Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The world ignores suffering as bad as Gaza’s and Ukraine’s

- Elizabeth Shackelfor­d Elizabeth Shackelfor­d is a foreign affairs columnist for the Chicago Tribune.

Headlines highlight the horrors of Gaza and Israel and the West’s debate over support for Ukraine, but another brutal war is raging far off the radar. These crises all call for action, but countries across the globe have mobilized to press for solutions for Ukraine and Gaza, while Sudan goes barely noticed.

Sudan hosts the largest displaced population on earth. Nearly 8 million people have fled their homes since the war began in April. Three million are children. More than 1.5 million Sudanese have left the country, though, as they are surrounded by other unstable countries, they have nowhere safe to go.

Starving in Sudan

As in Gaza, starvation is stalking Sudan — but on a far bigger scale. More than 20 million people, or 10 times the population of Gaza, face acute or emergency levels of hunger now. The most vulnerable are trapped where humanitari­an access is blocked by ongoing fighting. Left unaddresse­d, this situation will become famine on an epic scale.

How can the world be so attentive to the plight of Gaza’s civilians and so unconcerne­d with those in Sudan? And what does the lack of attention mean?

As Gaza and Ukraine demonstrat­e, global attention doesn’t mean a quick end to conflict. But the United States and others have led serious, sustained diplomatic and humanitari­an responses in Gaza and Ukraine. Though not sufficient, they are necessary to reduce suffering and restore peace.

In Sudan, no such serious response is underway.

The war is a fight for total control between Gen. Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, known as Hemedti, who leads the paramilita­ry Rapid Support Forces (RSF), and Gen. Abdel Fattah Burhan, the country’s de facto leader who heads the Sudanese Armed Forces. The two conspired in 2019 to oust Omar al-Bashir in a coup and obstructed civilian leadership, but they couldn’t agree on terms for unifying their forces and chose war instead.

In Khartoum, major landmarks and whole neighborho­ods were leveled. The conflict then spread west to Darfur and then south. Crimes against humanity have been rampant.

The start of the war saw a flurry of diplomatic wrangling and uncoordina­ted attempts at peace. Saudi Arabia and the United States, the African Union and the Intergover­nmental Authority on Developmen­t each led competing peace talks. None succeeded. Serious efforts would have coordinate­d and convened all interested and influentia­l parties.

The U.S. response has not been serious at all, paling in comparison to prior responses even to crises in Sudan.

Compare with Darfur

Take the conflict in Darfur two decades ago. Al-Bashir’s government used the Janjaweed, a proxy Sudanese Arab militia, to fight rebellion, and it unleashed brutal violence against the non-Arab population, while the Sudanese military bombed civilians from the air.

Human rights groups and activists responded with horror to reports of genocide and organized large public protests and campaigns in the United States and around the world. These actions spurred hearings in Congress and the United Nations Security Council. U.S. diplomacy was led by envoys reporting to the White House, indicating high-level attention on the issue.

Internatio­nal partners worked closely to negotiate a cease-fire and establish peacekeepi­ng missions, first led by the African Union and then with the United Nations. The U.N. Security Council even referred Sudan to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court in 2005. The response was delayed and often fell short, but internatio­nal engagement and pressure ultimately helped secure more than a decade of fragile peace.

Even with that level of engagement, the war in Darfur lasted years and killed an estimated 300,000 people. Imagine the damage this war could do with no efforts to rein it in.

Countries more engaged on Sudan today only fuel conflict. The United Arab Emirates, a close U.S. military partner, is the gravest offender, as it bankrolls and arms the RSF. The RSF has been on the offensive for months, suggesting a victory for the rebel forces could be in sight.

This has led other countries in the region to provide unwarrante­d diplomatic support to Hemedti as well. Instead of making him a pariah for widespread crimes against humanity, war crimes and possibly even genocide, many have rolled out the red carpet to receive him with the flare of a headof-state visit.

America can’t keep looking away

If the United States and others continue to look away, dire humanitari­an conditions will precipitat­e unimaginab­le suffering, and ultimately, someone will be rewarded for seizing power by force, which could inspire other armed groups in the region.

After months of calls from Congress, the United States will finally appoint a new special envoy. While it isn’t a cure-all, it’s an opportunit­y to reinvigora­te America’s response and diplomacy on Sudan. We have influence with the UAE, should we choose to use it. Even if we can’t secure a particular­ly palatable outcome at this stage, we should aim to minimize the suffering and help get assistance to those in need.

 ?? AFP via Getty Images ?? A haavily bombed area of Omdurman, the twin-city of Sudan’s capital, on July 4, 2023.
AFP via Getty Images A haavily bombed area of Omdurman, the twin-city of Sudan’s capital, on July 4, 2023.

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