Mail & Guardian

UN cutback plan ‘betrays’ Darfur

Reducing the size of the peacekeepi­ng mission will endanger civilians, say critics of the move

- Simon Allison

After nearly a decade of trying to keep the peace in Darfur, the United Nations and the African Union believe they are seeing light at the end of the tunnel. Unfortunat­ely, few others agree.

Claiming that violence in the region has decreased significan­tly, UN secretary general António Guterres is recommendi­ng huge cuts to the size and budget of the United Nations/African Union Mission in Darfur (Unamid). The AU’s Peace and Security Council has endorsed this proposal.

The proposed reductions, which are likely to be approved by the Security Council in a vote next week, will reduce the size of Unamid’s military component by 44% and its police component by 30%. It will also result in the closure of 18 Unamid staging posts.

Critics say Darfur remains as violent as ever, and that these reductions will further handicap a peacekeepi­ng mission that already has a poor track record of protecting civilians.

“I’m both sad and angered by this way of the UN basically betraying the Darfur people,” said Aïcha El Basri, a former Unamid spokespers­on, who blew the whistle on how top UN officials allegedly covered up crimes against humanity in Darfur.

“I was hoping that the UN wouldn’t surrender to the pressure from the Sudanese government, but it does look like it’s working.”

She said the decision to scale down Unamid is based on false informatio­n about reductions in the levels of violence. “[The UN] was never serious about confrontin­g the Sudanese government and bringing them to justice. They failed all the way. In order to downplay their failure, they have adopted and agreed to a fake narrative, to a narrative that I witnessed, which is a narrative of a cover-up, of deceit, lies and deception ... I’m in touch with people from Darfur, internally displaced persons, actual workers from Unamid, and they are saying the opposite.”

Hussein Abusharati, the spokespers­on for the Darfur Displaced and Refugees Associatio­n, speaking to Radio Dabanga, said: “A reduction of the number of Unamid peacekeepe­rs will make the Darfuris more vulnerable to abuses of all kinds by the paramilita­ry Rapid Support Forces and other militias operating in the region.

“The current situation requires the joint UN-AU forces to strengthen their force in order to protect the people, rather than a withdrawal or reduction of the troops. The last couple of years, the attacks, killings, rapes, theft and kidnapping have increased again.”

The conflict in Darfur dates back to 2003, when armed groups began fighting against President Omar al-Bashir’s government in Khartoum. The response was especially brutal, and hundreds of thousands of civilians were killed in what the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) describes as a genocide. The massacres earned al-Bashir an ICC arrest warrant, although he has refused to appear in The Hague.

Unamid was supposed to stop these killings. It came into existence in 2008 as a replacemen­t for the toothless African Union Mission in Sudan. Unamid was at one stage the largest peacekeepi­ng mission in the world, with a contingent that included 13632 military personnel, 1282 police officers and a budget well in excess of a billion dollars.

But Unamid wasn’t necessaril­y an improvemen­t on its predecesso­r.

“Broadly speaking, I think Unamid is troubled,” said John Stupart, the editor of the African Defence Review. “There are so many spots in Darfur still at risk for conflict and low-level violence. Human rights abuses are constantly happening. It’s almost the stereotypi­cal case of ‘what are the peacekeepe­rs actually doing?’.

“Unamid has also had so many scandals by various nations there for sexual abuse, human rights abuses, torture, bribery and extortion. It hasn’t got the best reputation at all.”

Eric Reeves, a Sudanese scholar, gives a similar assessment. “Nobody thinks [Unamid] is anything but the grossest failure judged by any reasonable peacekeepi­ng standards. Given its failure and its massive expense, the United Nations Peacekeepi­ng Office has been quite eager to shut it down.”

Despite its many and obvious flaws, Unamid remains the only force to protect civilians and facilitate­s the provision of humanitari­an aid. An estimated three million Darfuris — nearly half the population — are in need of this. “The slender reed of humanitari­an protection is going to be severed,” said Reeves.

He said the proposed cuts to Unamid are part of an internatio­nal process to reintegrat­e Sudan, once a pariah state. “The Europeans are desperate to stem the flow of African migrants to the European continent. And Khartoum has been enlisted as the primary ally in this effort, as Sudan is a transit point for many,” Reeves said.

“In the case of the United States, which doesn’t face a migration problem, the US wants to stay onsides with Khartoum in gathering counterter­rorism intelligen­ce.”

A spokesman for Unamid declined to comment on the proposed cuts until the Security Council vote.

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 ??  ?? Ray of hope dims: At one stage, the UN/AU peacekeepi­ng mission in Darfur was the largest in the world. Although compromise­d, it offers many civilians a degree of protection. But not for this woman (left) standing on the site of a home that was burned...
Ray of hope dims: At one stage, the UN/AU peacekeepi­ng mission in Darfur was the largest in the world. Although compromise­d, it offers many civilians a degree of protection. But not for this woman (left) standing on the site of a home that was burned...

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