From the Los Angeles Times
In Nubia, fears of another Darfur
As tensions flare over proposed dams, many
fear the northern Sudan territory will be the next to region erupt in
violence.
By Edmund Sanders
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
August 31, 2007
SEBU, SUDAN —
The tranquil Nubian villages along this Nile River stretch are best
known for the brightly painted gates that adorn many of the simple
mud-brick homes. With geometric shapes and hieroglyphic-like pictures,
the oversized gates hark back to the stone-carved doorways the
villagers' ancestors once built on pyramids that rivaled Egypt's.
These days, however, the elaborate entryways are shadowed by black
flags. Government soldiers patrol once-quiet dirt streets, occasionally
drawing stones from angry youths. Protest graffiti mar the walls,
including one scrawling of an AK-47 with the simple caption: "Darfur 2."
First, southern Sudan erupted in a 20-year civil war, followed by the
east and, most recently, the western region of Darfur. Now many fear
that Sudan's northern territory of Nubia will be the next to explode
over the fight for resources and all-too-familiar accusations of
"ethnic cleansing" and complaints of marginalization by an
Arab-dominated government.
Tensions have been high here since soldiers opened fire on an
anti-government protest of 5,000 Nubians in June, killing four young
men and wounding nearly two dozen. The government has arrested nearly
three dozen Nubian leaders and four journalists who were trying to
cover the violence.
Now a recently formed rebel group, calling itself the Kush Liberation
Front, is advocating armed resistance to overthrow the central
government, which it accuses of oppressing Nubians and other indigenous
peoples in Sudan.
"Our efforts will not succeed unless they are backed by military
action," said Abdelwahab Adem, a Nubian former businessman and
co-founder of the Kush Liberation Front. "We need to get rid of the
Arabs. Our goal is to realize a new Sudan, by force if necessary."
Adem said the new movement would rely on "guerrilla fighting,"
targeting the capital, Khartoum, and other major Sudanese cities. He
declined to specify what sort of tactics might be used or how many
fighters the group has.
With a separate language and culture, Nubians view themselves as a
distinct ethnic group and take pride in being one of Africa's oldest
civilizations. Political observers say the budding movement appears to
be taking its cue from the rebellions in Darfur and southern Sudan.
"That's the lesson of Darfur," said one Western diplomat in Khartoum,
who spoke on condition of anonymity.
"The government will only listen to you when you pick up a gun."
Darfur rebels are a potential source of weapons and training for the
Kush Liberation Front, observers said.
"We have good relations with our brothers in Darfur," said Adem, who is
based in London. But he denied receiving support from the western
Sudanese rebels.
The spark for recent unrest was a government proposal to construct two
or three electricity-producing dams along the Nile in the Nubian
heartland, between the villages of Kajbar, about 350 miles north of
Khartoum, and Dal, about 100 miles from the Egyptian border.
This fertile Nile River strip is home to an estimated 300,000 Nubians,
many of whom would be forced to relocate if rising river waters
swallowed scores of villages.
Also at risk are some of the world's richest archeological ruins,
notably those around the ancient city of Kerma, the first Nubian
capital, settled at least 8,000 years ago and lying just downstream
from where the proposed 200-megawatt Kajbar dam would be built. The
site is home to the oldest known man-made structure in sub-Saharan
Africa: a 50-foot, 3,500-year-old mud-brick temple known as the Deffufa.
The proposals come on top of another controversial project, the
1,250-megawatt Merowe Dam, which is already under construction about
150 miles to the east. Flooding from that project will displace 70,000
Arab farmers and engulf several hundred miles of unexplored Nubian
archeological sites.
"They want to cut us from our roots and flood all of Nubia and its
history," said Sharif Adeen Ali, 53, a Nubian farmer in the village of
Sebu. "They've done this before."
In 1964, construction of the Aswan High Dam in Egypt forced the
relocation of 50,000 Sudanese Nubians in the Wadi Halfa region near the
Egyptian border and nearly 800,000 Nubians in Egypt.
Nubians see the new dams as a plot by Arab governments in Sudan and
Egypt to exterminate their communities and seize the land.
"The two countries have never liked having Nubians, who are not Arabs,
in the middle," said Abdul Halim Sabbar, a former doctor who is part of
the Kajbar Dam Resistance Committee.
In Sebu, one of the Nubian communities that would be submerged by the
Kajbar dam, once-welcoming residents now peer warily at the parade of
unfamiliar trucks and SUVs that speeds through town carrying Chinese
engineers to a work site a mile away. Though government officials say
they are only conducting a feasibility study, Chinese crews are
installing giant cranes, water towers, floodlights and other equipment
that suggest to villagers that construction is underway.
On a recent morning, nearly 400 government soldiers marched and drilled
at a new military camp set up on the edge of Sebu to protect the
Chinese workers. On hills overlooking the village, uniformed lookouts
with rifles over their shoulders positioned themselves behind rocks.
"It's become very tense," said one villager, who was afraid to be
identified. "Many eyes are watching."
Officials at Sudan's Dams Implementation Unit declined to comment.
A leader in Sudan's ruling party defended the dams, contending that
they would help the Nubian communities by providing electricity and
irrigation for farming.
"It's going to economically transform the area," said Osman Khalid
Mudawi, foreign affairs chairman in Sudan's parliament. He estimated
that a lake created by the dam would irrigate 750,000 acres of newly
arable land.
But some scientists and environmentalists questioned whether the dams
would expand food production, noting that the region's soil is mostly
desert sand and granite. Farming is possible only along the riverbanks,
thanks to rich silt deposits from the Nile.
A recent report by the United Nations Environmental Program noted that
Sudan's existing dams suffer from declining performance because they
are clogged with silt, which has proved difficult to remove. Water loss
as a result of the high evaporation rates in the desert heat is another
problem. Meanwhile, downstream from the dams, farm production has
fallen because the soil is no longer enriched by the silt.
It's a similar story at the Aswan High Dam, where the lake created by
the dam is filling with silt much faster than anticipated and
downstream farmers are resorting to artificial fertilizers for the
first time.
Nubians argue that the new dams are not intended to provide electricity
and irrigation in Sudan, but to rescue the Aswan High Dam by capturing
silt before it reaches Egypt. "These dams don't look at all like
development," said Sabbar, the resistance committee member. "It's
clearly part of a programmed scheme between Egypt and Sudan."
For decades, Nubians have lived in relative isolation, shunning
politics and priding themselves on self-sufficiency. Some years the
region found itself entirely left out of the federal budget, which is
evident from the lack of paved roads and electricity. Nubians built
their own hospitals and schools, though they are still prohibited by
law from teaching in their native language.
The threat of renewed flooding, however, has drawn Nubians out of the
political desert, and they are mobilizing for a fight.
In addition to demonstrations in Sudan, Nubians abroad are pressing the
issue with the United Nations, U.S. State Department and human rights
groups such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch. They've
protested at the Sudanese and Chinese embassies in Washington and
uploaded graphic footage of the June 13 clashes on the Internet.
"We have more freedom to express ourselves than those still inside
Sudan," said Nuraddin Abdulmannan, a Nubian activist who is heading the
resistance committee in Washington. He says it is the duty of the
international community to preserve the region's archeological sites,
which include temples and pyramids built when Nubian kings briefly
reigned over Egypt's pharaohs around 730 BC.
"This is an international treasure, and there's an international
responsibility to protect it."
For many, the June clash with government troops was the final
indignity. Witnesses said soldiers tear-gassed the noisy but peaceful
demonstrators, forcing many to jump into the river to escape the fumes.
When protesters began to regroup, soldiers opened fire without warning.
"It was a murder, an assassination," said Ahmed Abdullahi Ameen, 63,
whose son, 28, was one of the four killed. The young man, Sheik Adeen
Haj Ahmed, was shot in the back of the head as he climbed out of the
river.
Many Nubians say they have little to lose. Izzadin Idriss Mohammed, 71,
a Nubian activist in the village of Farig, described the tensions with
an old Nubian saying:
"One who is sinking in the Nile will reach for any branch to survive."
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Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times