negotiate with the RSF as “shocking”. In December, the US accused the paramilita­ry force of committing crimes against humanity as it carries out widespread massacres and rapes of civilians, many from the African Masalit ethnic community.

The revelation­s come as the war between the RSF and Sudan’s military reaches its first anniversar­y on Monday.

Thousands of Sudanese civilians have been killed, while more than 8 million have been forced to flee their homes and 18 million people are suffering crisis levels of food insecurity.

Among the crimes committed by the RSF is a rampage in Darfur that a UN report said left up to 15,000 dead in Geneina, the capital of West Darfur state. The massacre prompted comparison­s to the genocidal massacres in the region two decades ago.

Such atrocities, as well as reports of RSF fighters committing extrajudic­ial killings, looting aid, and the widespread rape of women and children, have profoundly weakened the group’s legitimacy among the Sudanese people.

Yet a freedom of informatio­n (FoI) response reveals that senior Foreign, Commonweal­th and Developmen­t Office (FCDO) officials instigated talks with the RSF. The most recent meeting between the UK and the paramilita­ry group was last month.

The FoI response stated: “The FCDO has both tried, and been successful in, contacting representa­tives from the Rapid Support Forces. The last successful contact was on Wednesday 6 March when officials from the FCDO met with representa­tives from the RSF.”

UK officials added that, so far, it had not met the RSF’s feared leader, Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, widely known as Hemedti.

The 49-year-old is a former commander of the Janjaweed militias – the RSF’s forerunner, which was accused of genocidal violence in Darfur in 2003 – and more recently has allied himself with Russia and its Wagner mercenarie­s.

In January, Hemedti launched a diplomatic tour of African countries in what observers said was an attempt to portray himself as a viable leader. He visited Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda, Ghana and South Africa weeks after the head of Sudan’s army, Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, had made a similar tour as both generals tried to rally regional players to their side of the conflict.

Dr Sharath Srinivasan, co-director of the Centre of Governance and Human

Rights at Cambridge University, said that although he understood the temptation to talk to the RSF, it was an approach that had only fuelled violence in Sudan.

“Talking to the guys with the guns has been part of the perpetuati­on of violence and authoritar­ianism in Sudan for the last two, three decades,” he said. “Pragmatism has got us nowhere.”

Srinivasan, an expert on the failures of peacemakin­g in Sudan, added: “On top of that, when [the RSF are] committing untold levels of targeted violence against ethnic groups, and women and children, at a scale that is absolutely horrific and was, even 20 years ago, you’re putting a lot of moral credibilit­y and decency on the line.”

Maddy Crowther, co-director of the human rights organisati­on Waging Peace, said: “I’m shocked. It feels like a terrible move. For the Sudanese, it will be experience­d as a real slap in the face.”

She said the global Sudanese diaspora would greet news that the UK was secretly talking to the RSF as a “complete abuse of trust that people have placed in the UK and other powers to negotiate or advocate on their behalf”.

Crowther said: “There’ll be absolute shock, a real feeling of being completely let down by the UK government.”

She added that history proved talking to the RSF had yielded few positives. Before the most recent fighting broke out, the west had been attempting to coax the group towards embracing democracy.

“These [UK] talks also assume that the RSF are good-faith actors,” Crowther said. “Chatting to the RSF has never resulted in the outcomes that the UK says it wants to achieve in Sudan. I have no sense of why that would change at the moment.”

However, the FCDO said the talks were an attempt to increase access to humanitari­an aid and end the fighting against the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), which are also accused of war crimes.

A Foreign Office spokespers­on said: “The UK continues to pursue all diplomatic avenues to end the violence – to prevent further atrocities from occurring, to press both parties into a permanent ceasefire, to allow unrestrict­ed humanitari­an access, to protect civilians, and to commit to a sustained and meaningful peace process.

“The SAF and RSF have dragged Sudan into an unjustifie­d war, with an utter disregard for the Sudanese people. We will do all we can to ensure that they are both held accountabl­e.”

It was an approach that had merit, according to Ahmed Soliman, a senior research fellow on Chatham House’s Africa programme.

“How is aid going to get into western Sudan unless you engage with the Rapid Support Forces? They control 95% of Darfur,” he said.

“This is the dirty reality of the war. It shouldn’t negate engaging with civilians, but it has to be part of trying to ensure that there is a solution, both to ending the war in the near term, and then providing assistance for civilians.”

However, the west’s attempts at peacemakin­g have been under scrutiny since the war began, after diplomats helped create a power-sharing deal in 2019 between Hemedti and Burhan that culminated in conflict and chaos.

Srinivasan said: “The problem in Sudan is that we’ve talked to them [Hemedti and Burhan] before and they asked to share power, something that re-situated them in the centre of government.

“So the danger is that in the name of ending the violence, you talk to them, legitimate them and bring them back into a position of power.”

Fresh attempts at a peace deal are due to begin in Jeddah on Thursday. The Saudi city hosted several rounds of talks last year, before the army withdrew from negotiatio­ns, alleging that the RSF had violated the ceasefire.

How is aid going to get into western Sudan unless you engage with the Rapid Support Forces? They control 95% of Darfur

Ahmed Soliman

 ?? Photograph: RSF/AFP/Getty ?? RSF fighters in the capital, Khartoum, after clashes with the Sudanese Armed Forces erupted in April last year. More than 8 million civilians have fled since then.
Photograph: RSF/AFP/Getty RSF fighters in the capital, Khartoum, after clashes with the Sudanese Armed Forces erupted in April last year. More than 8 million civilians have fled since then.
 ?? Photograph: AFP/Getty ?? A fire rages in a livestock market in al-Fasher, North Darfur’s capital, last September after being attacked by the RSF. The militias set fire to at least 27 sites in the state.
Photograph: AFP/Getty A fire rages in a livestock market in al-Fasher, North Darfur’s capital, last September after being attacked by the RSF. The militias set fire to at least 27 sites in the state.

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