Sudan’s Christians face ‘ethnic cleansing’
South Sudan again on the brink of civil war
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service
SUDAN (ANS – July 12, 2016) -- Five years ago yesterday (July, 11, 2011), South Sudan became the world’s newest country after seceding from the North.
Following
a lengthy dispute over where a border should be drawn, it was decided
that Sudan’s predominantly Christian South Kordofan and Blue Nile states
would remain in the mainly Sunni Muslim North. In the five years since,
the Sudanese government has waged a bombing campaign against this
restive, resource-rich region.
According to World Watch Monitor (https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org),
Sudan’s Christians are among the hundreds of thousands of people who
have been displaced by the violence, and whose homes, crops, churches,
schools and hospitals have been destroyed.
In one of the latest incidents, in June, the sole secondary school in South Kordofan’s Umdorain Country was destroyed.
In
April, the US State Department designated Sudan a “Country of
Particular Concern” for the tenth consecutive year under the
International Religious Freedom Act, for “having engaged in or tolerated
particularly severe violations of religious freedom.”
“A
new report by Open Doors, a charity that supports Christians under
pressure for their faith, says Sudanese Christians – especially those in
South Kordofan and Blue Nile states – have been facing and continue to
face ‘ethnic cleansing,’” stated World Watch Monitor.
“The Sudan government's modus operandi was to conquer them, convert them and/or finish them off.”
According
to the report, successive Islamist regimes have attempted to turn Sudan
into a Sharia state that does not recognize other religious groups,
with strict punishments for apostasy, blasphemy and defamation of Islam.
World
Watch Monitor went on to say that these laws have been particularly
harsh on ethnically African (as opposed to Arab) Christians, notes the
report, which references the high-profile case of Meriam Ibrahim, who
was sentenced to death in 2014 for converting from Islam to
Christianity. (She was eventually released and allowed to resettle in
the United States.)
Following
South Sudan’s independence, many Christians in Sudan, especially those
whose family roots were in what is now South Sudan, were forced to leave
the country, as the Sudanese government embarked on what the report
refers to as its mission to create a “homogenous nation,” in which Islam
is the sole religion.
The
report, which also reviews the Sudanese government’s record over the
past 30 years and considers current trends, concludes that attacks
against Christians in South Kordofan and Blue Nile states are
“systematic” and “widespread” in their nature and therefore qualify as
“ethnic cleansing.” According to the report, the modus operandi in the
1980s and 1990s was to “conquer them, convert them and/or finish them
off”. This continued after war broke out between Sudan and the SPLM/N,
the political movement linked to the Sudan People’s Liberation Army
(SPLA), which fought for South Sudan’s independence.
World
Watch Monitor says that the report states that the government of Sudan
has been using non-violent, administrative measures, coupled with
military action, to accomplish its mission. It says the Sudanese
military has bombarded civilian villages and agricultural land, hampered
the planting of crops and forced people to live in caves. Other studies
by USCIRF, Human Rights Watch and Africa Rights Watch are also
referenced, which, Open Doors says, are consistent in testifying to
“systematic” and “widespread” attacks against Christians.
USCIRF’s
report states: “In violation of international law of armed conflicts,
Sudanese Air Forces attacked houses of worship through ground offensives
and aerial bombardment. Four of Kadugli’s five churches were destroyed
and their offices and guest houses attacked … Episcopal pastors and a
Sudan Council of Churches representatives in Kadugli described doors and
windows torn down, documents and religious papers ripped apart, parts
of churches burned and, supplies, vehicles and electronic equipment
looted.”
On
the subject of attacks against civilians in the Nuba Mountains (part of
South Kordofan,) the Open Doors report’s findings are in line with the
evidence listed in the Nuba Reports (a website that chronicles the
attacks against the Nuba people, but without registering the religious
affiliation of the victims) and with incidents reported by other rights
groups concerned with the Nuba people.
According
to Nuba Reports, government forces, especially the air-force, have been
attacking civilians consistently for years. In an extensive 2015 report
on attacks on civilians in South Kordofan, Amnesty International
documented the bombing of hospitals, schools, IDP camps and relief
organizations. Again, the report by Amnesty International does not list
religious affiliation; however Open Doors’ report says Christians are
being targeted specifically.
To read full report, please go to: https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org/3626084/4546542.
On the Brink
Sadly,
after getting their independence, South Sudan is once again on the
brink of civil war, according to Cassandra Vinograd of NBC News (http://www.nbcnews.com).
“Heavy
explosions and gunfire rocked the capital of South Sudan on Monday, as
the world's youngest nation hovered on the brink of a return to all-out
civil war,” she said.
“The
deadly spasm of violence started with a skirmish Thursday between two
longtime rival’s forces and since rapidly intensified — all amid
mounting fears the groups' leaders have lost control of their forces.
“Thousands
of civilians have fled their homes in the capital of Juba to seek
shelter at United Nations bases — sites which have themselves been
caught in the crossfire.”
One
aid worker at a U.N. base wrote on Twitter, “Heavy shooting is
happening right outside our windows. House keeps shaking with RPGs &
tanks firing.”
A journalist in Juba, added, “Large explosion just now. Seems like whole city hearing big booms right now.”
How did we get here?
Vinograd
explained, “South Sudan split from Sudan in 2011 after years of
fighting. The new nation’s independence was championed by the U.S. — its
success seen as an exercise in democracy.
“However,
tensions quickly emerged between South Sudan's President Salva Kiir and
his deputy, Riek Machar. The country descended into chaos in 2013 after
Kiir accused Machar of attempting a coup.
“Both sides have since been accused of committing atrocities in the ensuing conflict, which has killed thousands.”
Photo
captions: 1) Man shows where a bomb just landed. 2) A heavily
armed South Sudanese soldier. 3) Meriam Ibrahim with her husband, Daniel
Wani. 4) Thousands of Nuba Mountain civilians have taken refuge in
caves from government bombing. (Diocese of El Obeid photo). 5) Sudanese
church being bulldozed. 6) Peter Wooding, younger son of Dan and Norma
Wooding, reporting from South Sudan for CBN. 7) Dan and Norma Wooding on
a reporting assignment for ANS (Bryan Seltzer).
About
the writer: Dan Wooding, 75, is an award-winning winning author,
broadcaster and journalist who was born in Nigeria of British missionary
parents, Alfred and Anne Wooding, who worked with the Sudan Interior
Mission, now known as SIM. He now lives in Southern California with his
wife Norma, to whom he has been married for some 53 years. They have two
sons, Andrew and Peter, and six grandchildren who all live in the UK.
Dan is the founder and international director of the ASSIST News Service
(ANS), and is also the author of some 45 books. In addition, he has a
radio program and two TV shows all based in Southern California.
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