Stabroek News Sunday

Arab fighters killed babies, boys and men in war on Sudan tribe, mothers allege

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(Reuters) The Arab militiamen were hunting for boys that day. That’s how they found 2-year-old Ibrahim Saleh.

Ibrahim, his baby sister and their mother, Safaa Abdel Karim, were on the run in June, fleeing a weeks-long massacre in the Sudanese city of El Geneina. Arab militiamen had shot, stabbed and burned to death members of their tribe, the darker-skinned Masalit people.

Abdel Karim’s husband was among the dead. Along with dozens of women and children, she and her kids were trying to make it to safety in neighborin­g Chad. They almost did.

About 10 kilometers from the border, she said, Arab paramilita­ry forces and militiamen stopped them and ordered her to hand over Ibrahim. They looked inside his clothes to inspect his sex, then set him down and began bashing his head and body with wooden rods.

“He was crying, mama, mama,” Abdel Karim said. When she tried to rescue him, one of the men shot her below the shoulder, she said, leaving a scar from the wound. “I kept screaming to leave my son. Don’t kill my son.”

The men kept striking Ibrahim. “You zurga won’t stay in El Geneina,” the men shouted, using a racist term for darker-skinned people like the Masalit. “They said if the boy grows up, he will fight us.”

Bleeding from her wound and with her daughter in her arms, Abdel Karim said she kept trying to stop the attack on Ibrahim. But the men continued beating him until he lay dead.

Abdel Karim was one of more than 40 mothers who described to Reuters how their children, mostly boys, were killed by Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilita­ry and its allied Arab militias during an ethnically targeted killing campaign this year in and around the West Darfur capital of El Geneina.

Her son and the other children were all part of the Masalit tribe, which was a majority in El Geneina until the RSF and Arab militias forced them out. Around half a million people, mostly Masalit, have left for Chad as a result of the violence.

Thousands have died in the attacks. The dead include women and girls. Masalit women also have described enduring sexual assault at the hands of the Arab-dominated RSF and its allies, as Reuters detailed last month.

But in the killing sprees, witnesses say, Arab forces have specifical­ly targeted males for death, from infants to adults.

Thirty-six of the mothers told Reuters their children were shot from close range, 33 of them boys and eight girls. Six of the mothers said they watched as their children, some as young as six months old, were beaten to death by RSF and Arab militia fighters. Five of the six children killed this way were boys.

The killers used knives, too: Ten people who escaped to Chad told Reuters they saw children having their throats slit. All were boys.

Most of these children were killed as they fled with their mothers from El Geneina. En route to Chad, five survivors described seeing militiamen stop women with babies, check the child’s sex, and kill it if it turned out to be a boy.

Masalit men were also hunted down by the RSF and its allies. In the most recent round of violence in El Geneina in early November, Reuters revealed that hundreds of young Masalit men were rounded up and taken to various locations in the city where eyewitness­es said some of them were executed.

More than 30 women interviewe­d for this report said their husbands, brothers or fathers were killed or went missing in this year’s attacks. Several women said they hid their brothers or smuggled them out of El Geneina for fear they would be targeted. Dozens of men recounted how they cut through valleys and traveled along remote routes to Chad to evade checkpoint­s set up by the RSF and Arab militias.

Reuters was unable to independen­tly corroborat­e the details of some accounts. In some cases, friends and neighbors confirmed elements of the survivors’ stories. Common patterns also emerged from the descriptio­ns of the violence given by survivors. For some people, Reuters was able to review registrati­on cards issued for

refugees by the United Nations.

U.N. workers in Chad have so far collected demographi­c data on more than a quarter of the 484,000 refugees who have fled Sudan this year and now reside in camps along the border. Based on this data, the U.N. estimates nearly twice as many adult females as males have crossed the border. Despite the targeting of males, the gap is less pronounced among children, where there is almost parity between the number of boys and girls.

Several mothers of slain children, as well as other witnesses, said the militiamen made clear why they were targeting Masalit boys: They wanted to be sure the children wouldn’t grow up to be fighters and one day seek revenge for the attacks on the Masalit.

Aziza Adam Mohammed, 28, said her six-month-old son was shot and killed on June 14 as they fled to Chad with a group of other refugees. When Arab militiamen confronted the group, she said, “They shouted: Shoot, shoot the boys.”

“I heard them saying that the boys will grow up and they will kill us,” she said. “So we must destroy them now.”

A Trail of Blood and Fear

The escape route taken by hundreds of thousands of Masalit in fleeing Sudan. Arab forces specifical­ly hunted down and killed male infants, boys and adults along the way, dozens of survivors told Reuters.

Ana Scattone, an emergency protection officer at the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees in the Chadian border town of Adre, said the targeting of males also has a more far-reaching goal. “The objective of the killings seems to be the eliminatio­n of future fighters as well as the line of ancestry of a specific ethnic group,” Scattone said.

Masoud Mohammed Youssef, the coordinato­r of an umbrella group that represents some of the Arab tribes in El Geneina, said the Masalit are “fabricatin­g” stories to sway public opinion. The accusation that Arab militias and the RSF targeted male Masalit children and adults was “baseless,” he said.

The only Masalit who “were killed in the fighting in El Geneina,” he added, were armed fighters. “The rest of society, they lived,” he said. Arab tribal leaders have previously blamed the Masalit for instigatin­g the violence.

The RSF didn’t respond to questions from Reuters. In prior statements, the paramilita­ry has said it wasn’t involved in what it called a tribal conflict in El Geneina.

The war against the Masalit erupted amid a broader

conflict between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the RSF, partners in a 2021 coup that crushed hopes for a transition to democracy in Sudan. They began battling in the capital Khartoum in April, after splitting over how to apportion power in a proposed shift toward civilian rule.

In early December, the United States determined that both the RSF and the Sudanese army have committed war crimes since fighting broke out and spread to Darfur. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the RSF, which draws its forces largely from Arab groups, and its allied militias have also committed crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing. Both the army and the RSF have blamed each other for any abuses committed in the war.

Families without fathers

One day in mid-November, at the request of Reuters, a Masalit community leader drove through Ourang, one of the refugee camps on the Chad side of the border with Sudan, making an announceme­nt through a loudspeake­r – the main means of mass communicat­ion in the camp. There is almost no mobile phone coverage in Ourang.

The community leader called upon women whose children had been killed in the El Geneina violence to meet the following day under a large neem tree to tell their stories. The next day, by 9 a.m., dozens of women had gathered under the tree. Throughout the day, more continued to come.

Many said they had lost children. Others said they came because members of their families, mostly men – husbands, brothers, fathers – had been killed or were missing.

One woman said her 16-year-old son, her father and her brother were all killed in April by RSF forces – gunned down in a neighbor’s home where they had tried to hide.

A second woman said Arab militiamen descended on a school in a displaced persons camp in El Geneina, also in April, and opened fire on a group of men there, killing her father and one of her brothers. The next day, she said, they killed another of her brothers.

A third woman described how four of her uncles were gunned down in the family home in Ardamata in early November. Her husband, a soldier in the Sudanese army, has been missing since then, she said.

“They slaughtere­d him like an animal.”

Radiya Yahia told of the killing of Abbakr Abdullah, a 13-year-old boy she had been caring for since his mother died seven years ago.

 ?? ?? Boy overlooks a refugee camp near the Chad-Sudan border. Hundreds of Masalit families from Sudan’s West Darfur state are at the camp after being driven across the border in an ethnically targeted campaign by Arab forces. About half a million people, mostly Masalit, have fled Sudan for Chad. (Reuters photo)
Boy overlooks a refugee camp near the Chad-Sudan border. Hundreds of Masalit families from Sudan’s West Darfur state are at the camp after being driven across the border in an ethnically targeted campaign by Arab forces. About half a million people, mostly Masalit, have fled Sudan for Chad. (Reuters photo)

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