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RESOLUTION 1325
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Refugee Voices: Abduction and Displacement in Sudan
April 20, 2006 -(Refugees International) While there
is “peace” in south Sudan since the signing of the comprehensive
peace agreement (CPA) that ended the 22-year North-South war, life
still remains unpredictable and difficult for many Sudanese. Particularly
vulnerable are women and their children. Refugees International
interviewed Bakita (not her real name) in Northern Bahr-el-Ghazal,
a state that borders South Darfur. She has been living in South
Darfur for the past 12 years and recently returned to her small
village in the south. RI accompanied staff of the UN Office for
the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs to visit her village near
Maluakon and learned that its population had grown from approximately
200 people to over 500 in the past few weeks. There are only two
water pumps and no schools.
When asked why she left her village in Northern Bahr-el Ghazal she
told us, “My child was abducted. They took my child to Darfur
so I followed to try to get her back. I reported this to the police
there and the police rescued her. Things were bad here so we then
decided to live in South Darfur. Then when things became bad there,
we moved to the [internally displaced] camp there. It wasn’t
healthy and we heard that there was peace at home so we came back.
The government authorities here told us to come home so I came home.
I have been collecting firewood in Darfur to get the money we need.
My husband lives in Khartoum with his second wife so I do not see
him. I have a number of things that I need here. Our life is in
the hands of people like you. Our only problem now is hunger.”
Through the 1990s, one of the rallying calls throughout the US was
to end slavery in Sudan. The issue of slavery in Sudan is complex
as abduction of humans (mostly women and children) was a dormant
cultural tradition in parts of Sudan that resurfaced when the civil
war broke out in 1983. These abductions fall under the category
of “trafficking” -- the transport and/or trade of women,
children and men from one area to another for the purpose of forcing
them into slavery conditions. Some estimate that during the years
of civil war and resulting inter-tribal warfare, an estimated 15,000
Dinka women and children were abducted in the western and southern
regions of the country. An additional 3,500 abductions reportedly
occurred in regions held by the southern rebel force, the Sudan
People’s Liberation Movement.
The inter-tribal abductions which were labeled slavery are a by-product
of the violence that has plagued Sudan. Abductees frequently became
part of the abductor’s tribal family, with many women marrying
into the new tribe; however, some victims of abduction were used
for forced domestic labor and/or sexual exploitation. With the implementation
of the CPA, abductions have decreased. Despite the nominal peace,
women in this area of Sudan are still not safe. In Darfur, the conflict
is characterized by rapes by Janjaweed militia that are supported
by the Government of Sudan. Women are also the targets of opportunistic
violence when they venture forth from the relative safety of the
camps in Darfur to gather firewood or grass for their animals.
In July 2005 U.S. Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice pressured the
Government of Sudan to address the problem of violence against women
in Darfur, and linked the Sudanese ranking on the U.S. Trafficking
in Persons Report to its response to gender-based violence. While
this move was controversial within the agencies that work on human
trafficking, Bakita’s story shows that violence against women
in Darfur and the abductions in south Sudan are related.
Advocate Sarah Martin traveled to south Sudan in March.
From: http://www.refugeesinternational.org/content/article/detail/8439/
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