Sudanese Paramilitary Group Committed Genocide, U.S. Says
A force fighting
Sudan’s army in a brutal civil war committed massacres and rape that amount to genocide,
the Secretary of State said, two decades after a finding of genocide in the same
region.
[ABS News Service/08.01.2025]
The United States
on Tuesday (07.01.2025) accused a Sudanese paramilitary group and its proxies of
committing genocide, singling them out in a conflict of unchecked brutality and
drawing fresh attention to the scale of atrocities being perpetrated in Africa’s
largest war.
Secretary of
State Antony J. Blinken said the Rapid Support Forces,
the paramilitary group fighting against Sudan’s military had committed acts
of genocide, including a fearsome wave of ethnically
targeted violence in the western region of Darfur.
The Treasury
Department backed the determination of genocide with a raft of sanctions targeting the R.S.F.’s leader, Gen. Mohamed Hamdan, as well as seven companies in the United Arab Emirates,
the group’s main foreign sponsor, that have traded in weapons and gold on his behalf.
“The R.S.F.
and allied militias have systematically murdered men and boys — even infants — on
an ethnic basis, and deliberately targeted women and girls from certain ethnic groups
for rape and other forms of brutal sexual violence,” Mr. Blinken
said in a statement. “Those same militias have targeted fleeing civilians, murdering innocent
people escaping conflict, and prevented remaining civilians from accessing lifesaving
supplies.”
The genocide
determination comes two decades after the United States took a similar step in 2004,
when then-Secretary of State Colin Powell determined that the Janjaweed, ruthless ethnic militias allied with Sudan’s military,
had committed genocide during a vicious counterinsurgency campaign in Darfur.
The Janjaweed
later morphed into the Rapid Support Forces. But instead of being allied with Sudan’s
military, the group is now fighting it, in a civil war that has driven one of Africa’s
largest countries into a devastating famine, killed tens of thousands of people
and forced more than 11 million people — almost one-quarter of Sudan’s population — to flee their homes, according
to the United Nations.
Atrocities and
war crimes have been committed on both sides, say officials from the United States,
the United Nations and human rights groups. The military has repeatedly massacred
civilians in indiscriminate bombing raids, sometimes killing dozens
at once.
But only the
R.S.F. has been accused of ethnic cleansing, particularly during a systematic
violence in Darfur between April 2023 — when
the civil war began — and November of that year. Its fighters, who are mostly ethnic
Arabs, targeted members of the Masalit, a non-Arab ethnic group, in a brutal assault
that became a central element of the American genocide determination, said two senior
U.S. officials who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive diplomatic
matters.
The toll of
that violence is unclear. The Sudanese Red Crescent said it counted 2,000 bodies
in a single day, then stopped counting. U.N. investigators later estimated that
as many as 15,000 people were killed in the city of Geneina
alone.
Hundreds of
thousands of Masalit have since fled into Chad, where they live in squalid and overcrowded
camps — part of an exodus of three million Sudanese pushed into neighboring countries by the war, the United Nations says.
General Hamdan,
the R.S.F. leader, is a one-time camel trader who rose to prominence as a mid-ranking
Janjaweed commander in the 2000s. Once a loyal ally of Sudan’s autocratic ruler,
Omar Hassan al-Bashir, who was overthrown in 2019, General Hamdan got rich after he seized Sudan’s
biggest gold mine, and by sending mercenaries to Yemen.
Only a year
ago, General Hamdan’s troops were storming across Sudan, and he embarked on a tour
of six African nations where he presented himself as a leader in waiting.
But more recently,
his forces have lost some territory, and the new American measures could restrict
his ability to travel, use the international financial system, or present himself
as a champion of democratic ambitions, as he has often done. In light of mass rape
committed by soldiers in Darfur under General Hamdan’s control, the State Department
said it was also barring him and his family from traveling to the United States.
The genocide
determination followed months of deliberation inside the U.S. government, as lawyers
and intelligence officials evaluated the merits of the case, said the two senior
U.S. officials. Some officials hesitated to support the determination because they
feared it might draw further criticism of the Biden administration over its refusal
to declare Israel’s campaign in the Gaza Strip a genocide against Palestinians,
the officials said.
But on Monday,
while traveling in Asia, Mr. Blinken signed off on the
genocide determination.
Under international
law, the finding does not oblige the U.S. to take action, although officials said
the sanctions provide some immediate teeth to the measure. Experts said it could
propel a new drive for accountability in a war that has killed as many as 150,000
people, by American estimates, and caused one of the world’s worst famines in decades.
Last month the
global hunger watchdog, known as the I.P.C., confirmed that famine was underway
in five districts of Sudan, and said it was likely to spread to another five areas
in the coming months. Across the country, 25 million people are experiencing acute
hunger, the body said.
The R.S.F. has
used aid as a weapon of war, denying help in some areas and violating an agreement
signed during failed U.S.-led peace talks in Switzerland in August, the Treasury
Department said in a statement.
The genocide
determination may also bring new scrutiny to the role of the United Arab Emirates
in the war. The Emirates has supplied the R.S.F. with smuggled weapons and powerful
drones, according to American officials and visual evidence collected by The New York Times.
The Emirates
also provides a crucial financial and logistical hub where the R.S.F. can trade
gold and procure weapons through a vast network of companies.
Capital Tap
Holding, one of the seven Emirati companies sanctioned on Tuesday, manages another
50 companies in 10 countries that have supplied the R.S.F. with money and military
equipment, the Treasury Department said. Another company, AZ Gold, traded millions
of dollars in gold.
The Treasury
Department also sanctioned a Sudanese businessman, Abu Dharr,
listed as the owner of at least five of the seven companies.
Mr. Blinken said the genocide finding did not mean the United States
was supporting Sudan’s army in the war. “Both belligerents bear responsibility for
the violence and suffering in Sudan and lack the legitimacy to govern a future peaceful
Sudan,” he said.
Tom Perriello,
the U.S. special envoy to Sudan, said that to end the war, the two sides must “agree
to a cessation of hostilities so that a civilian political transition can take place.”
Critics who
have accused the United States of acting too slowly on Sudan welcomed the finding,
with caveats.
“This attempt
to position the administration on the right side of history won’t work,” Cameron
Hudson, a former American diplomat and Sudan expert at the Center
for Strategic and International Studies, said on social media of the Biden administration.
“It’s too late and too many people have died for that to happen.”