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By
Mahmood Mamdani
The similarities between Iraq and Darfur are remarkable. The
estimate of the number of civilians killed over the past three
years is roughly similar. The killers are mostly paramilitaries,
closely linked to the official military, which is said to be their
main source of arms. The victims too are by and large identified
as members of groups, rather than targeted as individuals. But the
violence in the two places is named differently. In Iraq, it is
said to be a cycle of insurgency and counter-insurgency; in Darfur,
it is called genocide. Why the difference? Who does the naming?
Who is being named? What difference does it make?
The most
powerful mobilisation in New York City is in relation to Darfur,
not Iraq. One would expect the reverse, for no other reason than
that most New Yorkers are American citizens and so should feel
directly responsible for the violence in occupied Iraq. But Iraq
is a messy place in the American imagination, a place with messy
politics. Americans worry about what their government should do in
Iraq. Should it withdraw? What would happen if it did? In
contrast, there is nothing messy about Darfur. It is a place
without history and without politics; simply a site where
perpetrators clearly identifiable as ‘Arabs’ confront victims
clearly identifiable as ‘Africans’.
A
full-page advertisement has appeared several times a week in the
New York Times calling for intervention in Darfur now. It wants
the intervening forces to be placed under ‘a chain of command
allowing necessary and timely military action without approval
from distant political or civilian personnel’. That intervention
in Darfur should not be subject to ‘political or civilian’
considerations and that the intervening forces should have the
right to shoot – to kill – without permission from distant
places: these are said to be ‘humanitarian’ demands. In the
same vein, a New Republic editorial on Darfur has called for
‘force as a first-resort response’. What makes the situation
even more puzzling is that some of those who are calling for an
end to intervention in Iraq are demanding an intervention in
Darfur; as the slogan goes, ‘Out of Iraq and into Darfur.’
What would
happen if we thought of Darfur as we do of Iraq, as a place with a
history and politics – a messy politics of insurgency and
counter-insurgency? Why should an intervention in Darfur not turn
out to be a trigger that escalates rather than reduces the level
of violence as intervention in Iraq has done? Why might it not
create the actual possibility of genocide, not just rhetorically
but in reality? Morally, there is no doubt about the horrific
nature of the violence against civilians in Darfur. The ambiguity
lies in the politics of the violence, whose sources include both a
state-connected counter-insurgency and an organised insurgency,
very much like the violence in Iraq.
The insurgency and counter-insurgency in Darfur began in 2003.
Both were driven by an intermeshing of domestic tensions in the
context of a peace-averse international environment defined by the
War on Terror. On the one hand, there was a struggle for power
within the political class in Sudan, with more marginal interests
in the west (following those in the south and in the east) calling
for reform at the centre. On the other, there was a
community-level split inside Darfur, between nomads and settled
farmers, who had earlier forged a way of sharing the use of
semi-arid land in the dry season. With the drought that set in
towards the late 1970s, co-operation turned into an intense
struggle over diminishing resources.
As the insurgency took root among the prospering peasant tribes of
Darfur, the government trained and armed the poorer nomads and
formed a militia – the Janjawiid – that became the vanguard of
the unfolding counter-insurgency. The worst violence came from the
Janjawiid, but the insurgent movements were also accused of gross
violations. Anyone wanting to end the spiralling violence would
have to bring about power-sharing at the state level and
resource-sharing at the community level, land being the key
resource.
Since its onset, two official verdicts have been delivered on the
violence, the first from the US, the second from the UN. The
American verdict was unambiguous: Darfur was the site of an
ongoing genocide. The chain of events leading to Washington’s
proclamation began with ‘a genocide alert’ from the Management
Committee of the Washington Holocaust Memorial Museum; according
to the Jerusalem Post, the alert was ‘the first ever of its
kind, issued by the US Holocaust Museum’. The House of
Representatives followed unanimously on 24 June 2004. The last to
join the chorus was Colin Powell.
The UN Commission on Darfur was created in the aftermath of the
American verdict and in response to American pressure. It was more
ambiguous. In September 2004, the Nigerian president Olusegun
Obasanjo, then the chair of the African Union, visited UN
headquarters in New York. Darfur had been the focal point of
discussion in the African Union. All concerned were alert to the
extreme political sensitivity of the issue. At a press conference
at the UN on 23 September Obasanjo was asked to pronounce on the
violence in Darfur: was it genocide or not? His response was very
clear:
Before you can say that this is genocide or ethnic cleansing, we
will have to have a definite decision and plan and programme of a
government to wipe out a particular group of people, then we will
be talking about genocide, ethnic cleansing. What we know is not
that. What we know is that there was an uprising, rebellion, and
the government armed another group of people to stop that
rebellion. That’s what we know. That does not amount to genocide
from our own reckoning. It amounts to of course conflict. It
amounts to violence.
By October, the Security Council had established a five-person
commission of inquiry on Darfur and asked it to report within
three months on ‘violations of international humanitarian law
and human rights law in Darfur by all parties’, and specifically
to determine ‘whether or not acts of genocide have occurred’.
Among the members of the commission was the chief prosecutor of
South Africa’s TRC, Dumisa Ntsebeza. In its report, submitted on
25 January 2005, the commission concluded that ‘the Government
of the Sudan has not pursued a policy of genocide . . . directly
or through the militias under its control.’ But the commission
did find that the government’s violence was ‘deliberately and
indiscriminately directed against civilians’. Indeed, ‘even
where rebels may have been present in villages, the impact of
attacks on civilians shows that the use of military force was
manifestly disproportionate to any threat posed by the rebels.’
These acts, the commission concluded, ‘were conducted on a
widespread and systematic basis, and therefore may amount to
crimes against humanity’ (my emphasis). Yet, the commission
insisted, they did not amount to acts of genocide: ‘The crucial
element of genocidal intent appears to be missing . . . it would
seem that those who planned and organised attacks on villages
pursued the intent to drive the victims from their homes,
primarily for purposes of counter-insurgency warfare.’
At the same time, the commission assigned secondary responsibility
to rebel forces – namely, members of the Sudan Liberation Army
and the Justice and Equality Movement – which it held
‘responsible for serious violations of international human
rights and humanitarian law which may amount to war crimes’ (my
emphasis). If the government stood accused of ‘crimes against
humanity’, rebel movements were accused of ‘war crimes’.
Finally, the commission identified individual perpetrators and
presented the UN secretary-general with a sealed list that
included ‘officials of the government of Sudan, members of
militia forces, members of rebel groups and certain foreign army
officers acting in their personal capacity’. The list named 51
individuals.
The commission’s findings highlighted three violations of
international law: disproportionate response, conducted on a
widespread and systematic basis, targeting entire groups (as
opposed to identifiable individuals) but without the intention to
eliminate them as groups. It is for this last reason that the
commission ruled out the finding of genocide. Its less grave
findings of ‘crimes against humanity’ and ‘war crimes’ are
not unique to Darfur, but fit several other situations of extreme
violence: in particular, the US occupation of Iraq, the Hema-Lendu
violence in eastern Congo and the Israeli invasion of Lebanon.
Among those in the counter-insurgency accused of war crimes were
the ‘foreign army officers acting in their personal capacity’,
i.e. mercenaries, presumably recruited from armed forces outside
Sudan. The involvement of mercenaries in perpetrating gross
violence also fits the occupation in Iraq, where some of them go
by the name of ‘contractors’.
The journalist in the US most closely identified with
consciousness-raising on Darfur is the New York Times op-ed
columnist Nicholas Kristof, often identified as a lone crusader on
the issue. To peruse Kristof’s Darfur columns over the past
three years is to see the reduction of a complex political context
to a morality tale unfolding in a world populated by villains and
victims who never trade places and so can always and easily be
told apart. It is a world where atrocities mount geometrically,
the perpetrators so evil and the victims so helpless that the only
possibility of relief is a rescue mission from the outside,
preferably in the form of a military intervention.
Kristof made six highly publicised trips to Darfur, the first in
March 2004 and the sixth two years later. He began by writing of
it as a case of ‘ethnic cleansing’: ‘Sudan’s Arab
rulers’ had ‘forced 700,000 black African Sudanese to flee
their villages’ (24 March 2004). Only three days later, he upped
the ante: this was no longer ethnic cleansing, but genocide.
‘Right now,’ he wrote on 27 March, ‘the government of Sudan
is engaged in genocide against three large African tribes in its
Darfur region.’ He continued: ‘The killings are being
orchestrated by the Arab-dominated Sudanese government’ and
‘the victims are non-Arabs: blacks in the Zaghawa, Massalliet
and Fur tribes.’ He estimated the death toll at a thousand a
week. Two months later, on 29 May, he revised the estimates
dramatically upwards, citing predictions from the US Agency for
International Development to the effect that ‘at best,
“only” 100,000 people will die in Darfur this year of
malnutrition and disease’ but ‘if things go badly, half a
million will die.’
The UN commission’s report was released on 25 February 2005. It
confirmed ‘massive displacement’ of persons (‘more than a
million’ internally displaced and ‘more than 200,000’
refugees in Chad) and the destruction of ‘several hundred’
villages and hamlets as ‘irrefutable facts’; but it gave no
confirmed numbers for those killed. Instead, it noted rebel claims
that government-allied forces had ‘allegedly killed over 70,000
persons’. Following the publication of the report, Kristof began
to scale down his estimates. For the first time, on 23 February
2005, he admitted that ‘the numbers are fuzzy.’ Rather than
the usual single total, he went on to give a range of figures,
from a low of 70,000, which he dismissed as ‘a UN estimate’,
to ‘independent estimates [that] exceed 220,000’. A warning
followed: ‘and the number is rising by about ten thousand a
month.’
The publication of the commission’s report had considerable
effect. Internationally, it raised doubts about whether what was
going on in Darfur could be termed genocide. Even US officials
were unwilling to go along with the high estimates propagated by
the broad alliance of organisations that subscribe to the Save
Darfur campaign. The effect on American diplomacy was discernible.
Three months later, on 3 May, Kristof noted with dismay that not
only had ‘Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick pointedly
refused to repeat the administration’s past judgment that the
killings amount to genocide’: he had ‘also cited an absurdly
low estimate of Darfur’s total death toll: 60,000 to 160,000’.
As an alternative, Kristof cited the latest estimate of deaths
from the Coalition for International Justice as ‘nearly 400,000,
and rising by 500 a day’. In three months, Kristof’s estimates
had gone up from 10,000 to 15,000 a month. Six months later, on 27
November, Kristof warned that ‘if aid groups pull out . . . the
death toll could then rise to 100,000 a month.’ Anyone keeping a
tally of the death toll in Darfur as reported in the Kristof
columns would find the rise, fall and rise again very bewildering.
First he projected the number of dead at 320,000 for 2004 (16 June
2004) but then gave a scaled down estimate of between 70,000 and
220,000 (23 February 2005). The number began once more to climb to
‘nearly 400,000’ (3 May 2005), only to come down yet again to
300,000 (23 April 2006). Each time figures were given with equal
confidence but with no attempt to explain their basis. Did the
numbers reflect an actual decline in the scale of killing in
Darfur or was Kristof simply making an adjustment to the changing
mood internationally?
In the 23 April column, Kristof expanded the list of perpetrators
to include an external power: ‘China is now underwriting its
second genocide in three decades. The first was in Pol Pot’s
Cambodia, and the second is in Darfur, Sudan. Chinese oil
purchases have financed Sudan’s pillage of Darfur, Chinese-made
AK-47s have been the main weapons used to slaughter several
hundred thousand people in Darfur so far and China has protected
Sudan in the UN Security Council.’ In the Kristof columns, there
is one area of deafening silence, to do with the fact that what is
happening in Darfur is a civil war. Hardly a word is said about
the insurgency, about the civilian deaths insurgents mete out,
about acts that the commission characterised as ‘war crimes’.
Would the logic of his 23 April column not lead one to think that
those with connections to the insurgency, some of them active in
the international campaign to declare Darfur the site of genocide,
were also guilty of ‘underwriting’ war crimes in Darfur?
Newspaper writing on Darfur has sketched a pornography of
violence. It seems fascinated by and fixated on the gory details,
describing the worst of the atrocities in gruesome detail and
chronicling the rise in the number of them. The implication is
that the motivation of the perpetrators lies in biology
(‘race’) and, if not that, certainly in ‘culture’. This
voyeuristic approach accompanies a moralistic discourse whose
effect is both to obscure the politics of the violence and
position the reader as a virtuous, not just a concerned observer.
Journalism gives us a simple moral world, where a group of
perpetrators face a group of victims, but where neither history
nor motivation is thinkable because both are outside history and
context. Even when newspapers highlight violence as a social
phenomenon, they fail to understand the forces that shape the
agency of the perpetrator. Instead, they look for a clear and
uncomplicated moral that describes the victim as untainted and the
perpetrator as simply evil. Where yesterday’s victims are
today’s perpetrators, where victims have turned perpetrators,
this attempt to find an African replay of the Holocaust not only
does not work but also has perverse consequences. Whatever its
analytical weaknesses, the depoliticisation of violence has given
its proponents distinct political advantages.
The conflict in Darfur is highly politicised, and so is the
international campaign. One of the campaign’s constant refrains
has been that the ongoing genocide is racial: ‘Arabs’ are
trying to eliminate ‘Africans’. But both ‘Arab’ and
‘African’ have several meanings in Sudan. There have been at
least three meanings of ‘Arab’. Locally, ‘Arab’ was a
pejorative reference to the lifestyle of the nomad as uncouth;
regionally, it referred to someone whose primary language was
Arabic. In this sense, a group could become ‘Arab’ over time.
This process, known as Arabisation, was not an anomaly in the
region: there was Amharisation in Ethiopia and Swahilisation on
the East African coast. The third meaning of ‘Arab’ was
‘privileged and exclusive’; it was the claim of the riverine
political aristocracy who had ruled Sudan since independence, and
who equated Arabisation with the spread of civilisation and being
Arab with descent.
‘African’, in this context, was a subaltern identity that also
had the potential of being either exclusive or inclusive. The two
meanings were not only contradictory but came from the experience
of two different insurgencies. The inclusive meaning was more
political than racial or even cultural (linguistic), in the sense
that an ‘African’ was anyone determined to make a future
within Africa. It was pioneered by John Garang, the leader of the
Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) in the south, as a way of
holding together the New Sudan he hoped to see. In contrast, its
exclusive meaning came in two versions, one hard (racial) and the
other soft (linguistic) – ‘African’ as Bantu and
‘African’ as the identity of anyone who spoke a language
indigenous to Africa. The racial meaning came to take a strong
hold in both the counter-insurgency and the insurgency in Darfur.
The Save Darfur campaign’s characterisation of the violence as
‘Arab’ against ‘African’ obscured both the fact that the
violence was not one-sided and the contest over the meaning of
‘Arab’ and ‘African’: a contest that was critical
precisely because it was ultimately about who belonged and who did
not in the political community called Sudan. The depoliticisation,
naturalisation and, ultimately, demonisation of the notion
‘Arab’, as against ‘African’, has been the deadliest
effect, whether intended or not, of the Save Darfur campaign.
The depoliticisation of the conflict gave campaigners three
advantages. First, they were able to occupy the moral high ground.
The campaign presented itself as apolitical but moral, its concern
limited only to saving lives. Second, only a single-issue campaign
could bring together in a unified chorus forces that are otherwise
ranged as adversaries on most important issues of the day: at one
end, the Christian right and the Zionist lobby; at the other, a
mainly school and university-based peace movement. Nat Hentoff of
the Village Voice wrote of the Save Darfur Coalition as ‘an
alliance of more than 515 faith-based, humanitarian and human
rights organisations’; among the organisers of their Rally to
Stop the Genocide in Washington last year were groups as diverse
as the American Jewish World Service, the American Society for
Muslim Advancement, the National Association of Evangelicals, the
US Conference of Catholic Bishops, the US Holocaust Memorial
Museum, the American Anti-Slavery Group, Amnesty International,
Christian Solidarity International, Physicians for Human Rights
and the National Black Church Initiative. Surely, such a wide
coalition would cease to hold together if the issue shifted to,
say, Iraq.
To understand the third advantage, we have to return to the
question I asked earlier: how could it be that many of those
calling for an end to the American and British intervention in
Iraq are demanding an intervention in Darfur? It’s tempting to
think that the advantage of Darfur lies in its being a small,
faraway place where those who drive the War on Terror do not have
a vested interest. That this is hardly the case is evident if one
compares the American response to Darfur to its non-response to
Congo, even though the dimensions of the conflict in Congo seem to
give it a mega-Darfur quality: the numbers killed are estimated in
the millions rather than the hundreds of thousands; the bulk of
the killing, particularly in Kivu, is done by paramilitaries
trained, organised and armed by neighbouring governments; and the
victims on both sides – Hema and Lendu – are framed in
collective rather than individual terms, to the point that one
influential version defines both as racial identities and the
conflict between the two as a replay of the Rwandan genocide.
Given all this, how does one explain the fact that the focus of
the most widespread and ambitious humanitarian movement in the US
is on Darfur and not on Kivu?
Nicholas Kristof was asked this very question by a university
audience: ‘When I spoke at Cornell University recently, a woman
asked why I always harp on Darfur. It’s a fair question. The
number of people killed in Darfur so far is modest in global
terms: estimates range from 200,000 to more than 500,000. In
contrast, four million people have died since 1998 as a result of
the fighting in Congo, the most lethal conflict since World War
Two.’ But instead of answering the question, Kristof – now
writing his column rather than facing the questioner at Cornell
– moved on: ‘And malaria annually kills one million to three
million people – meaning that three years’ deaths in Darfur
are within the margin of error of the annual global toll from
malaria.’ And from there he went on to compare the deaths in
Darfur to the deaths from malaria, rather than from the conflict
in Congo: ‘We have a moral compass within us and its needle is
moved not only by human suffering but also by human evil. That’s
what makes genocide special – not just the number of deaths but
the government policy behind them. And that in turn is why
stopping genocide should be an even higher priority than saving
lives from Aids or malaria.’ That did not explain the relative
silence on Congo. Could the reason be that in the case of Congo,
Hema and Lendu militias – many of them no more than child
soldiers – were trained by America’s allies in the region,
Rwanda and Uganda? Is that why the violence in Darfur – but not
the violence in Kivu – is named as a genocide?
It seems that genocide has become a label to be stuck on your
worst enemy, a perverse version of the Nobel Prize, part of a
rhetorical arsenal that helps you vilify your adversaries while
ensuring impunity for your allies. In Kristof’s words, the point
is not so much ‘human suffering’ as ‘human evil’. Unlike
Kivu, Darfur can be neatly integrated into the War on Terror, for
Darfur gives the Warriors on Terror a valuable asset with which to
demonise an enemy: a genocide perpetrated by Arabs. This was the
third and most valuable advantage that Save Darfur gained from
depoliticising the conflict. The more thoroughly Darfur was
integrated into the War on Terror, the more the depoliticised
violence in Darfur acquired a racial description, as a genocide of
‘Arabs’ killing ‘Africans’. Racial difference purportedly
constituted the motive force behind the mass killings. The irony
of Kristof’s columns is that they mirror the ideology of Arab
supremacism in Sudan by demonising entire communities.[*]
Kristof chides Arab peoples and the Arab press for not having the
moral fibre to respond to this Muslim-on-Muslim violence,
presumably because it is a violence inflicted by Arab Muslims on
African Muslims. In one of his early columns in 2004, he was
outraged by the silence of Muslim leaders: ‘Do they care about
dead Muslims only when the killers are Israelis or Americans?’
Two years later he asked: ‘And where is the Arab press? Isn’t
the murder of 300,000 or more Muslims almost as offensive as a
Danish cartoon?’ Six months later, Kristof pursued this line on
NBC’s Today Show. Elaborating on the ‘real blind spot’ in
the Muslim world, he said: ‘You are beginning to get some voices
in the Muslim world . . . saying it’s appalling that you have
evangelical Christians and American Jews leading an effort to
protect Muslims in Sudan and in Chad.’
If many of the leading lights in the Darfur campaign are fired by
moral indignation, this derives from two events: the Nazi
Holocaust and the Rwandan genocide. After all, the seeds of the
Save Darfur campaign lie in the tenth-anniversary commemoration of
what happened in Rwanda. Darfur is today a metaphor for senseless
violence in politics, as indeed Rwanda was a decade before. Most
writing on the Rwandan genocide in the US was also done by
journalists. In We wish to inform you that tomorrow we will be
killed with our families, the most widely read book on the
genocide, Philip Gourevitch envisaged Rwanda as a replay of the
Holocaust, with Hutu cast as perpetrators and Tutsi as victims.
Again, the encounter between the two seemed to take place outside
any context, as part of an eternal encounter between evil and
innocence. Many of the journalists who write about Darfur have
Rwanda very much in the back of their minds. In December 2004,
Kristof recalled the lessons of Rwanda: ‘Early in his
presidency, Mr Bush read a report about Bill Clinton’s paralysis
during the Rwandan genocide and scrawled in the margin: “Not on
my watch.” But in fact the same thing is happening on his watch,
and I find that heartbreaking and baffling.’
With very few exceptions, the Save Darfur campaign has drawn a
single lesson from Rwanda: the problem was the US failure to
intervene to stop the genocide. Rwanda is the guilt that America
must expiate, and to do so it must be ready to intervene, for good
and against evil, even globally. That lesson is inscribed at the
heart of Samantha Power’s book, A Problem from Hell: America and
the Age of Genocide. But it is the wrong lesson. The Rwandan
genocide was born of a civil war which intensified when the
settlement to contain it broke down. The settlement, reached at
the Arusha Conference, broke down because neither the Hutu Power
tendency nor the Tutsi-dominated Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF) had
any interest in observing the power-sharing arrangement at the
core of the settlement: the former because it was excluded from
the settlement and the latter because it was unwilling to share
power in any meaningful way.
What the humanitarian intervention lobby fails to see is that the
US did intervene in Rwanda, through a proxy. That proxy was the
RPF, backed up by entire units from the Uganda Army. The green
light was given to the RPF, whose commanding officer, Paul Kagame,
had recently returned from training in the US, just as it was
lately given to the Ethiopian army in Somalia. Instead of using
its resources and influence to bring about a political solution to
the civil war, and then strengthen it, the US signalled to one of
the parties that it could pursue victory with impunity. This
unilateralism was part of what led to the disaster, and that is
the real lesson of Rwanda. Applied to Darfur and Sudan, it is
sobering. It means recognising that Darfur is not yet another
Rwanda. Nurturing hopes of an external military intervention among
those in the insurgency who aspire to victory and reinforcing the
fears of those in the counter-insurgency who see it as a prelude
to defeat are precisely the ways to ensure that it becomes a
Rwanda. Strengthening those on both sides who stand for a
political settlement to the civil war is the only realistic
approach. Solidarity, not intervention, is what will bring peace
to Darfur.
The dynamic of civil war in Sudan has fed on multiple sources:
first, the post-independence monopoly of power enjoyed by a tiny
‘Arabised’ elite from the riverine north of Khartoum, a
monopoly that has bred growing resistance among the majority,
marginalised populations in the south, east and west of the
country; second, the rebel movements which have in their turn bred
ambitious leaders unwilling to enter into power-sharing
arrangements as a prelude to peace; and, finally, external forces
that continue to encourage those who are interested in retaining
or obtaining a monopoly of power.
The dynamic of peace, by contrast, has fed on a series of
power-sharing arrangements, first in the south and then in the
east. This process has been intermittent in Darfur. African Union-organised
negotiations have been successful in forging a power-sharing
arrangement, but only for that arrangement to fall apart time and
again. A large part of the explanation, as I suggested earlier,
lies in the international context of the War on Terror, which
favours parties who are averse to taking risks for peace. To
reinforce the peace process must be the first commitment of all
those interested in Darfur.
The camp of peace needs to come to a second realisation: that
peace cannot be built on humanitarian intervention, which is the
language of big powers. The history of colonialism should teach us
that every major intervention has been justified as humanitarian,
a ‘civilising mission’. Nor was it mere idiosyncrasy that
inspired the devotion with which many colonial officers and
archivists recorded the details of barbarity among the colonised
– sati, the ban on widow marriage or the practice of child
marriage in India, or slavery and female genital mutilation in
Africa. I am not suggesting that this was all invention. I mean
only to point out that the chronicling of atrocities had a
practical purpose: it provided the moral pretext for intervention.
Now, as then, imperial interventions claim to have a dual purpose:
on the one hand, to rescue minority victims of ongoing barbarities
and, on the other, to quarantine majority perpetrators with the
stated aim of civilising them. Iraq should act as a warning on
this score. The worst thing in Darfur would be an Iraq-style
intervention. That would almost certainly spread the civil war to
other parts of Sudan, unravelling the peace process in the east
and south and dragging the whole country into the global War on
Terror.
Footnotes
* Contrast this with the UN commission’s painstaking effort to
make sense of the identities ‘Arab’ and ‘African’. The
commission’s report concentrated on three related points. First,
the claim that the Darfur conflict pitted ‘Arab’ against
‘African’ was facile. ‘In fact, the commission found that
many Arabs in Darfur are opposed to the Janjawiid, and some Arabs
are fighting with the rebels, such as certain Arab commanders and
their men from the Misseriya and Rizeigat tribes. At the same
time, many non-Arabs are supporting the government and serving in
its army.’ Second, it has never been easy to sort different
tribes into the categories ‘Arab’ and ‘African’: ‘The
various tribes that have been the object of attacks and killings
(chiefly the Fur, Massalit and Zeghawa tribes) do not appear to
make up ethnic groups distinct from the ethnic groups to which
persons or militias that attack them belong. They speak the same
language (Arabic) and embrace the same religion (Muslim). In
addition, also due to the high measure of intermarriage, they can
hardly be distinguished in their outward physical appearance from
the members of tribes that allegedly attacked them. Apparently,
the sedentary and nomadic character of the groups constitutes one
of the main distinctions between them’ (emphasis mine). Finally,
the commission put forward the view that political developments
are driving the rapidly growing distinction between ‘Arab’ and
‘African’. On the one hand, ‘Arab’ and ‘African’ seem
to have become political identities: ‘Those tribes in Darfur who
support rebels have increasingly come to be identified as
“African” and those supporting the government as the
“Arabs”. A good example to illustrate this is that of the
Gimmer, a pro-government African tribe that is seen by the African
tribes opposed to the government as having been “Arabised”.’
On the other hand, this development was being promoted from the
outside: ‘The Arab-African divide has also been fanned by the
growing insistence on such divide in some circles and in the
media.’
Mahmood Mamdani is Herbert Lehman Professor of Government and a
professor of anthropology at Columbia University. His most recent
book is Good Muslim, Bad Muslim: America, the Cold War and the
Roots of Terror.
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