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- Turning A Blind Eye to Terrorism?: The United States, Uganda and Sudan
by David Hoile/ESPAC
President George W. Bush's 20 September 2001 address to Congress and the
American People, responding to the horrific atrocities of 11 September,
declared a war on terrorism. (1) The point was also made that it was not
just terrorism associated with Islamic fundamentalism that was to be
targeted, but all forms of terrorism. On 5 December 2001, the United
States government announced 39 organisations that had been listed on
Washington's "Terrorist Exclusion List" under the provisions of the new
USA Patriot Act. (2) A State Department press statement announcing the
listing announced: "We are taking a methodical approach to all aspects
of the campaign to eliminate terrorism as a threat to our way of life."
(3) One of the organisations so listed is the so-called "Lord's
Resistance Army" in Uganda. It is important to note the United States
government's legal definition of terrorism and international terrorism.
The relevant definitions come from Title 22 of the United States Code,
Section 2656f (d): "The term terrorism means premeditated, politically
motivated violence perpetrated against noncombatant targets by
subnational or clandestine agents, usually intended to influence an
audience" and: "The term international terrorism means terrorism
involving citizens of the territory of more than one country." There is
no doubt that the Lord's Resistance Army has engaged in terrorism and
large-scale abuses of human rights in the course of its conflict with
the Ugandan government in northern Uganda.
The simple question which must be asked, however, is why has the United
States listed the Lord's Resistance Army when it has conspicuously not
listed the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA), an organisation that
has been equally implicated in acts of terrorism and human rights
abuses? The parallels between the two groups are stark and disturbing.
There is very little to differentiate them. The United States government
has described the Lord's Resistance Army as having "inflicted brutal
violence on the population in northern Uganda, including rape,
kidnapping, torture, and murder". (4) 'The New York Times' on the other
hand, has, for example, described the SPLA as "brutal and predatory",
stating that they "have behaved like an occupying army, killing, raping
and pillaging" in southern Sudan, and calling SPLA leader John Garang
one of Sudan's "pre-eminent war criminals". (5)
The Lord's Resistance Army and the SPLA lend themselves to further
comparison. Both are essentially based on one ethnic group, and have
become entangled in vicious inter-tribal conflicts; both have no
discernible political programme; and both have refused to respond to
repeated offers of amnesties and calls for ceasefire.
It would be difficult to come across a more clear-cut case than the SPLA
for listing as a terrorist organisation. Whatever crimes the Lord's
Resistance Army has been guilty of have been equalled and in some
instances surpassed by the SPLA. It is ironic that many of these human
rights abuses and the SPLA's pattern of terrorism have been extensively
documented by the United States government itself. In addition to the
SPLA's responsibility for widespread abuses of human rights with Sudan,
the SPLA has also been guilty of widescale terrorism during its conflict
with the Sudanese government. The SPLA has admitted the shooting down of
civilian airliners within Sudan, incidents involving considerable loss
of civilian life. In one instance the SPLA shot down a civilian airliner
taking off from Malakal in southern Sudan, killing sixty people. A
further civilian aircraft was shot down with the deaths of thirteen
passengers and crew. (6) These incidents were documented by the United
States government. SPLA terrorism has also included the widespread
murder of Sudanese men, women and children and indiscriminate mortaring
and rocketing of urban areas in southern Sudan, resulting in hundreds of
further civilian deaths. The American government has itself again, in
several of its official human rights studies, 'Country Reports on Human
Rights Practices', documented numerous examples of SPLA terrorism. It
has pointed out that the SPLA has "conducted indiscriminate mortar and
rocket attacks on the southern city of Juba, killing more than 40
civilians and wounding many others. These attacks...seemed intended to
terrorize the inhabitants". (7) In another instance, the American
government stated that the SPLA had continued the random shelling of
Juba, killing over 200 southern civilians. (8) SPLA shelling of
civilians has been a feature of the past decade. Similar shelling was
reported as recently as October 2001. In February 2000, for example,
Reuters correspondent Rosalind Russell personally witnessed: "a pillar
of smoke rising from the besieged town of Mayom [on the edge of oil
producing areas in southern Sudan], subject to daily bombardments by
rebels as they try to advance eastwards to the oil development." (9) The
town of Bentiu has also been shelled in the course of 2001, resulting in
civilian casualties. (10)
The United States is also very aware of SPLA involvement in large-scale
massacres of civilians. The United Nations Special Rapporteur on human
rights in Sudan has provided graphic evidence of the SPLA's premeditated
use of terrorism against civilians, terrorism which more than matched
the savagery of the Lord's Resistance Army. He documented an incident in
which John Garang's SPLA forces attacked two villages in Ganyiel region
in southern Sudan. The SPLA murdered 210 villagers, of whom 30 were men,
53 were women and 127 were children. The Special Rapporteur stated that:
"Eyewitnesses reported that some of the victims, mostly women, children
and the elderly, were caught while trying to escape and killed with
spears and pangas. M.N., a member of the World Food Programme relief
committee at Panyajor, lost four of her five children (aged 8-15 years).
The youngest child was thrown into the fire after being shot. D.K.
witnessed three women with their babies being caught. Two of the women
were shot and one was killed with a panga. Their babies were all killed
with pangas. A total of 1, 987 households were reported destroyed...".
(11)
The United States government in its own 'Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices' records the SPLA's responsibility for this incident as well
as its refusal to account for the incident. (12) The Ganyiel atrocity is
sadly only one of many similar instances of SPLA terrorism. Amnesty
International, for example, recorded another instance in which SPLA
forces lined up 32 women from the village of Pagau, 12 kilometres from
Ayod in southern Sudan, and then shot each once in the head. Eighteen
children were reported to have been locked in a hut which was then set
on fire. Three children who attempted to escape were then shot. The rest
burnt to death. In Paiyoi, an area north-east of Ayod, Amnesty
International reported that 36 women were burnt to death in a cattle
byre. Nine others were clubbed to death by the SPLA. (13)
The international community has particularly focused upon the Lord's
Resistance Army's abduction of children and their use as child soldiers.
(14) In 1998 it was estimated that the Lord's Resistance Army had
abducted eight thousand children. (15) It is equally well-documented
that the SPLA has also long been identified with a planned, long-term
policy of abducting children for use by their organisation. The SPLA's
direct role in abducting more than ten thousand young southern Sudanese
boys and holding them against their will in abysmal conditions has been
well-documented. The United States government's own 'Country Reports on
Human Rights Practices' have again placed on record that the SPLA had
"forcibly conscripted at least 10 000 male minors" (16) and reiterated
that the SPLA continued to use southern men for forced labour and
portering. Human Rights Watch/Africa and the Children's Rights Project
published studies which described the removal of young boys from
southern Sudan by the SPLA in what has been described as the
"warehousing" of children for subsequent use in the war. (17) Once
suitably isolated these children are then used for forced labour and
then forcibly conscripted into the SPLA. The SPLA's abduction and
gathering of children, and their subsequent treatment, is dealt with
over almost thirty pages in 'Civilian Devastation: Abuses by All Parties
in the War in Southern Sudan'. (18) In a separate study, Human Rights
Watch/Africa concluded that: "The primary purpose, however, of luring
and keeping thousands of boys away from their families...was, in the
judgement of Human Rights Watch, a military purpose. This resulted in
the training and recruitment of thousands of underage soldiers who were
thrust into battle in southern Sudan and briefly in Ethiopia." (19)
THuman Rights Watch/Africa has also recorded the almost wanton way in
which these boys are used by the SPLA. These children were grouped in
what was known as the 'Red Army'. A SPLA officer stated: "Young people,
ages fourteen to sixteen...(when) the Red Army fought...(it) was always
massacred...They were not good soldiers because they were too young."
(20) In addition to being responsible for the slaughter of thousands of
young boys, often in pointless, "human wave" attacks, the SPLA is also
directly responsible for the deaths by starvation or disease of
thousands of other minors. Former SPLA Executive member Dr Peter Nyaba
has pointed to the SPLA leadership's direct responsibility for these
deaths. "For instance, the officer responsible for Bilpam was not held
accountable for the deaths from starvation and related diseases of
nearly three thousand Nuba youths under training in 1988. And yet it was
known that their food was being sold at the Gambella market, and the
proceeds appropriated by the commander. Similarly, the deaths from
hunger and starvation of hundreds of recruits in the Dimma refugee camp
were not investigated." (21) The SPLA has attempted to offset criticism
of its abduction of children and their use as child soldiers by claiming
to have demobilised them. However, in its 2001 report Amnesty
International stated that the SPLA continues to forcibly recruit child
soldiers. (22)
Conclusion
The United States' war on terrorism is understandable, in some instances
long-overdue, and must be supported by the international community.
Washington discredits itself and its anti-terrorist credentials,
however, when it engages in blatant double-standards with regard to what
constitutes terrorism and which organisations it deems to be engaging in
terrorism. Regrettably these double-standards also provide those
European and developing world countries who voted the United States off
the United Nations Human Rights Commission earlier this year with yet
more evidence for their anti-Americanism. (23)
Premeditated SPLA attacks on civilians, if carried out by Osama bin-
Laden's al-Qaeda movement - or the Lord's Resistance Army - would be
deemed by Washington to be terrorism. A premeditated attack on an
American owned-or-operated oil installation would undoubtedly be seen as
a terrorist attack. Terrorist attacks by the SPLA on civilian oil
installations and oil workers, many of them Canadian, would, however,
appear not to be a terrorist act in Washington's eyes. (24) Such a
position undoubtedly undermines American credibility in the war on
terrorism, and also can only but prolong the Sudanese conflict. It is an
open secret that American administrations have militarily supported and
encouraged the SPLA in its conflict with the Sudanese government. This
has on several occasions been placed on record by former President Jimmy
Carter. (25)
Playing politics with terrorism, and ultimately human rights, is
unacceptable - all the more so in the wake of the 11 September attacks.
Notes
1 President Bush,
'Address to a Joint Session of Congress and the
American People', 20 September 2001, Washington-DC.
2 These groups were
listed under section 212 of the Immigration and
Nationality Act, as amended by the post-September 11 'USA Patriot Act'.
3 'Statement on the
Designation of 39 Organisations on the USA
Patriot Act's "Terrorist Exclusion List"', Press Statement, Philip T. Reeker, Deputy Spokesman, Department of State,
Washington-DC, 6 December 2001.
4 'Background Notes:
Republic of Uganda, February 1998', Bureau of
African Affairs, Department of State, Washington-DC, February 1998,
5 "Misguided Relief to
Sudan", Editorial, 'The New York Times', 6
December, 1999.
6 'Denying "The Honor
of Living": Sudan A Human Rights Disaster',
Africa Watch, London, 1989, pp.116-17.
7 'Country Reports on
Human Rights Practices', 1990, Bureau of
Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, United States Department of State, Washington-DC, February 1991. p.387.
8 'Country Reports on
Human Rights Practices', 1992, Bureau of
Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, United States Department of State, Washington-DC, February 1993.
9 "Rag-tag Rebels Fight
for Sudan's Oil Riches", News Article by Reuters
on 14 February 2000 at 14:24:21.
10 See, for example, "Seven
People Killed in Attack on Bentiu", News Article
by Agence France Presse, 20 October 2001; "Sudan Rebels Say They Attacked Oil Region Capital", News Article by
Reuters, 21 October 2001
11 'Situation of Human Rights
in the Sudan', UN Special Rapporteur Gaspar
Biro, E/CN.4/1996/62, 20 February 1996.
12 See, for example, 'Country
Reports on Human Rights Practice', 1996, Bureau
of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, United States
Department of State, Washington-DC, 30 January 1997, p.2.
13 'Sudan: The Ravages of
War: Political Killings and Humanitarian
Disaster', Amnesty International, London, AI Index: AFR 54/29/93, 29 September 1993, p.25.
14 See, for example,
'Breaking God's Commands: The Destruction of
Childhood by the Lord's Resistance Army in Uganda', Amnesty International, London, 18 September 1997; "Human
Rights Watch Condemns Abduction and Killing of
Children by Ugandan Rebel Group", Human Rights
Watch, New York, 18 September 1997; 'Congressional Human Rights Caucus: Members' Briefing: The Abduction of Children by Rebel
Forces in Northern Uganda', U.S. Congress,
Washington-DC, 10 March 1998; "Abducting
Children to Win a War", 'Electronic Mail and Guardian'
(Johannesburg),
13 February 1998; and various other reports, articles and
resolutions.
15 "Abducting Children to Win
a War", 'Electronic Mail and Guardian'
(Johannesburg), 13 February 1998
16 'Country Reports on Human
Rights Practices', 1991, Bureau of Democracy,
Human Rights and Labor, United States Department of State, Washington-DC, February 1993, p.382.
17 'Children of Sudan', Human
Rights Watch, New York, 1995, p.75.
18 'Civilian Devastation:
Abuses by All Parties in the War in Southern
Sudan', Human Rights Watch, New York, 1995 pp.195-224.
19 'Children of Sudan', op.
cit., p.75.
20 Human Rights Watch/Africa,
press release for 'Child Soldiers and
Unaccompanied Boys in Southern Sudan', Human Rights Watch, New York, 11 November 1994.
21 Peter Nyaba, 'The Politics
of Liberation in South Sudan: An Insider's
View', Fountain Publishers, Kampala, 1997, p.55.
22 See "Sudan", 'Amnesty
International Report 2001', London, 2001.
23 See, for example, "U.S.
Loses Seat on U.N. Human Rights Commission",
News Article by Associated Press, 3 May 2001; "U.S. Ouster From Rights Body Reflects Hostility", News Article by
Inter-Press Service, 5 May 2001.
24 See, for example, "Press
Release: SPLA Forces Destroy Three Oil Wells",
Commander Yasir Said Arman, SPLM Spokesman, 27 January 2001; Press Release: SPLA Attacks Oil Fields', Dr Samson L.
Kwaje, Commissioner for Information and Culture
and Official Spokesman, SPLM/SPLA; "Sudan Rebels
Say They Attacked Oil Region Capital", News
Article by Reuters, 21 October 2001
25 See, for example, "Carter,
Others Say US Has Faltered in Africa",
'The Boston Globe', 8 December 1999
The European-Sudanese Public Affairs
Council sent this media contribution to Media Monitors
Network (MMN)
Source:
by courtesy & © 2001 European-Sudanese Public Affairs Council
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