Houses raided over Christmas in Sudan’s Blue Nile region

The Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North under the leadership of Malik Agar (SPLM-N Agar) in the Blue Nile region has condemned police raids on homes of South Sudanese Christians in Sennar.

The raids took place during Christmas celebrations on Sunday. Amani El Sadig, deputy head of the SPLM-N Agar in Sennar, urged the state authorities to reveal the reasons for the incident and prevent their recurrence in the future.

Three women and a man were detained and released after imposing fines ranging from SDG20,000 (approx. USD35) to SDG30,000, said El Sadig in a press statement on Tuesday.

El Sadig also called for a Commission for Religious Freedoms to be formed in accordance with the stipulations in the Juba Peace Agreement, signed by the SPLM-N Agar, a number of other rebel movements, and the Sudanese government on October 3, 2020.

On June 22, the New York-based African Centre for Justice and Peace Studies (ACJPS) reported that police forces raided a church in Zalingei and detained four Christian men whom they found praying. The men were charged with apostasy, as the police insisted that they had converted from Islam to Christianity even though they maintained that they are Christians.

Radio Dabanga reported on the violent suppression of freedoms that characterised the 30-year regime of Omar Al Bashir increasing again in all levels of society in July. The following month, ACJPS called for urgent investigations into “suspicious circumstances’” surrounding the deaths of Pastor Azrag Barnabas and his three children in Central Darfur. According to a postmortem report, Azrag may have been poisoned before falling ill and dying in November 2021.

After Omar Al Bashir took power through a military coup in 1989, Sudan witnessed a significant clampdown on religious freedoms in which Sudanese Christians were greatly persecuted. During the transitional government that followed, Christians began to receive better protection from the Sudanese authorities and the crime of apostasy was decriminalised. Renouncing Islam had been punishable by flogging, imprisonment, and death in Sudan.

“Despite this amendment, Sudanese security agencies have continued to harass Christians by raiding churches and arresting individuals who have converted from Islam to Christianity,” ACJPS stated.

* USD 1 = SDG 448.74 at the time of publishing this article. As effective foreign exchange rates can vary in Sudan, Radio Dabanga bases all SDG currency conversions on the daily US Dollar rate quoted by the Central Bank of Sudan (CBoS).

Source: Radio Dabanga

Over 16,000 displaced following attacks by armed gunmen in South Darfur

The United Nations reported that more than 16,000 people have been displaced because of attacks on villages of Beleil in South Darfur last week, amidst strong condemnation of violence in the region.

Radio Dabanga reported that the death toll from attacks on villages in Beleil, South Darfur, reached at least 15 on Monday, however, there are conflicting reports about the number of victims.

The Sudanese Central Committee of Doctors reported that nine people were killed and 18 others were injured during the attacks last week. Six of the victims were killed by bullets, one by immolation, and two were hit in the head with a blunt object. 15 people were injured by bullets, two by fire, and one has a critical injury after being hit in the head.

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Aid (OCHA) in Sudan reported on Monday that people took refuge in Dereig camp for the displaced in Nyala locality, the Beleil camp in Beleil locality, and the Damma camp for the displaced in Mershing locality. Others fled to villages in Nitega locality.

A delegation from various UN agencies and international and national organisations visited the displaced on Monday to assess their needs. Osman Ibrahim, representative of the Sudanese Humanitarian Aid Commissioner confirmed in a press statement following the visits the dire conditions the people are living in, after losing their property and food stocks when their houses were burned down.

People who fled strongly criticised the slowness of the authorities of Beleil locality and the South Darfur government in dealing with the recent violence, calling on the governor to listen to them directly.

Some of the displaced expressed their desire to return to their villages but said they fear that the violence may erupt again. They called for more presence of security forces and the removal of “the outlaws” from their farms “once and for all.”

‘Deliberate and systematic’

Daju tribe leader Saleh Eisa, one of the leaders of the Dajo tribe, said that “the security situation has not improved,” even after a joint force of army soldiers, Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitaries, policemen, and members of the General Intelligence Service (GIS) arrived at the affected areas on Sunday. He told Radio Dabanga that a vehicle carrying food and other relief items for the victims was set on fire on Monday.

Roads between the affected villages and the camps of Kalma, Dereig, and Otash have partially opened, Eisa said. He reported that there is a lack of food, and “shelter and blankets are needed during the bitter cold.”

He demanded that all roads and passages are opened safely, enabling the displaced to reach their families, and the prompt provision of shelter materials, food, drink, clothing, and blankets.

The Daju sultanate described the attacks on the local villages of Beleil in the state of South Darfur as “organised.” It amounts to “ethnic cleansing,” he said.

The National Authority for the Protection of Civilians described the attack on the villages in Beleil as “deliberate and systematic.” In a statement this week, it expressed its deep concern over “the repeated barbaric aggressive acts against innocent citizens in villages of Beleil.”

Five days after the first attack on the villages in Beleil, the Darfur Regional Government, chaired by former rebel leader Minni Minawi, issued a statement in which it expressed “its total rejection of the way the parties dealt with the problem,” and condemned “the tendency of the components of society to solve their problems through armed conflicts.”

The DRG announced that it will work with the state government to hold those involved to account in a fair trial.

Causes of violence

The statement referred to the region’s security and developmental woes due to the failure of the transitional period. Failure to implement the Juba Peace Agreement, further security arrangements, Darfur Regional Governance Law, and payments to the region which would help it to develop have led to this situation, according to the DRG.

Yesterday, members of the Sultanate of Daju said in a press conference in Nyala that the attacks were carried out by people wearing RSF uniforms. They were reportedly riding in RSF four-wheel drive vehicles, and on motorcycles and camels.

The speakers said that what happened was not a tribal conflict, but an attack on innocent defenceless people by gunmen. They warned that the violence will continue even after the declaration of the state of emergency, which was put in place by the South Darfur authorities on Saturday.

The aftermath of the attacks will cost approximately SDG 130 million according to the speakers, who hold the government responsible for what happened. They urged for the dismissal of acting governor of South Darfur, Hamid El Tijani, as well as an urgent international investigation.

They claimed that the attacks on the villages in the Moreer Administrative Unit aim to displace the indigenous population, and said that the areas between Andar to Damma and Moreer and Um Zeifa have become settlements for new population groups.

They pointed to several attacks in the area in November and the release of livestock on farms without any accountability or security measures taken. They said that the idea of conflict between herders and farmers has become a peg on which all security failures are hung.

The Darfur Regional Government (DRG) said in a statement that “the tendency of the components of society to solve their problems through armed conflicts is unacceptable.”

Condemnation of the attack

Political parties and other rebel movements called for an investigation into the violence and the arrest of those involved.

The Sudanese Congress Party and the National Umma Party both condemned the events in a statement and “hold the putschists fully responsible for the events.”

The Justice and Equality Movement, the Sudan Liberation Movement-Transitional Council faction, the Sudan Liberation Forces, and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North under the leadership of Malik Agar, each called for an immediate investigation, arrest and trial of the perpetrators, and disarmament.

The mainstream Sudan Liberation Movement headed by Abdelwahid El Nur “holds the coup government and its militias fully responsible for these terrible crimes.” The movement condemned “the silence of the international community regarding the ongoing crimes and violations and its failure to protect defenceless civilians.”

UNITAMS strongly condemned the recent violence in South Darfur, calling on the parties to the conflict to stop the violence immediately. In a statement yesterday, UNITAMS called on the authorities to take stronger measures to protect civilians, allow humanitarian access, and hold perpetrators accountable. The mission also emphasised the urgent need to comprehensively address the root causes of violence across Sudan.

On December 14, Radio Dabanga reported a number of attacks on civilians by armed men in Darfur. “A new wave of attacks on civilians in Darfur since mid-November 2021 highlights the urgent need for the UN to enhance its scrutiny of the restive region of Sudan,” said Human Rights Watch in a statement the day after.

Source: Radio Dabanga

Sudan Ministry of Industry and tax office workers go on strike

Employees of the Sudanese Ministry of Industry in Khartoum began a strike on Monday, demanding improvement in work conditions and a pay rise. Tax office staff and South Kordofan government employees also began a strike on Sunday.

The Strike Committee said in a statement on Tuesday that the Ministry of Finance responded negatively to their demands, while the Council of Ministers did not respond at all.

The statement noted “a terrible decline” in working conditions at the ministry. “Promotions procedures are ignored and the previously approved job structure has not been implemented.”

Tax office staff laid down their tools to demand an increase in wages across Sudan on Sunday. On Tuesday, they announced more actions after the taxes administration refused to respond to their demands and threatened to dismiss the strikers.

In South Kordofan, government employees, including medics at state clinics and hospitals, embarked on a strike to demand payment of their salaries on Sunday.

Mohamed Adam Dahya, a member of the Staff Demand Committee, told Radio Dabanga that the strike excludes emergency cases. He said that the strike, which is demanding improved salaries and a month’s payment of the South Kordofan state’s revenues, will continue until January 7.

September saw a number of strikes across Sudan over unpaid salaries and the failure of authorities to implement the promised 2022 salary structure. Teachers are currently on strike across Sudan to demand better salaries and improved working conditions in state schools.

Last month, Radio Dabanga interviewed people about the cost of living in Sudan. Many said that market prices are too high. “My salary of SDG50,000 (USD86*) only covers two daily meals for five days a week,” a young teacher said.

In an interview on Radio Dabanga’s Sudan Today programme in September, economic expert Sidgi Kaballo described the inflation figures as “disturbing” and warned of a “revolution of the hungry” if the root causes of the economic problems are not addressed.

* The selling rates of the American dollar at Sudanese banks on Dec 28 varied between SDG576-584 according to the Central Bank of Sudan.

Source: Radio Dabanga

Teachers demand higher salaries and students protest fee increases in Sudan

Teachers at state schools and students at higher education institutions in Sudan have begun to strike to put further pressure on the government to increase their wages and improve tuition fees.

Duriya Babiker, a member of the Teachers’ Strike Committee, told Radio Dabanga that teachers all over the country responded to their calls to close schools from Tuesday to Thursday.

She condemned the statement of the Governor of Khartoum, who called the strike unacceptable. “The governor should stand with the teachers, who are demanding improved salaries and school environments, a decrease in the huge number of students in classrooms, and better maintenance of school buildings, instead of blaming them.”

Staff members of Sudanese research centres organised a protest vigil in front of the Ministry of Higher Education on Tuesday to demand an increase in wages and a reform of salary structures. They demanded that the new salary structure emulates university lecturers and other employees working for the Ministry.

Yesterday, the Sudan University of Science and Technology announced the suspension of studies in the Southern Campus indefinitely. The decision was taken after students of the Faculty of Engineering started a strike that day to protest significant increases in tuition fees.

The Sudanese Teachers Committee called the appointment of an undersecretary for the Ministry of Education “a step in the right direction” in a statement yesterday. The appointment of an undersecretary will improve the situation, as “a single person doing the work of three senior positions in the ministry causes roles to overlap,” according to the committee.

The acting Minister of Education is supposed to stand with the teachers’ demands and defend them, and not threaten to transfer or dismiss them, said Babiker on December 18.

Earlier this month, the Service Affairs Bureau announced an increase in teachers’ wages by six per cent. The authorities have previously used bonus payments “as a means to placate teachers,” according to a Sudanese Teachers’ Committee statement on October 15.

The teachers, who demonstrated for better salaries outside the Council of Minister’s headquarters in Khartoum the day after the statement, said this payment barely covered the rise of the cost of living in Sudan.

Source: Radio Dabanga