Egypt's central bank hosts sustainable finance conference with IFC    Gold prices fall on Monday    Oil prices steady on Monday    Egypt sets 2:00 am closing hours for Ramadan, Eid    Sir Magdy Yacoub Addresses the Student Body of Manara School in El-Gouna    Egypt to advance government salaries for next two months to ease Ramadan pressures: Madbouly    Al-Sisi reviews summer electricity plan, orders accelerated solar expansion    Egypt offers industrial and green energy expertise to drive COMESA integration    African Peer Review Mechanism head seeks Egyptian expertise for continental governance goals    Environment Ministry investigates strange odours in Giza, deploys mobile monitoring units    Egypt's Abdelatty reinforces regional security, economic ties in high-level AU summit meetings    Egypt reasserts water rights, Red Sea authority at African Union summit    Egypt proposes $500bn Africa development initiative as NEPAD chairmanship ends    WHO-certified Egyptian drug expertise to lead Africa's "strategic" shift in medicine production    Egypt wins ACERWC seat, reinforces role in continental child welfare    Egypt denies reports attributed to industry minister, warns of legal action    Egypt completes restoration of colossal Ramses II statue at Minya temple site    Al-Sisi oversees swearing-in of new ministers following cabinet reshuffle    Egypt, Kuwait discuss strengthening tourism cooperation    Sisi swears in new Cabinet, emphasises reform, human capital development    Profile: Hussein Eissa, Egypt's Deputy PM for Economic Affairs    PROFILE-Egyptologist Gihane Zaki takes helm as Egypt's culture minister    Former World Bank official Ahmed Rostom takes over Egypt's planning ministry    Egypt reinstates Ministry of Information in major cabinet overhaul featuring 14 new ministers    Egypt recovers ancient statue head linked to Thutmose III in deal with Netherlands    Egypt's Amr Kandeel wins Nelson Mandela Award for Health Promotion 2026    Egypt recovers King Thutmose III era artefact from Netherlands after international investigation    Egypt, Türkiye set ambitious trade goals after strategic council meeting    M squared extends partnership for fifth Saqqara Half Marathon featuring new 21km distance    Sisi, King Abdullah hold Talks on Gaza, regional security, bilateral cooperation    Egypt Golf Series: Chris Wood clinches dramatic playoff victory at Marassi 1    Finland's Ruuska wins Egypt Golf Series opener with 10-under-par final round    4th Egyptian Women Summit kicks off with focus on STEM, AI    Egypt warns of erratic Ethiopian dam operations after sharp swings in Blue Nile flows    Egypt resolves dispute between top African sports bodies ahead of 2027 African Games    Germany among EU's priciest labour markets – official data    Russia says it's in sync with US, China, Pakistan on Taliban    It's a bit frustrating to draw at home: Real Madrid keeper after Villarreal game    Shoukry reviews with Guterres Egypt's efforts to achieve SDGs, promote human rights    Sudan says countries must cooperate on vaccines    Johnson & Johnson: Second shot boosts antibodies and protection against COVID-19    Egypt to tax bloggers, YouTubers    Egypt's FM asserts importance of stability in Libya, holding elections as scheduled    We mustn't lose touch: Muller after Bayern win in Bundesliga    Egypt records 36 new deaths from Covid-19, highest since mid June    Egypt sells $3 bln US-dollar dominated eurobonds    Gamal Hanafy's ceramic exhibition at Gezira Arts Centre is a must go    Italian Institute Director Davide Scalmani presents activities of the Cairo Institute for ITALIANA.IT platform    







Thank you for reporting!
This image will be automatically disabled when it gets reported by several people.



First bluff, now blood
Published in Al-Ahram Weekly on 15 - 05 - 2008

In an unprecedented development, a Darfur armed opposition group storms Sudan's cultural capital, writes Gamal Nkrumah
Is it really over? Maybe the Battle of Om Durman is over, but the fight ahead looks bloody. For the fighters of Darfur, turning towards the Sudanese capital was a change of tact. And losses are now emerging in areas other than a loss of face or prestige. Maybe Armageddon has been avoided, but a boost to Sudanese confidence this most certainly has not been.
The Sudanese government beat back an attack by one of the most influential armed Darfur opposition groups, the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) headed by Khalil Ibrahim. The unprecedented attack sparked a diplomatic furore and reignited the traditional enmity between Sudan and Chad. Would Chad really consider foisting an unelected Darfur-based regime on Sudan? Whatever the answer, the momentum of JEM is scaring many Sudanese.
The Sudanese capital Khartoum is a city on high alert. Om Durman is part of Greater Khartoum -- composed of three cities; Khartoum North, Khartoum proper and Om Durman. The curfew imposed on Saturday was lifted Sunday but it is still enforce in Om Durman, the cultural capital of Sudan and twin city of Khartoum, on the western bank of the River Nile. JEM forces captured Om Durman on Saturday, but were quickly overcome by government forces. Scores of JEM fighters were killed and their bodies are strewn in the streets of the city. There is much speculation that Khalil Ibrahim and his henchmen are hiding in the city, but these rumours are not verified.
What is confirmed, according to Sudanese government forces, is that Mohamed Saleh Gharbo, a leading JEM commander who allegedly led the attack on Om Durman, was killed in battle.
The Sudanese government accused neighbouring Chad's government of masterminding the attack on Greater Khartoum. The Chadians vehemently deny the charge, but Khartoum claims that the Chadian government is backing JEM. Sudanese President Omar Hassan Al-Bashir in a widely-publicised nationwide television interview vowed retribution and promptly announced the severing of diplomatic relations between Sudan and Chad.
Chadian President Idriss Deby, like the JEM leader, is an ethnic Zaghawa. This particular ethnic group is spread over a vast stretch of the Sahara Desert -- in Chad, Darfur and Libya. The Sudanese government suspects that the close tribal ties between the Zaghawa of Darfur and Chad played a critical role in the surprise attack staged by JEM on Om Durman. However, tribal affiliation does not always ensure political loyalties. Another Zaghawa leader from Darfur, Minni Arko Minnawi, signed a peace agreement with the Sudanese government a couple of years ago. He led a breakaway faction of the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA), another powerful Darfur-based armed opposition group.
It is not so much the historic flushing out of JEM fighters from Greater Khartoum that is eye- catching, but rather the fact that JEM did venture so close to Khartoum. Other factors are at play. The leader of the opposition Popular Congress Party (PCP) Sheikh Hassan Al-Turabi is the spiritual mentor of the JEM leader Khalil Ibrahim and his movement. Indeed, many in the Sudanese government suspect that Al-Turabi is the main instigator of the latest round of fighting and hence he was promptly arrested and detained on Sunday after his return from a tour of the central Sennar province to garner support for his PCP. After interrogations he was released without charge. Al-Turabi has long been seen as in cahoots with JEM; indeed, many Sudan observers view JEM as the military wing of the PCP. Both organisations are Islamist in orientation and Al-Turabi is widely viewed as Sudan's chief Islamist ideologue.
Al-Turabi, however, has in recent years demonstrated a predilection for democracy and political liberalisation. He contends that there is no fundamental contradiction between Islam and democracy. It is an opinion shared by his disciples in JEM. Four other PCP leaders were arrested alongside Al-Turabi. "This is a national crisis and reveals serious security lapses. The Darfur crisis is a national crisis. It is now clear for all the world to realise this fact. This is the result of the beggar-thy-neighbour policy espoused by the Sudanese government. They are now paying a terrible price for their regional policies and machinations. They have only themselves to blame," Al-Turabi told Al-Ahram Weekly.
"I sympathise with the broader cause of JEM, but they have chosen the path of the armed struggle. I prefer political activism, that is the way forward."
There are those in Sudan who believe that Al-Turabi is responsible for most of what has gone wrong in Sudan. If an irrefutable link between JEM's latest military adventure and Al-Turabi, a former speaker of the Sudanese parliament and a one-time close associate of President Al-Bashir, is established, then we can expect another long prison sentence for Al-Turabi. He was incarcerated for seven years when he fell out with Al-Bashir. Al-Turabi wants power with all the trimmings.
Al-Turabi can scarcely complain about treachery and political back-stabbing, for he helped to inculcate a taste for plots, political intrigue and sedition during his years as speaker when he behaved as the real ruler of the country. Al-Turabi's character and public persona do not help either. His outspokenness and malleable charisma have charmed millions across Africa and the Muslim world, and not just in Sudan.
Today, Al-Turabi is the icon of the wave of democratic resurgence in Sudan. His brand of Islamist democracy is leavened with egalitarianism and that includes a strong belief in the devolution of power to Sudan's disadvantaged outlying regions. Others warn that the current turmoil in Sudan cannot be blamed entirely on Al-Turabi. Other factors come into play. It isn't all his fault that the outlying and historically marginalised regions of Sudan, Africa's largest country, are now demanding a greater say in the decision-making process in Sudan. Western Sudan, the east and south have all long been neglected. These are extremely poor and underdeveloped regions. Their impoverished peoples have long yearned for change, but their aspirations were systematically thwarted. Many are angry, hungry and malnourished.
It is difficult to gauge how many sympathisers JEM has inside Om Durman. There are many, and not only Zaghawa people or Darfuris who are fed up with political repression in Sudan. Few Sudanese are benefiting from the newfound oil wealth of the country. And, they are prepared to take up arms.
The war is no longer restricted to Khartoum. It also confirms that the Darfur armed opposition groups are not secessionist movements, but political groups aiming to reform and revolutionise the entire Sudanese political system.
Khartoum International Airport was closed on Sunday, but reopened on Tuesday. A tense calm prevails, but some believe it is the calm before yet another storm.
The Sudanese government, however, is putting on a brave face. "We were able to overcome them and repulse the attack in less than one hour," Al-Fateh Ezzeddin, the governor of Om Durman, told the Qatar-based pan-Arab television satellite channel Al-Jazeera. He explained that the Sudanese government forces are pursuing the JEM fighters, many of whom are suspected of taking shelter in Om Durman. The city is multi-ethnic and there are hundreds of thousands of Darfuris resident in the city. Many are suspected of sympathising with the Darfur armed opposition groups. There are fears of a government clampdown and that many Darfuris in the sprawling squatter settlements and shantytowns will be forcibly evicted or persecuted in retaliation by government forces.
For the Sudanese political establishment and in particular the crucial few who monopolise power, this latest episode in Sudan's wars could matter significantly. Sudan's disadvantaged are in a state of truculence and they know it. It is no good pretending that Chad and Al-Turabi are the culprits.
Inexorably the Sudanese state is imploding. Can Sudan recover from the surprise JEM attack on Om Durman? Posters of JEM leader Khalil Ibrahim are plastered all over Om Durman. It is ironic that while the US has a $25 million reward for anyone providing information leading to the capture of Osama bin Laden, the Sudanese government has set a $122 million bounty on Ibrahim. "This is just the start of a process and the end is the termination of this regime," Ibrahim, purportedly speaking from his hideout in the heart of Om Durman, retorted. Sudanese lower ranking troops defected to JEM during the storming of Om Durman. Small wonder: 60 per cent of Sudan's army conscripts are from Darfur. The bottom line is that the angry youngsters of Sudan's slums will not watch political bigwigs trundle off along the country's torturously slow progression to democracy. Ibrahim understands their frustrations and despair.


Clic here to read the story from its source.