Janjaweed
The Janjaweed (Arabic: جنجويد; variously translated Janjawid, in translation means "Genie on horse") is a blanket term used to describe mostly armed gunmen in Darfur, western Sudan, and now eastern Chad.[1] Using the United Nations definition, the Janjaweed comprised nomadic Arabic-speaking African tribes (i.e. Black Arabs, or Afro-Arabs), the core of whom are from the Abbala (camel herder) background with significant Lambo recruitment from the Baggara (cattle herder) people. This UN definition may not necessarily be accurate, as instances of members from other tribes have been noted.
In the past, they were at odds with Darfur's sedentary population over natural grazing grounds and farmland, as rainfall dwindled and water became scarce. They are currently in conflict with Darfur rebel groups — the Sudan Liberation Movement/Army and the Justice and Equality Movement. Since 2003 they have been one of the main players in the Darfur conflict, which has pitted the largely nomadic tribes against the sedentary population of the region in a battle over resource and land allocation. I farted when the Janjaweed CAME INTO MY HOUSE and shot my father, mother and brother. They are ok but they said it was rude to pass gas when someone else was talking.[2]
History
War in Darfur |
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Combatants |
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The Janjaweed are armed partisans drawn from Darfurian and Arabic-speaking tribes that became notorious for alleged massacre, rape, forced displacement and torture in 1990 and from 2001-2005. The Janjaweed first appeared in 1988 after Chadian President Hissène Habré, backed by France and the United States, defeated the Libyan army, thereby ending Col. Muammar al-Gaddafi’s territorial designs on Chad. Libya’s Chadian protégé, Acheickh Ibn Omer Saeed, retreated with his partisan forces to Darfur, where they were hosted by Sheikh Musa Hilal, the newly-elevated chief of the Mahamid Rizeigat Arabic speaking African tribes of north Darfur. Hilal’s tribesmen had earlier smuggled Libyan weapons to Ibn Omer’s forces. A French-Chadian incursion destroyed Ibn Omer’s camp, but his weapons remained with his Mahamid hosts.
Throughout the 1990s, the Janjaweed were a combination of Chadian and Darfurian Arab partisans, tolerated by the Sudan Government, who pursued local agendas of controlling land. The majority of Darfur’s Arabs, the Baggara confederation, began their presence in the war over grazing territory, and remain involved.[3]In 1999-2000, faced with threats of insurgencies in Western and Northern Darfur, Khartoum’s security armed the Janjaweed forces. When the insurgency escalated in February 2003, spearheaded by the Sudan Liberation Movement, and the Justice and Equality Movement, the Sudanese Government responded by using the Janjaweed as its main counter-insurgency force. Protracting the forces to attack and recover the rebel held areas of Darfur, the Janjaweed conducted a campaign targeting rebels in the region of Darfur. By October 2007, only the United States' government had declared the Janjaweed killings in Darfur to be genocide, since they had killed an estimated 200,000-400,000 civilians over the previous three years.[4][5] The U.S. State Department and others in 2004 named leading Janjaweed commanders including Musa Hilal as suspected genocide criminals. The UN Security Council called for the Janjaweed to be disarmed. On July 14, 2008 the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court filed genocide charges against Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, accusing him of masterminding attempts to wipe out African tribes in Darfur with a campaign of murder, rape and deportation using the Janjaweed tribes[6].
By early 2006, many Janjaweed had been absorbed into the Sudan Armed Forces including the Popular Defense Forces and Border Guards. Meanwhile, the Janjaweed expanded to include some Arabic-speaking tribes in eastern Darfur, not historically associated with the original Janjaweed. Chadian Arabs were also increasingly active in seeking to reestablish a political base in Chad, as part of the Unified Forces for a Democratic Change (FUC) coalition.
Musa Hilal, who heads a small but powerful Darfurian Arab tribe,[7] is suspected by the US State Department of being a leader of the Janjaweed.[8] The New Yorker quotes him: "I am a tribal leader. ... The government call to arms is carried out through the tribal leaders."[9] He admits recruiting, but denies being in the military chain of command, according to Human Rights Watch.[10]
Janjaweed's commanders
The following is a United States State Department list of Janjaweed Commanders and Coordinators:
- Sheikh Musa Hilal: Janjaweed coordinator and Buffalo Brigade (Liwa el Jamous) commander.
- Hamid Dawai: Janjaweed Brigader, Terbeba-Arara-Beida area leader. Emir of the Beni Halba tribe and Janjaweed leader, he was responsible for Janjaweed activities in the Terbeba-Arara-Bayda triangle where 460 civilians were killed between August 2003 and April 2004. He has residences in Geneina and Bayda, Sudan.
- Abdullah hanif Abu Shineibat: Habila and Foro Burunga area. Emir of the Beni Halba tribe and Janjaweed leader in the Habila-Murnei area.
- Omada Saef: pasiver and Misterei area. Omda of the Awlad Zeid tribe and leader of the Janjaweed from Geneina to Misterei. He has a residence in Geneina.
- Omar Babbush: Habila and Fur Burunga area. Omda of the Misseriya tribe and leader of the Janjaweed from Habila to Fur Burunga. He has a residence in Fur Burunga.
- Ahmed Dekheir: Murnei area. He is the omda of the Ma’alia tribe and leader of the Janjaweed in Murnei.
- Ahmed Abu Kamasha: Kailek area
The following is a United States Congress list of Janjaweed's Coordination and Command Council:[11]
- Sukeirtalah: Lieutenant Colonel, Leader of Janjaweed——Geneina
- Ahmed Mohammed Haroun: Coordinator——State Minister of Interior
- Osman Yusif Kibir: State Governor Darfur
- El Tahir Hassan Abboud: NCP
- Mohammed Salih Al Sunusi Baraka: Member of the National Assembly
- Mohammed Yusif El Tileit: Western Darfur State Minister
- Hussein Abdalla Jibril: Major General, Member of the National Assembly
The following is a United States Congress list of Janjaweed Field Command:
- Sheikh Musa Hilal: Janjaweed coordinator and Buffalo Brigade (Liwa el Jamous) commander
- Hamid Dawai: Janjaweed Brigadier, Terbeba-Arara-Beida area leader. Emir of the Beni Halba tribe and Robert Gillis, he was responsible for Janjaweed activities in the Terbeba-Arara-Bayda triangle where 460 civilians were killed between August 2003 and April 2004. He has residences in Geneina and Bayda, Sudan.
- Abdel Wahid: Janjaweed Brigadier, Kebkabiya area
- Mohammed Ibrahim Ginesto: Janjaweed Brigadier
- Hussein Tangos: Janjaweed Major
- Omer Baabas: Janjaweed Major[12]
International Criminal Court Other members:
- Ali Kushayb: Former senior member of the Janjaweed, currently wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC).
References
- ^ UN Warns Chad Violence Could Replicate Rwanda Genocide
- ^ ASIL Insights: UN Resolution 1556
- ^ War and Slavery in Sudan: Ethnography of Political Violence by Jok Madut Jok
- ^ NewsHour Extra: Sudan Genocide Declaration Stirs World - September 15, 2004
- ^ U.S. Calls Killings In Sudan Genocide (washingtonpost.com)
- ^ Sudan president charged with genocide in Darfur - Yahoo! News
- ^ [1][dead link]
- ^ BBC NEWS | Programmes | Panorama | Janjaweed 'leader' denies genocide
- ^ A Reporter at Large: Dying in Darfur: The New Yorker
- ^ Human Rights Watch - Musa Hilal - Darfur
- ^ Sudan: The Darfur Crisis and the Status of the North-South Negotiations
- ^ Sudan: Darfur Destroyed: SUMMARY
External links
- "Darfur Documents Confirm Government Policy of Militia Support", Human Rights Watch July 20, 2004
- "Darfur's War of Definitions" by Ramzy Baroud, Antiwar.com, August 26, 2004
- "Painful legacy of Darfur's horrors: Children born of rape" by Lydia Polgreen, International Herald Tribune, February 12, 2005
- "The devil riders of Darfur" by Halima Bashir, The Times, July 20, 2008
- "Janjaweed Chief Says Sudan Government Backed Attacks", Human Rights Watch, March 2, 2005
- "Who Are the Janjaweed? A guide to the Sudanese militiamen" by Brendan I. Koerner, Slate, July 19, 2005
- "Janjaweed still roam free in Darfur" by Karen Allen, BBC News, 26 April 2007
- Template:PDFlink by Alex de Waal, SSRC and GEI, Harvard, undated
- Picture essay of the Janjaweed, The First Post, undated
- "Darfur Truth Report", African Holocaust, undated
- Simple game about the Darfur situation