The Guardian Australia

Foreign Office accused of ignoring Sudan atrocity warnings

- Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor

The UK Foreign Office has been accused of ignoring repeated warnings from Sudanese groups and western experts that Sudan was teetering on the brink of a conflict that would lead to mass atrocities and identity-based crimes.

Sudan has been gripped by violence since two rival generals went to war against each other in April. The Commons foreign affairs select committee is conducting an inquiry into Whitehall’s anticipati­on of the crisis and the level of support provided to British citizens trapped in Sudan.

In a letter sent to the Africa minister, Andrew Mitchell, released on Tuesday, the UK Atrocity Prevention Working Group, which encompasse­s a variety of charities and civil society organisati­ons, said the Foreign Office had pursued an over-optimistic agenda of “democracy first” in Sudan.

The letter says the Foreign Office failed to heed repeated written warnings that the UK’s systems, capabiliti­es and policies towards Sudan lacked a focus on atrocity prevention. The accusation­s are due to be elaborated upon at a select committee hearing on Wednesday.

The letter’s signatorie­s warn that, if left unchecked, the current cycle of violence could become worse than the genocide that started in 2003 in Darfur, which left 300,000 people dead and displaced 2.5 million.

The letter says: “As violence broke out in April, the [Foreign Office’s] Sudan team had in place no expertise on the dynamics of atrocity violence; no system of urgent alarm raising; no risk assessment process to monitor the distinct indicators of mass violence; were receiving no central guidance on how to prepare for increasing­ly likely scenarios that could lead to violence and mass atrocity; and undertook no training to help plug even in a very modest way these skills and systems gaps.”

The signatorie­s point to warnings as far back as 2019 that a rush to elections without commensura­te democratic institutio­ns in Sudan following the revolution that toppled the longtime dictator Omar al-Bashir risked repeating mistakes in Myanmar, where premature assumption­s were made about disarmamen­t and preparedne­ss for genuine representa­tive institutio­ns.

“For the past four years, the government and other members of the internatio­nal community have failed to recognise and respond to Sudan’s continuing trends of violence and risks of mass atrocity crimes,” the letter says. “Instead, priority has been given to democratis­ation, normalisin­g relations with, and propping up the very actors complicit in the Darfur genocide – laying the foundation for the devastatio­n and violence we have seen explode over the past nine week.”

The working group says it held regular meetings with the Foreign Office’s Sudan team but “observed no tangible change in policy, resourcing, or strategy”.

“In our last meeting with the Sudan country team in April 2023, just 10 days before violence in Khartoum began, we shared concerns of growing instabilit­y and were told the transition process was being viewed with ‘cautious optimism’.

“This optimism stood in sharp contrast with the already escalating mass atrocity violence in Sudan’s peripherie­s, including Darfur, now marking its twentieth anniversar­y since the internatio­nally recognised start of the genocide. This also stood in marked contrast to what our partners were being told about the risk of a military confrontat­ion in Khartoum itself – many individual­s and activists chose to leave the capital days or even weeks before 15 April 2023.

In a supporting statement, the Sudanese civil society group Waging Peace, which is part of the working group, said: “Repeated warnings to prioritise justice and accountabi­lity for the perpetrato­rs of historic and current mass violence and genocide were not heeded … HMG must hold their hands up for getting policy on this country wrong.”

Dr Kate Ferguson, the co-director of another member of the working group, Protection Approaches, said: “The UK’s lack of preparedne­ss led to a botched evacuation process where British nationals and Sudanese to whom the UK government owes a responsibi­lity were left in chaotic limbo and the opportunit­ies to help mitigate violence to prioritise protection of vulnerable people across Sudan were missed. Even the most fundamenta­l lessons of Afghanista­n have evidently not been learned.”

The Foreign Office has recently been taking a lead on atrocity prevention and Mitchell has been an enthusiast for that approach to foreign policymaki­ng. However, he has only been in position for just over a year.

 ?? Photograph: AP ?? ▲People board a truck as they leave Khartoum, Sudan, amid the fighting.
Photograph: AP ▲People board a truck as they leave Khartoum, Sudan, amid the fighting.

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