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Darfur: Militia Leader Implicates
Khartoum Janjaweed Chief Says Sudan
Government Backed Attacks
A top militia leader says the Sudan government backed and
directed Janjaweed activities in northern Darfur.
Widely regarded as the top Janjaweed leader in Darfur, Musa
Hilal was interviewed over the course of several hours by
Human Rights Watch researchers in Khartoum.
Hilal states that the government of Sudan directed all
military activities of the militia forces he had recruited.
“All of the people in the field are led by top army
commanders,” he told Human Rights Watch on videotape. “…These
people get their orders from the Western command center, and
from Khartoum.”
“Musa Hilal squarely contradicts the government’s claim
that it has ‘no relationship’ with local militias,” said Peter
Takirambudde, Executive Director of Human Rights Watch’s
Africa division.
The Sudan government has said that any atrocities in Darfur
are the fault of Janjaweed “bandits” and are the result of
recurring ethnic clashes in Darfur in which the government is
“neutral.”
“We now see that the two parties responsible for crimes
against humanity in Darfur are pointing the finger at each
other,” said Takirambudde. “Musa Hilal is a dangerous man for
the Sudanese government. His testimony could be very
interesting to the International Criminal Court.”
Although many eyewitnesses have named Musa Hilal as a
leader of militia forces responsible for some of the most
brutal attacks in Darfur, in the videotape he denies any
leadership role and says his followers have not committed
atrocities.
However, several eyewitnesses interviewed by Human Rights
Watch described how Musa Hilal came to the central market in
Kebkabiya in North Darfur twice in January 2004 with his
forces, and addressed the crowds about his militia forces’
great ‘victories’ in outlying areas against the rebel forces.
The eyewitnesses said that Musa Hilal was not only uniformed
and armed, but also claimed to have led his followers to these
military victories.
Musa Hilal’s forces were initially recruited from among his
tribesmen in North Darfur, and have been active for several
years around the Kebkabiya area, where Human Rights Watch
conducted research in October 2004.
Many witnesses in Kebkabiya told Human Rights Watch about
the location and activities of Musa Hilal’s forces. They
reported that Misteriya town is the location of Hilal’s
militia camp near Kebkabiya, where he and Hassim Mangari of
the Sudan army are commanders. Musa Hilal is known for taking
women prisoners and holding them at Jebel Jur (meaning “hunger
mountain”) west of Misteriya. Many of the women have not
returned to date.
Some witnesses spoke of militia members who committed
atrocities in the name of Musa Hilal. Others said that their
former Arab neighbors and Janjaweed militia prevented them
from returning to their fertile farming land outside
Kebkabiya: one group of women trying to return in Merguba,
outside of Kebkabiya and two and a half hours from Misteriya
by donkey, were told by their former Arab neighbors, ‘This
[Merguba] is the land of Musa Hilal. You must not go and take
anything from there.’
Darfur government documents in the possession of Human
Rights Watch refer to official Sudanese government support for
Musa Hilal. In a memo dated February 13, 2004 from the office
of a sub-locality in North Darfur, the authorities urge all
“security units in the locality” to “allow the activities of
the mujahedeen and the volunteers under the command of Sheikh
Musa Hilal to proceed in the areas of [North Darfur] and to
secure their vital needs.”
The memo continues, “We also highlight the importance of
non-interference so as not to question their authorities and
to overlook minor offences by the mujahedeen against civilians
who are suspected members of the rebellion….”
Human Rights Watch researchers conducted the video
interview with Musa Hilal on September 27, 2004 in Khartoum.
Since then, he has largely refrained from giving interviews to
the media.
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