Islamists leave 'killing field'of civilians

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Why it's a good idea to never be an unarmed civilian.





http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=31033

Islamists leave 'killing field'
of civilians
Team finds remains of unarmed villagers in southern Sudan

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted: February 14, 2003
1:00 a.m. Eastern


By Art Moore
© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com

The bones of scores of villagers litter a "killing field" left in the wake of an unprovoked attack by Sudan's militant Islamic regime in which as many as 3,000 unarmed civilians died, according to a team of investigators.

Dennis Bennett of the relief group Servant's Heart recently returned from Upper Nile Province where he and his colleagues heard local survivors tell of a massive attack they believe killed between one-third and one-half of the 6,000 people who lived in the villages of Liang, Dengaji, Kawaji and Yawaji.



A woman from Dengaji named Tangook told Bennett's team that her two children, approximately ages 4 and 5, were killed in the late April 2002 attack by Arab soldiers. Two days after she fled to a neighboring village, men from Dengaji went back to find the bodies.

"My children’s bodies were being eaten by birds," she said, according to a transcript of a video interview. "The soldiers burned all our houses and took all our belongings. When the men went back to the village looking for [salvageable] items, they found almost nothing left."

Bennett said the estimate of up to 3,000 dead was made in part by counting survivors who have returned to the villages and those in refugee camps. But he wants an investigation from an independent monitoring team that was established in an agreement with the Khartoum regime last October.



"It was a completely unarmed region of more than 6,000 unarmed civilians," Bennett told WND. "No rebel soldier was in the area and none had ever been there."

Villagers interviewed said many of the people are Christians and some are animists.

'Jihad is our way'

Backed by Muslim clerics, the National Islamic Front regime in the Arab and Muslim north declared a jihad on the mostly Christian and animist south in 1989. Since 1983, an estimated 2 million people have died from war and related famine. About 5 million have become refugees.

Sudan's holy war against the south was reaffirmed in October 2001 by First Vice President Ali Osman Taha.

"The jihad is our way, and we will not abandon it and will keep its banner high," he said to a brigade of mujahedin fighters heading for the war front. "We will never sell out our faith and will never betray the oath to our martyrs."

Survivors in the Upper Nile villages said the attackers were members of the Sudan regular army from the Boing Garrison, commanded by Brig. Gen. Ibrahim Saleh.

Bennett said his team – which included Mel Middleton, president of Freedom Quest International and Glenn Penner, communications director of Voice of the Martyrs Canada – walked almost 30 miles each way in 115-degree heat to document the incident.

'Deliberate attacks' on civilians

The U.S. State Department said yesterday it has forwarded Bennett's findings to the international Civilian Protection and Monitoring Team, CPMT, assigned to report on violations of the March 2002 agreement between Khartoum and the rebel Sudanese People's Liberation Movement.

The agreement specifically barred both sides from attacking civilians. Bennett and his colleagues are urging the State Department to include details of the attack in the report to Congress mandated by the Sudan Peace Act, which was signed into law last October.

The Sudan Peace Act requires the U.S. administration to present a detailed report by April 21 of any acts of genocide or war crimes.



Last Sunday, the CPMT issued a report charging that since Dec. 31, government-backed forces had initiated "deliberate attacks against non-combatant civilians and civilian facilities" in Western Upper Nile province.

State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said Tuesday in response to the report that the U.S. condemns "these unconscionable attacks and abuses against civilians."

The CPMT said many of the attacks focused on towns along a road under construction between Bentiu and Adok that would provide access to numerous oil facilities in the province.

In a similar campaign in the Western Upper Nile and Kordofan Provinces in 1997, militia and government forces raided villages to clear out the area for an oil pipeline project to Port Sudan. China's national oil company holds a majority stake in the pipeline.

Many human rights groups charge that Khartoum is using oil revenues to fuel its war effort. Bennett, with 20 years experience in international risk management and banking, said he was the first to probe the link between oil and jihad that is now documented and publicized by the rights groups. His research began in 1996 when he asked: If you're the government of Sudan and you're broke, how are you paying for your war?

On his recent fact-finding trip, Bennett said his team came within five miles of the Government of Sudan positions from which the attack was launched. Three Arab nomads spying for the government were caught in a village Bennett visited, which forced his team to leave secretly and walk most of the night to reach safety.

Heavy artillery

In the April 2002 attack, heavily-armed government forces reportedly struck in the early morning as the villagers slept, launching a rampage of killing, looting and burning down houses. Residents said the attackers were armed with 60 millimeter mortars, rocket-propelled grenades, 12.7 millimeter heavy machine guns and AK-47 assault rifles.



In a videotaped interview, villager Tunya Jok said he witnessed his 4-year -old daughter being shot and killed as she fled from the soldiers.

Later, his 6-year-old son was captured and beheaded by the soldiers. The boy's body was thrown into a burning hut and his head planted upright, facing away from the dwelling.

Awtio, subchief of the village of Liang, said a young girl named Yata was captured by the soldiers and thrown into a fire.

Others fled into the bush and died there, he said.



Wol Majief, a woman from Dengaji, said she began to flee when soldiers started shooting, but four of her children were killed.

Teela, Anjota, Jotier and Berta were shot by the troops, she said.

Dengaji village chief Billy Worgo told Bennett's team, "Your coming here is good."

"This is the first time anyone from the outside has come to find out about this problem," he said. "This is very encouraging to us. Your visit makes us very happy."
 
The U.S. State Department said yesterday it has forwarded Bennett's findings to the international Civilian Protection and Monitoring Team, CPMT, assigned to report on violations of the March 2002 agreement between Khartoum and the rebel Sudanese People's Liberation Movement.

SPLM I think are the good guys here. Remember it was the Khartoum government that declared jihad on the Christians and animists, and trying to exterminate them, but from the reading, they're equals? What the hell?

I don't see SPLM forces attacking civilians. When's Sudan going to get bombed into submission? They support terrorism as much, if not more, than Iraq and Iran.
 
The SPLM are definitely the good guys. A guy I know recently went to southern Sudan to assist them in the camps that they use to teach trades to captured government soldiers. The SPLM are actually educating these former government soldiers and teaching them to move back into society. Seems a lot of guys join the government army because there's no other option.
Saw lots of interesting AK and RPG-7 pictures.
The Sudanese civil war gets no publicity here. I have some tinfoil suspicions that it may have to do with the religious orientation of the victims involved, but it may just not be sensational enough for the network newsies.
 
Gee Malone, DING-DING, you are the winner! Oil. Oil. Oil. Oh wait, Iraq isn't about oil at all. Sudan? Where's that? Oh right, that's in Africa, a place that the US government seems to steer clear of. Mustn't be anything of great monetary or strategic value there.....
 
Well, that's not really true. A few Americans got killed a few years ago in a place called Somalia. They were there as part of a UN force trying to do some good, all to the credit of GB I (and you won't hear me praising him often.)

But I'm not really concerned that the US poke it's nose in every trouble spot in the world. Just that we'd be more careful and have better motives when we do.
 
If the USA is steering clear of Africa, then why did the USA ear-mark 15 billion dollars to combat AIDS/HIV in Africa?

And, this funding is for countries that many instances have no known oil reserves that I am aware of.
 
There is plenty of oil in the Sudan. The Chinese are getting it. If we try to interfere with Sudan, we risk getting the Chicoms upset. Ergo, we don't touch that situation with a 10 foot pole. Same reason we're not talking about attacking N. Korea.


Something's rotten.
 
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