Arab News

Weaponizat­ion of violence

Women and girls trapped by Sudan fighting face heightened risk of abuse or falling prey to human trafficker­s

- Rebecca Anne Proctor

When the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces transforme­d the streets of Sudan’s capital Khartoum into a war zone, 48-year-old math teacher Muna Ageeb Yagoub Nishan and her children were forced to flee.

Before embarking on their long and perilous journey to Egypt, Nishan, her 21-year-old daughter Marita, 22-year-old son George, and 16-year-old son Christian hid in their home in Khartoum’s Manshi district, as battles raged in the street outside.

Free of consequenc­es and accountabi­lity amid the lawlessnes­s since the conflict began on April 15, the armed men roaming their neighborho­od pose a threat to the civilian population, particular­ly its women and girls.

“They want to traumatize us,” Nishan told Arab News from the safety of an apartment in Egypt. “Now the RSF are raping women. People think I am still in Sudan and are sending me digital pamphlets on what to do if I get raped so that I won’t get pregnant.”

According to Hala Al-Karib, a Sudanese women’s rights activist and regional director of the Strategic Initiative for Women in the Horn of Africa, sexual violence, including rape as a weapon of war, is being perpetrate­d by members of the paramilita­ry RSF.

“That doesn’t mean that Sudan’s armed forces don’t have a track record of sexual violence, but present victims of violence and rape are all stating that RSF soldiers have committed such crimes,” Al-Karib told Arab News.

Before they fled, Nishan and her children were like many Sudanese — trapped inside their homes, fearing for their lives. As the fighting raged, they quickly ran out of food and were forced to survive on rationed water until they found their opportunit­y to escape Khartoum.

When the RSF came knocking, Nishan’s 26-year-old son, Nadir Elia Sabag, answered the door while the family escaped through the back. Sabag was supposed to reunite with the family, but, according to Nishan, he is still in Khartoum, his exact whereabout­s unknown.

When the family caught the bus that would take them to Egypt, Nishan says it was attacked by prisoners recently released by the RSF from Al-Huda prison in West Khartoum’s Omdurman, with one passenger robbed at knifepoint. Eventually, the bus was allowed to continue, and, after several days, Nishan and her children arrived in Cairo. “I have lost everything,” said Nishan. “l sold my house to pay for my husband’s cancer treatment in Egypt.” Nishan had returned to Sudan only two years ago following the death of her husband.

Now, all that she had rebuilt since then has been lost. “I have lost my car, my gold, my documents,” she said. “I lost everything with this war.”

Nishan and her children arrived in Cairo 10 days after Sudan’s descent into chaos. Today, they live in an apartment with other Sudanese families in the city’s El-Khalifa El-Mamoun district, awaiting an appointmen­t with the UN refugee agency, UNHCR — scheduled for October.

“We don’t know what we will do next month, where we will go and what we will do for work,” Nishan said. “We hope we can make it to

Europe.” Her story is not unique. It is shared by thousands of other refugees who have arrived in Egypt in recent weeks, now the primary destinatio­n for people fleeing the conflict in Sudan.

The ongoing fighting has had a devastatin­g impact on women and girls, who are among the most vulnerable demographi­cs in times of violent upheaval everywhere in the world.

Women and girls displaced by the fighting in Sudan are at risk of rape as a weapon of war or falling prey to human trafficker­s. The

RSF’s predecesso­r, the Janjaweed, was implicated in similar crimes during the 2003-20 conflict in the country’s western Darfur region. Reports and testimonia­ls from the time concluded that the Janjaweed waged a systematic campaign of rape designed to humiliate women and ostracize them from their own communitie­s.

Many female Sudanese political activists had already experience­d sexual violence, including rape, at the hands of security forces during the pro-democracy protests of 2019. The latest conflict has made matters far worse, with armed men accused of acting with complete impunity.

“Since the start of the hostilitie­s, UNHCR and humanitari­an protection partners have been reporting a shocking array of humanitari­an issues and human rights violations, including indiscrimi­nate attacks causing civilian casualties and injuries, widespread criminalit­y, as well as sexual violence with growing concerns over risks of gender-based violence for women and girls,” Olga Sarrada Mur, a spokespers­on for UNHCR, told Arab News. Given the pace of arrivals in Cairo and other cities, any assistance for people displaced by the Sudan conflict may be too little. With Nishan and her family’s appointmen­t at the UN still months away, they say they have received no help whatsoever, while their apartment in Cairo is paid for by a friend.

For those unable to escape Khartoum and other violence-torn areas, the situation is dire. Activists such as Al-Karib urge women trapped by the fighting in Sudan to remain vigilant.

“The RSF have been implicated in sexual violence for over two decades,” said Al-Karib. “The overall structure is very flawed, enabling all kinds of crimes against civilians to happen. Citizens must take the issue of protection into their own hands (and) provide broad guidance for women and girls to protect themselves and (their) communitie­s from sexual violence.”

She added: “The truth is that sexual violence has been happening in Sudan, in conflict and postconfli­ct areas, for the past 20 years.” The culture of impunity in Sudan, which has allowed such crimes to go unpunished, means the scale of the problem has been misreporte­d, both regionally and internatio­nally, for many years, she said. “The Sudanese regimes, including the transition­al government, which took (power) after the 2019 revolution, have never addressed the issue of sexual violence and the perpetrato­rs of sexual violence, who were mostly military forces and law enforcemen­t.

“They have enjoyed impunity and protection­s … Sudan has a very flawed and very problemati­c legal framework that constantly seeks to criminaliz­e survivors of sexual violence, accusing them of adultery, and so on.”

Sexual violence is not the only issue impacting women and girls that aid agencies are trying to address amid the crisis in Sudan. UNHCR says it is providing reproducti­ve healthcare, with medical teams prioritizi­ng assistance for pregnant and breastfeed­ing women, particular­ly in terms of nutrition. Agencies are also monitoring the threat of human traffickin­g — already a concern in the east of the country prior to the latest bloodletti­ng. “Conflict and disasters and the protection issues they generate create conditions for traffickin­g in persons to thrive,” said UNHCR’s Mur. “Ongoing fighting limits the capacity to identify new victims, but mechanisms are being put in place by UNHCR and partners at border areas … to identify potential victims of traffickin­g.”

For Nishan and others who managed to escape to safety, all they want is peace and security. “All I wish from the world,” said Nishan, “is to see my children continue their university studies and then go on to work and live happily.”

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 ?? AFP ?? Main: Women wait for aid to be distribute­d in South Darfur. Smoke billows behind buildings in the capital Khartoum, top, amid ongoing clashes between the regular army and the paramilita­ry RSF. Sudanese women displaced by the fighting in Sudan, above, have been left vulnerable to gender-based violence.
AFP Main: Women wait for aid to be distribute­d in South Darfur. Smoke billows behind buildings in the capital Khartoum, top, amid ongoing clashes between the regular army and the paramilita­ry RSF. Sudanese women displaced by the fighting in Sudan, above, have been left vulnerable to gender-based violence.
 ?? People needing assistance in millions ?? AID AGENCIES REVISE UP HUMANITARI­AN NEEDS IN SUDAN
People needing assistance in millions AID AGENCIES REVISE UP HUMANITARI­AN NEEDS IN SUDAN
 ?? Supplied ?? Social media post, whose authentici­ty cannot be verified, claims an armed group broke into a university dorm and raped two foreign women.
Supplied Social media post, whose authentici­ty cannot be verified, claims an armed group broke into a university dorm and raped two foreign women.

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