FCC-CC leaders warn of ‘dire consequences’ should Sudan junta abandon Framework Agreement

Ibrahim El Sheikh, former Minister of Industry and a leading member of the Sudanese Congress Party, which is a member of the Forces for Freedom and Change-Central Council (FFC-CC), has warned Lt Gen Abdelfattah El Burhan, Lt Gen Shamseldin Kabbashi, and the other members of the military junta of the dire consequences of abandoning the Framework Agreement.

El Sheikh said in an interview with Radio Dabanga on Monday that the leaders of the military junta seem to abandon the agreements. He said that Kabbashi rejected the Framework Agreement before he later agreed to it because of commitment to the military hierarchy.

The politician stressed that the international community does not trust El Burhan and Sudan’s military because of their non-compliance with agreements. “The main reason for political groups opposing the Framework Agreement, such as the Arab Socialist Ba’ath Party, is the shaken confidence in the military.”

He stressed the need for strict adherence to the Framework Agreement signed between “the military component, the FFC-CC, and other transition forces”, and stressed that “the Framework Agreement represents the last opportunity to cross the country from the impasse caused by the 2021 coup”.

The FFC-CC repeated their refusal to include any parties that have not signed the Framework Agreement, in reference to Kabbashi’s recent statements.

Mohamed Abdelhakam, leading member of Sudan’s Federal Association and the FFC-CC told Radio Dabanga that the signatory parties to the Framework Agreement have elaborately discussed the conditions for signing the agreement.

“The issue was resolved according to a clear and clear vision, and it cannot be re-discussed, stressing the commitment of FFC-CC to the other signatory parties.

The FFC-CC repeated their refusal to include any parties that have not signed the Framework Agreement, in reference to Kabbashi’s recent statements.

Mohamed Abdelhakam, leading member of Sudan’s Federal Association and the FFC-CC told Radio Dabanga that the signatory parties to the Framework Agreement have elaborately discussed the conditions for signing the agreement.

“The issue was resolved according to a clear and clear vision, and it cannot be re-discussed, stressing the commitment of FFC-CC to the other signatory parties.

Source: Radio Dabanga

More anti-gold mining protests in Sudan as cyanide poses environmental and health risk

People in Sirba in West Darfur have called on the state authorities to intervene and stop illegal mining excavations in the area in which toxic cyanide is used. In Red Sea state, people are blocking the Port Sudan-Kassala road to protest the environmental dangers posed by mining waste treatment facilities in the area.

Member of the Sirba Youth Association Dawelbeit El Degeir told Radio Dabanga that a group of workers began excavations in the areas of Teira and Souq Koul, roughly seven kilometres east of Sirba.

The workers dug an artesian well and a number of basins for washing minerals using cyanide. El Degeir explained that two horses and a large number of birds died as a result of the use of cyanide.

‘Two horses and a large number of birds died as a result of the use of cyanide’

“We went to the workers to ask them what they are doing and they told us that they belong to El Junaid Company,” he said. “We then notified the Sirba security committee, who then visited the site headed by the commissioner and the police chief of Sirba.”

He explained that they had also notified the West Darfur governor of the matter. The governor denied having any knowledge about the excavations and stressed that gold mining has been suspended in the state and is therefore illegal.

He promised to send a force to the site.

Environmentalists have been warning of the health and environmental hazards of the use of toxic mercury and cyanide to extract gold from ore for years.

A recent report on mercury poisoning in Sudan points out that “years of indiscriminate use of dangerous chemicals such as mercury, cyanide, and thiourea without protective measures for miners or local populations has exposed millions of citizens across Sudan to lethal risks”.

El Junaid and the RSF

El Junaid Gold Mining Company is a controversial presence in Darfur and also operates the economically important Jebel Amer gold mines in North Darfur. The company has been linked to the infamous paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

Lt Gen Mohamed Hamdan ‘Hemeti’, Deputy Chairman of Sudan’s Sovereignty Council and Commander of RSF, has family ties that link him to El Junaid Gold Mining Company, which is also the operator of the economically important Jebel Amer gold mines in North Darfur.

The RSF grew out of the Janjaweed militias that are largely held responsible for the Darfur Genocide. Former Janjaweed leader Musa Hilal seized control of the Jebel Amer gold mining area in July 2015 and, according to a UN Security Council report in April 2016, profited from vast gold sales.

Sources claim that Hemeti was behind the detention of Hilal in 2017 before taking over the operation of the mines. According to the NGO Global Witness, Hemeti captured a large part of the gold market in Sudan in previous years, bringing him much wealth and power.

In 2020, the government took over control of the Jebel Amer gold mines. Last year, however, CNN published an investigation disclosing how “Russia is plundering gold in Sudan to boost Putin’s war effort in Ukraine” with the complicity of Sudanese military rulers, especially the RSF.

Red Sea state protests

Protesters continued to block the Port Sudan-Kassala road near Dordeib in Red Sea state for the sixth day in a row yesterday, calling for the removal of plants that treat gold mining waste (called karta in Sudan) that contains cyanide in open basins.

Red Sea state has been witnessing tensions for months as residents protest the behaviour of gold mining companies and fear that their drinking water supply is at risk.

Journalist Osman Hashim reported that a large number of lorries and other vehicles are lined up on two sides of the blockade, while bus passengers are forced to get off and take other buses on the other side of the closed road.

They protested in the area of the 55th Infantry Brigade near Dordeib town.

He told Radio Dabanga that the protesters reject the decision issued by the commander of the Infantry Brigade to stop the work of the karta treating plants for a week in order to address the matter with the residents of the area. Instead, the activists call for the final removal of the pants from the army base because of their impact on the health of humans, animals, and the environment.

The Dordeib Protest Committee commented in a press statement that the brigade commander’s statement to only stop the work at the plants for a week confirms that he does not seek to remove basins and expel the gold mining companies permanently.

The committee affirmed that the road will remain closed until its demands of dismantling the basins and expelling the companies are fulfilled.

The committee explained that the effects on the environment and livestock appeared two months after the start of the operation of the treatment basins by the mining companies that use cyanide.

Two months ago, the local Demanding Bodies Association said that illegal gold mining activities using cyanide are causing an environmental disaster in Red Sea state.

Source: Radio Dabanga

Joint Darfur security force to be deployed across South Darfur as new batch graduates

In a meeting in South Darfur capital Nyala yesterday, Commanders of the Darfur Security Forces for the Protection of Civilians discussed the deployment of the joint forces in South Darfur as part of the implementation of the Security Arrangements protocol of the Juba Peace Agreement.

A delegation led by the second commander of the joint Darfur security forces, Brig Gen Mohamed Sabahelkheir, met with Acting Governor of South Darfur Bashir Morsal Hasaballah in Nyala yesterday.

In a press conference following the meeting, the governor repeated his pledge to the security forces “to provide everything necessary for their deployment in the villages of voluntary return, camps for the displaced, and agricultural areas”. He also welcomed the forces’ role in combating the sale of drugs.

Brig Sabahelkheir announced a plan of action for the forces and explained the map of their deployment during the first phase of the plan.

The joint security force will be deployed across eight axes in South Darfur to establish more security in areas prone to attacks or drug trafficking.

Joint Darfur security force

In line with the Juba Peace Agreement, a new joint peacekeeping force was set up in Darfur last year with the aim of protecting civilians in the troubled region and uniting the different rebel movements and government forces.

The slow implementation of the security arrangements stipulated in the Juba Peace Agreement, which was signed in 2020, has been a point of critique and discontent for many displaced in Darfur, whose safety is still under severe threat.

The first batch of the new joint security force in Darfur graduated last July. To many’s frustrations, however, the country’s most prominent and influential armed forces, the government’s own Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) and Rapid Support Forces (RSF), have been slow to join.

Ex-rebels of the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) during the launch of the integration process into the Sudanese army in 2014 (Hamid Abdulsalam / UNAMID)

A new batch of the joint peacekeeping force that finally includes army soldiers and members of the paramilitary RSF, alongside former rebel fighters and policemen, has been continuing training in the Dumeya military camp near Nyala for more than two months.

They will graduate in the coming days to be part of those forces that are to be deployed across eight axes in South Darfur.

Source: Radio Dabanga