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Sudan, Off With the Head!

War criminal Omar al-Bashir needs to go. Does the West have what it takes to make that happen?

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July 16, 2008--Sudan's president Omar al-Bashir has just been indicted for war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Court.

It's a nice gesture. Better 19 years late than never.

Whether the warrant issued by the ICC will result in Bashir's arrest and trial, however, is a dubious prospect.

It will take more than a piece of paper or the wagging fingers of the world community to get rid of Bashir. It will take bombs, bullets, buckets of blood, and the West—the United States especially—doesn't have much of a stomach for that, at least not when it comes to Africa.

You can get the reasons why Omar al-Bashir is a bad actor from any AP report: up to 300,000 Sudanese killed under his direct orders; perhaps 2.5 million displaced into squalid and lawless camps; the plunder of the Southern Sudanese oil which is then sold to China, Canada and Russia in order to fund its civil war; the institution of Sharia law, the imprisonment of British school teachers who have the gall to name a teddy bear Mohammed.

The list is endless. He's got to go.

But unlike Liberia's Charles Taylor or Serbia's Slobodan Milosevic, there's not enough organized internal strife within Sudan to bloodlessly depose or arrest the guy.

There are a handful of rebel groups clamoring for Bashir's head, but they lack the resources to take out the Northern government's tanks, Antonov warplanes and specter-like Janjaweed militiamen who have carried out the most heinous atrocities.

For anyone late to the party, here are the quick and dirty basics:

Historically, Sudan has had a ruling, predominantly Arab Northern population and a mostly Christian/Animist South. Since oil was discovered in the South in the early 1980s, The North has instituted a campaign to wipe out those non-Arab populations, so that it could consolidate its power as well as hold on to some assets the South was beginning to claim as its own.

(The Khartoum government has traditionally ignored the South's pleas for water, food, aid and basic services).

When the South rose up in armed defiance in 1982, a bloody civil war began that would last until 2005. In 1989, Bashir, a Sudanese Army colonel who'd fought with Egypt against Israel in the Yom Kippur War of 1973, took over the Sudan in a coup. His main point of dissatisfaction with the then government was that it was about to sign a peace treaty with the South which would have replaced Islamist Sharia law with a secular, Democratic government, as well as implement an oil profit-sharing agreement with the South. Everyone knows fundamental Islam and democracy go together like nuts and gum, so Bashir dissolved the government, eventually naming himself chief of state, chief of the armed forces, chief of defense, prime minister, and eventually, just to make sure all his bases were covered, president.

Darfur, in northwest of the country, and not so far from the oil- producing regions, is the site of the Bashir's greatest infamy.

Here is where the North and South's demography mingled and manifested itself in violence. Truth be told, the vast majority of Sudan's dead and displaced were from the South, Darfur was merely the staging area. Bashir successfully used the war in the South to spur on the Arab populations near Darfur, urging them to "take back the land from the blacks." (In the most ironic example of black-on-black crime imaginable, the "Arab" northerners are every bit as dark as the Fur or Dinka tribes they've targeted for extermination.) He instructed the Janjaweed militias to kill the men; rape and kill the women and sell the children into slavery. Villages were burned and depopulated wholesale. This show of force was meant to quash the drive for independence in the South, and re-establish an Islamist hegemony.

In 2005, at the behest of the West, a treaty was brokered to guarantee the South's right to secession in 2011. With Bashir in power, there's little chance he'll let go of the mineral-rich parts of the country. The South Sudanese have a long memory, and they'd just as soon have the Chinese never see another drop of their oil.

Without China buying Sudan's oil (and allegedly supplying arms and munitions to the North), Bashir can't possibly hope to remain in power. And given that China needs Sudan's oil, and has the U.N. Security Council veto power over any U.N. mandate to arrest Bashir, the math doesn't look good for our boy making it to the gallows or even an international circuit court.

So what does this indictment by the ICC really mean? Bashir's not taking it seriously. The ICC isn't allowed in Sudan, and the prosecutor, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, will have a tough time proving genocide.

Bashir has also killed or enslaved dissenters who happen to be Muslim. With him, it's about power first and Islam second. There's also the balancing act of whether Bashir's arrest will further destabilize the country, as its factions jockey for leadership. Sudan's 10 neighboring countries, filled with such stable democracies as Eritrea, Uganda, Chad, Kenya, and Libya, would likely want to have a say in how things turned out as well.

We could wind up with an Iraq-like quagmire of various ethnic groups, with their centuries-old laundry lists of grievances and no center from which to govern. In an act of bravado, Bashir may even keep good on his scheduled trip to the United Nations this September. His vice president Ali Osman Mohamed Taha has gone so far as to suggest that any attempt to arrest Bashir on U.S. soil would be considered "an act of war."

Not that the United States has all that much to fear from a government that relies on men on horseback to do its killing, but the hubris is staggering nonetheless.

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Sudan, Off With the Head!

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  • Posted By:
    andys30 at 07/22/2008 11:38:19 PM
    Comment:
    This is an internal conflict between black Arab Muslims and black Christians. It is somewhat of an internal struggle within a black nation state that should be solved by Africans (Muslim, Christian and Animist) only. Let us not be like the British of the late 19th and early 20th century that used similar kinds of pretexts of wrong doing during by some key African leader as a pretext for neocolonial intervention. Key white figures in the UK and the US have been on the ground in Sudan making the situation worse. It is hypocritical to use economic warfare (sanctions, freezing bank accounts, restricting travel) and then support opposition leader directly and then stand back and blame and demonize a Mugabe or Omar Bashir. I am not saying that these leaders are saints but they are being used as pawns. Know the history of Sudan and Zimbabwe. These countries have always had an anti-colonial history and have never been forgiven by the West. Be careful before jumping on the popular media bandwagon. Please research Cecil Rhodes and ???Chinese??? Gordon???s methods of colonialism and invention.
  • Posted By:
    chezcrisden at 07/21/2008 2:53:33 PM
    Comment:
    the sudan has to do what the sudan has to do to get rid of him.
    if moses can part the seas, ramses and his army can drown?
    then....
  • Posted By:
    wantok at 07/20/2008 2:55:47 AM
    Comment:
    The article is a great synopsis of the human disaster known as Sudan. I just finished reading ???What is What??? So true Dufar was the media staging ground for opening up the awareness to the world what atrocities have/are occurring in Sudan, but in the south Dinka and other tribes have gone through a holocaust.
    The question I ask whenever the query is made about what is the West, (U.S. mostly) going to do to solve an ???African??? problem. So where is Africa? Why must it always look to the West to pull it back on board the ship called earth? It has earthly wealth, minerals, oil, gas . . .; Lord knows it has human wealth, highly educated people. Until the countries of Africa begin to use them wisely, all the help from the great ???Western Plantation??? is not going solve their problems. They need to get off that plantation and truly begin to work with each other. Until then they will remain pawns in their own land being used and abused by outsiders.

    It would be better if they looked toward the successes in Asia and Latin America. They have their problems like all other parts of the world. But when the cow manure hits the fan they take care of it, it may be sloppy, but it???s done on their own accord without crying out to the West.

    Lastly, this is an age old belittling of black Africans by cultural Arabs (black or white). The Islamic north and Middle-east have never been real friends to the black south, never.
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