Ecology, Politics and Violent Conflict
It was the
year 1998. The famine in southern
All three
interpretations belong to traditional schools of conflict analysis, which
explains all armed conflicts in
The two
research projects we took part into “Environment and Conflict Project” (ENCOP)
and “Environmental Change,
Lesson one: Environmental factors can be important but
are not everything
One
important message from ENCOP and ECOMAN is that environmental degradation,
(environmental scarcity, or in a broader sense, environmental discrimination[1])
can act as a cause of conflict only in interaction with other economic, social,
and historical factors. It tells us that environmental scarcity of renewable
resources, especially cropland, fresh water, marine resources, and forests, is
becoming more and more significant as cause and/or catalyst of armed conflict,
especially in the developing world. Scarcity of renewable resources such as
soil, water, fauna, and flora does not inevitably lead to violent confrontation
and could well bring about desirable cooperation among the affected parties.
Yet, in situations where this scarcity is aggravated by social and economic
upheavals, as is the case in many poor
In spite
of its growing impact, researchers in the field of environment and conflict
concede that environmental degradation is but one in a complex web of causes
that collectively precipitate violent conflict. It functions within the given
multi-layered matrix of history, economy, and politics and is most acute there
where human and livestock population pressures are reinforced by unequal access
to resources. Environmental degradation, however, is widespread in sub-Saharan
Graph 1:
Rainfall data for the region of northern
Rainfall
data for the region of northern Darfur covering the period from 1950–1990
reveals three major spans of drought, a relatively mild one in the mid-1960s
and two severe droughts in 1972–1974 and 1982–1984. In all three cases, the
drought was accompanied by the flaring of skirmishes, the worst of which took
place in mid-1980s and became a
high-intensity conflict.
The
correlation of rainfall data to conflict intensity over a 30-year period (from
1957–1987) reveals two interesting patterns: first an increase in conflict
incidents with a corresponding decrease in rainfall and second a lag between
minimum rainfall and maximum conflict intensity of roughly one year, a
relaxation period that allows for the impact of the drought to take full
effect.
The drought of the 1980s brought famine, displacement, and violence on a much larger scale than that of the 1970s. Possible explanations of this apparent discrepancy between the impacts of the two severe droughts (1972–1974 and 1982–1984) could be:
1.
In the 1970s, the agricultural food production of the
2.
During the 1970s, the regional food and other reserves
of
3.
In the 1970s, the local traditional administration was
still functioning and supportive, but it was abolished by then-president
Nimeiri in the 1980s.
4.
In the 1970s, there was no large-scale warfare in the
Lesson two: Denying or limiting access to natural and
social resources can be a more potent cause of violence than environmental
degradation
ENCOP
findings revealed the complexity of the root causes of violence, which go far
beyond environmental discrimination, scarcity, or degradation. To incorporate
economic, social, and other factors into the equation, broader terms were
needed. Baechler coined the term “environmental discrimination” to give
credence to the multiplicity and complexity of causes of violent conflict.[3]
One crucial aspect of this intricate web is the denial or limitation of access
to natural and social resources to small-scale farmers and pastorlaists.
The African
natural environment is fragile. The movie image of
No other
continent suffers the same degree of separation of agricultural from livestock production. No other
continent has such a high proportion of soils that are infertile and so easily
degraded. No other continent has a climate of such unpredictability. These
factors, made more potent still in combination, have severely handicapped
African agriculture.[4]
In the web
of causes that precipitate violent conflicts in sub-Saharan
The
traditional assumption that violent conflicts in
Of all ideological weapons used in
African warfare: nationalism, socialism, religion and ethnicity, the latter
proved by far the more superior as a principle of political solidarity and
mobilisation as well as a dominant political force.[5]
Work
carried out on environment and conflict by a number of research groups has
shown that ecological degradation can act as cause or catalyst of violent
conflicts. Greater emphasis, however, has been given in the research to the
impact of ecological degradation than to the implications of the denial and
limitation of access to renewable resources. This focus on the degradation of
the renewable resource base imparts by default greater significance to the
causes of environmental degradation, namely, human and animal population
growth, climatic variations, and so on.[6]
Such conflict analysis tends to limit conflict resolution to tackling the
causes of ecological degradation and in the process neglects or belittles the
consequences of limiting people’s access to vital resources. With environmental
degradation as the focal point, the proposed conflict resolution mechanisms are
thus more technical in nature than economic or political.
This school
emphasises issues of environmental conservation and rehabilitation as conflict
management mechanisms, for example, better water management, soil conservation,
reforestation, and family planning to curb population growth. The crucial
issues of the economy, state power and politics, are inadvertently pushed
aside. The persistent inequity in resource allocation, which is inherently
political and economic, and the role of the beneficiaries and perpetrators of
the status quo are thus taken out of
the limelight.
In order to
assess properly the impact of denying or limiting access to renewable resources
in sub-Saharan African countries whose economies are largely confined to
primary commodity production, some very important issues that are integral to
understanding the causes of violent conflict and that are ultimately integral
to conflict resolution must be considered: Structural Adjustment Programs
(SAPs) and export agriculture; the collapse of the terms of trade as a
consequence of the deterioration of the prices of primary commodities; the
economic, social, and ecological implications of foreign debt and of capital
flight; and the reversal of investment trends.
In all
group conflicts we scrutinised in
Lesson three: Cultural diversity could be either
Beauty or Beast
Although
indirect and sometimes intricate, the relationship between culture and
development can yet be discerned, albeit with great difficulty. In this
context, culture shapes the material and spiritual forms that social and
material development takes and is in turn enriched by the progress of this
development. Culture is thus both a medium and a tool of positive social
change. Problems, however, begin to arise when cultures, or rather cultural
differences, are used not as a tool of progress but as a weapon to settle
disputes in a violent way.
It is my
understanding that people go to war because they are or they perceive
themselves to be disadvantaged in the distribution or ownership of or right to
the available social, economic, and natural resources. Others fight to keep or
enlarge their real or perceived advantages.
Real or
perceived material advantages (or disadvantages) are the primary causes of
violent conflicts. Yet few nations or groups of people would go to war openly
under the banner of this or that material interest. Neither need nor greed is a
good pretext to maim and kill. Loftier reasons are sought and found. Ethnic,
cultural, and religious differences are cited, and in the process cultural
diversity becomes cultural divide.
When people
are satisfied with their living conditions, and these seem to be beneficial to
all, cultural diversity is seen as a blessing to the nation, but when
competition over resources increases because of need or greed, cultural
differences are twisted into cultural divides and violence erupts along
cultural fault lines. And because violent conflict is an inherently major
disruption to social development, it is important to make it difficult or
impossible to manipulate cultural differences as a pretext for waging war.
Attacking
the cultural values of a group is usually followed by physically attacking members of that group. Pogroms and hate
campaigns against the Jews, the Arabs, the blacks, the lower castes, the Native
Americans, the Muslims, the Catholics, the Protestants, the Sikhs, the Hutu,
the Tutsi, the Armenians, and others have all been used and/or are still being
used to discriminate culturally against one group (ethnically, religiously
etc.) in order to limit or deny the
access of members of this or that group to social, economic, and natural
resources. This is one obvious reason behind the ethnic discrimination of
southern Sudanese and the Nuba and Ingessana peoples in
Cultural,
ethnic, race, and religious discrimination is a major tool of economic
exploitation and social repression. The cold violence of discrimination can
easily turn into the hot violence of repression. Whether latent or raging,
violence is inherently anti-development.
Lesson four: Identity issues can invert from
perceptions to genuine causes of violence
Most
violent conflicts start over material resources, actual or perceived. With the
passage of time, however, ethnic, cultural, and religious affiliations seem to
undergo a transformation from abstract ideological categories into concrete
social forces. In a wider sense, they themselves become contestable material
and social resources and, hence, possible objects of group strife and violence.
Although usually by-products of fresh conflicts, ethnic, cultural, and
spiritual dichotomies can invert with the progress of a conflict to become
intrinsic causes and, in the process, increase the complexity of the conflict,
thereby reducing the possibility of managing, resolving, and ultimately
transforming that conflict. The civil war in
At the
beginning of the second civil war in
The
perception of the war as an identity conflict between Muslim Arabs and
Christian Africans has thus begun to take roots in the minds of many
Southerners. Identity issues (religious, ethnic, and cultural differences) are
inverting from being perceptions of the conflict to becoming inherent causes of
it - from being abstract social and political categories to becoming concrete
social forces. Effect has inverted into cause. That is why enduring, old
conflicts are difficult to resolve, because the initial causes are constantly being
augmented by the intrusion of feelings (perceptions) into the causal sphere.
The inversion of ethnicity (identity) from perception
to a cause of violent conflict
A plausible
explanation for this inversion of perception into cause can be found in studies
concerned with animal and human behavior. Studies in human behavior has
revealed that people usually judge options for future action according to the
amount of effort they have invested in the past, rather than the size of the expected returns, what
ethnologists call the Sunk-cost fallacy.
In animal behavior, scientists found the reverse tendency: animals choose the
option with the highest future benefit and thus do not follow the so-called
Ethnicity as perception of a conflict can invert
over time & cost into Ethnicity
as Cause of that conflict.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
WHY?
Because
human behaviour follows the while Animal behaviour follows the
‘Sunk-cost Fallacy’
‘Concorde Fallacy’
which
is:
which is:
(To judge options according (To
judge options according
to size of previous investments to
future benefits not past
rather than the size of expected returns) investments)
Human beings
often go for
while Animals select
according
the sunk-cost option
to the size of expected returns
The
inversion of identity issues, for example ethnicity, over expended time and
human and material resources is probably due to the sunk-cost fallacy. Human
beings look back at the amount of effort invested in their endeavor and choose
their actions and reactions accordingly. This is perhaps the reason why
enduring conflicts are hard to resolve. Instead of opting for peace, people
engaged in a persistent conflict will continue to fight arguing that: “We will
not give up now, not after we have sacrificed so much. We will not betray our
martyrs! We will not go back after so much investment in human and material
resources etc.” Animals do not possess a moral memory! Their rationale is not
muddled by sentiment. If the road followed by them does not lead to the
benefits required, that road will immediately be abandoned and an alternative
root explored.
Lesson five: Rationality and irrationality are both
inherent to collective violence (
The
complexity and variety of causes, perceptions, and manifestations of group
violence baffles rational thought. Complex social processes and phenomena,
themselves dependent on a multitude of objective and subjective factors, impart
uncertainty to the course of violent conflict, as well as to our attempts to
understand and judge it as the actual behavior of actual people.
On first
approximation, violence seems to be an irrational, chaotic behavior par
excellence. It defies the rational and practical principle that in the case of
dispute over conflicting interests, cooperation is in the long term the most
rewarding course of action. Yet history is replete with incidents of violence.
We now know that irrationality and chaos show inherent order that allows us to
discern some repetitive patterns and that chance and necessity are indeed woven
together. Even in the realm of the social, the inherent inner necessity
articulates itself in the form of chance. It is not surprising, therefore, to
find that in the very complex area of social violence the objective has not
been totally overrun by the subjective, and that familiar patterns and similar
traits may become discernible.
Thus, we
may not be able to understand the rationality of social violence at the level
of the individual participants, but we have a better chance in discerning some
of its gray substance as the concerted behavior of a large number of people,
so-called “group violence”. The rationality and irrationality of violence are
thus two facets of the same reality.
In
sub-Saharan
Wherever
human-made and natural adversities combine, as is the case for the
Conflicts
are historical processes, not static events. Therefore, when the wealth of a
nation is dwindling because of intensive exploitation and degradation, it is
only logical to assume that this loss will have far-reaching negative
repercussions on social peace. To continue treating conflicts in Africa as
purely ethnic, tribal, or religious, ignoring in the process the growing impact
of restricting or denying access to resources and the growing ecological
degradation and depletion of the renewable resource base could ultimately lead
to a distorted understanding of the real situation and, consequently, limit the
possibility of genuine conflict resolution.
An analysis
of the civil war in
An
additional factor to both the socio-economic decline and the degradation of the
natural environment is the militarisation of rural poverty. Life in
Lesson six: Understanding the culture of violence in
the Horn of
The Horn of
Africa is conflict-prone. The whole spectrum of conflict typology is there.
Interstate and civil wars are compounded by regional and local conflicts. As
stated earlier, violence is baffling to rational thought. On first
approximation, violence appears as an irrational and chaotic behavior par
excellence. Let us hope that we will become wiser about the root causes of this
evil ghost that haunts our region. In all conflicts we scrutinised in the Horn
region, competition over natural, economic, and social resources seems to be the
main culprit and, when asked, people insisted that they had taken up arms for
social justice and equality.
Too many
people doing the same thing
The armed
conflicts that have afflicted the Horn region over the last three decades have
usually been interpreted as typical ethnic/tribal and/or religious/cultural
conflicts. While these categorizations may have served as plausible
descriptions of earlier conflicts and may still have some bearing on how
current conflicts are being conducted and perceived, the reality is that
conflict causes tend to change and diversify. Changes in the economic,
political, social, and ecological backgrounds influence gradually, if
imperceptibly, the nature of conflicts, and so it is justifiable to assume that
the far-reaching ecological and economic changes that have beset the Horn of
Africa must have had a profound effect on social peace in the region.
Prolonged severe climatic desiccation coupled with intensive exploitation of soil, water, forests, and other renewable resources, as well as the huge increase in human and livestock populations, have so degraded the inherently fragile environment of the region that conflicts caused or catalysed by these compounding ecological factors were bound to take place. Four factors have contributed substantially to this state of affairs:
5. The
distribution of resources is greatly dependent on the economic, political, and
land-tenure systems in each country. Huge increases in commercial agriculture
(mainly for export purposes) are pushing more and more people and livestock
into marginal lands and into fierce competition for meager resources.
The overall
situation is further complicated by the fact that resource endowment in the
Horn is far from uniform. For example, highlanders in
Hence, it
is not surprising to find that many current Horn disputes are not taking place
along traditional political borders but along the ecological borders that
divide richer and poorer ecozones. This fact highlights the need for a broader
approach in the analysis and interpretation of potential and actual armed
conflicts in the region. This approach should take the impact of environmental
scarcity and climate variation into consideration, thus enabling the parties
concerned to deal effectively with a very complex situation. Continuing to
treat conflicts in the Horn of Africa as purely political and/or ethnic/tribal
and ignoring the growing impact of environmental discrimination and of the
unsustainable exploitation of the resource base can only lead to a distorted
understanding of the real situation and consequently drastically limit the
possibility of genuine conflict resolution.
Lesson seven: We need to differentiate between
structural and direct causes of a conflict. The example of civil war in Sudan
Sudan is a country at war with itself. Violent conflict is raging on four fronts: civil war in the south, high intensity conflict in the Nuba Mountains, and high to medium intensity conflicts in the east and west of the country. To understand the turmoil of violence and dislocation, a differentiation between structural and direct causes of violence is useful. Structural problems are responsible for making the country susceptible to unrest, while the direct causes are those that actually precipitate the violence.
Structural
causes of violence
Countries
of the Horn region in general and the Sudan in particular are plagued with
inherent structural problems that are conducive to violent conflict whenever
significant immediate causes arise. These major structural issues are augmented
and reinforced by resource and identity dichotomies. They collectively
influence the state of war and peace in the region. For example and in brief:
Poverty: Per capita
income is less than a dollar a day; 68% of the workforce works in agriculture
and animal husbandry, 9% in industry, and 23% in the service sector, compared
to 1.8%, 21.2%, and 77%, respectively,
in the UK.
The
post-colonial state: The post-colonial state has failed to function as the
vehicle of development, peace and democracy. Instead it has become highly
politicized, often ending in one-party clientelist states (the Eritrean
People’s Liberation Front [EPLF] in Eritrea, the Tigray People’s Liberation
Front [TPLF] in Ethiopia, and the National Islamic Front [NIF] in Sudan). Such
states are incapable of meeting the challenges of development, democracy and
peace.
Bad
governance, lack of democracy and rampant corruption:
Since independence, all Horn countries have scarcely experienced peaceful democratic rule. Brutal yet corrupt military dictatorships followed corrupt weak civilian dictatorships. Civil society organization are banned most of the time, trade unions and women organizations when they exist are usually state creations. The media is in the hands of government. Security is tight, corruption is rich. The people cannot see hope in the future nor can they feel safe. Living is a burden, existing a continuous strife.
Non-productive
urbanisation: Contrary to the urbanisation
process during the industrial revolution in Europe, the urbanisation process in
the Sudan is a movement of people from areas of little food and much physical
insecurity to urban centers, where access to food and physical security are
relatively more certain. Almost 40% of the young are unemployed and are thus
available to other forms of exploitation, for example, to recruitment in jihad activities and other military
campaigns.
Most people
are doing the same things: Most people
plant the same crops and rear the same animals. There is little structural
differentiation in the national economy. This means that in times of crisis
very little help can be expected from other sectors of the economy, in contrast
to the way, for example, the UK has dealt with its BSE and foot and mouth
disease crises.
Environmental
degradation: The “too many people doing the same thing” syndrome
means that damage to the natural environment is aggravated year in, year out.
Degraded land is promptly abandoned, and machinery and tractors are moved in to
adjacent and more distant lands. There is, however, scarcely any virgin land
left. The indigenous owners resist the encroachment of mechanised agriculture,
and violence erupts between the local people and the absentee landlords, the
government usually supports the latter. When the tractors face resistance the tanks move in.
For example, the movement of mechanized agriculture into the area south of the
Blue Nile, the Nuba Mountains, and towards the south proper has been met with
stiff resistance.
Land
scarcity: The land available to traditional farmers has dwindled, due
to the allocation of huge tracts to large-scale mechanized farming of land
owned by absentee landlords. 8,000 families own Nine million hectares, while
four million hectares belong to four million traditional farmers. In one single
public announcement in 1993, the government distributed some seven million
hectares in southern Darfur alone. One Galal El Dien Issa Mustafa was granted
439,000 hectares, an area about half the size of Lebanon!
Uneven
development: During the
colonial and post-colonial periods, most industrial, service, financial, and
infrastructural developments were based in the north. Higher education and
advanced health centers were located in and around the capital, Khartoum. Urban
Sudan and its ruling elite prospered at a huge cost to rural people. This
discrepancy has not only led to growing migration to urban centers but has also
fostered among rural people a feeling of injustice and discrimination.
Uneven
resource endowment: The overall situation is further compounded by an
uneven distribution of resource endowment. Resources are unevenly distributed
and unevenly shared. Land is scarce along the Nile; water is scarce in the
plains around Jebel Marra and the Nuba Mountains in western Sudan; and in the
south rain is abundant, but the soils are not as good as in the north..
Climatic
variations: Since 1967, rainfall has been erratic and has
decreased to half the previous annual average. The beginning of the Sahel
drought coincided with the establishment in Sudan, with support from the World
Bank of the Mechanised Farming Corporation (MFC). The scissors effect of
drought and land scarcity has left deep wounds in rural Sudan, and people took
up arms against their perceived enemies, mainly the state and its allies, the Jellaba.
The low
status of women: Women’s social, economic, and political status is a
major structural impediment to economic and social progress. In all countries
of the Horn and in Islamist Sudan very few women are allowed a significant
share in economic and public life.
External
players: The economic policies of multinational companies, the IMF,
and the World Bank have encouraged export agriculture against the requirements
of the country’s food needs. For example, during the famine years from
1982–1985, Sudan exported 621,000 metric tons of sorghum, the staple food of
the people, to the European Union and Saudi Arabia for animal feed. The IMF’s
country representative in the Sudan called the plunder “the sorghum success story in the Sudan”. He praised the government
of Sudan for exporting sorghum and earning so much foreign currency.
In addition
to the structural problems that beset Sudan, deep-rooted traditional identity
dichotomies (ethnic, cultural, and religious differences) between the north and
south play an important role in inciting violence. In addition, new and
far-reaching resource issues emerged during the 1970s and 1980s that rendered
the south immensely lucrative in the eyes of the Jellaba: the discovery of oil in Bentu in the south, the digging of
the Jonglei Canal, the prospect of some 10 million hectares of former swamp
land being made cultivable, and the possibility for the military to at last be
able to move their motorized armed convoys by land from Khartoum down to Juba
in the south without encountering the bottleneck of the Sudd swamps. The
fragile edifice of Sudanese society began to collapse under the strains of
expanding and compounding resource and identity problems.
The gradual
depletion of large tracts of land in the north through unsustainable
large-scale mechanised farming, the denuding of forests and grazing lands,
erratic rainfall, and the mismanagement of water resources have all conspired
to lower the productivity of the central plains, the major source of wealth and
subsistence in northern Sudan. For the first time, the Jellaba and their state became immensely interested in the natural
resources of the south, namely, in its land, oil, and water.
Oil: In April 1981, Chevron announced the discovery of
commercial deposits of oil in the Unity Field of its southwestern concession.
Recoverable reserves from the Unity and the adjacent Heglig fields were
officially estimated at 236 million barrels. Confirmed oil reserves for the
whole of Sudan were estimated at two billion barrels. This is enough to earn
the country some US$10 billion or cover its projected energy needs for 10
years.
Original
plans to process the oil locally were deferred in September 1982. Instead, with
Chevron’s encouragement, the Nimeiri government opted for the construction of a
refinery and an export terminal south of Port Sudan, linked to the oil fields
by a 1,400-kilometer pipeline. This sudden reversal of policy alerted people in
the south to the probable intentions of Nimeiri and his backers among the Jellaba. One of the first acts of the
SPLA was to attack Chevron’s oil field installations, forcing the company to
suspend work in February 1984.
Since then,
large deposits have been discovered in many areas, mainly in the south.
Extracted oil is transported through a 1,600-kilometer pipeline to Red Sea
ports for exportation. To secure the uninterrupted flow of oil, the government
has waged scorched-earth military campaigns. Indiscriminate killing and burning
are in full swing all over the exploration and extraction areas. The consortium
that exploits the oil wealth is the Greater Nile Petroleum Operating Company
(GNPOC). It is made up of the Chinese National Oil Corporation (CNPC) with 40%
of the shares; the Malaysian Petronas Carigali Overseas, which holds 30%; the Canadian
Talisman Energy Inc. with a 25% stake and Sudapet (Sudan government) with only
5%. Lundin Oil AB, a family-owned Swedish oil company based in Geneva, has
struck oil in block 5a. Lundin is the major operator there, with 40% of the
shares. Other stakeholders in these concessions are Petronas with 28.5%, OMV of
Austria with 26%, and again Sudapet with only 5%. The British companies Weir
(Glasgow) and Rolls Royce supplied the pump stations. Each day 200,000 barrels
are exported, and this is may soon to increase to 400,000. Already the oil
returns are covering the running costs of the civil war, some US$400m. Above all, the
credit-worthiness of Sudan has shot up. Once again, sales people are coming to
Khartoum offering everything from Chanel No. 5 perfume to helicopter gunships.
China, Malaysia, Austria, and several east-European countries, including
Russia, Poland, Bulgaria and the Ukraine, are all cashing in. Even the European
Union is now engaged in a so-called critical
dialogue with the regime. The oil areas have become both extraction and killing fields. The omens
are bad for the people of Sudan, especially in the south.
Water: Since the beginning of the century the idea of
constructing a canal to drain the Sudd marshes of the White Nile at Jonglei has
been debated by developmentalists and environmentalists alike. Conceived from a
desire for more water downstream and the prospect of uncovering a vast expanse
of fertile land, the Jonglei Canal is one of the most intensively researched
water projects in the world. What has always been conspicuous by its absence,
however, is any serious assessment of how the local people, some 1.7 million
Dinka, Shilluk and Nuer, Murle, Bari, and Anuak, who will be directly or
indirectly affected by the project, actually feel about it.[10]
Actual
construction of the canal began in 1978 as a joint Sudanese-Egyptian project in
collaboration with the French CCI Company. Aimed at conserving some four
billion cubic meters of water that evaporates annually, the operation was
forcibly suspended in 1984, with about 250 kilometers of the proposed 360
kilometers completed, following a series of attacks on the construction site by
the SPLA. Egypt desperately wants the additional water represented by its half
share in Jonglei, some two billion cubic meters, to help grow more food for its
burgeoning population. Before the expansion of mechanized farming, Sudan was
not under the same pressure to obtain water. Since the mid-1970s, however,
water has become the limiting factor for agricultural expansion in many parts
of northern Sudan, since new irrigation projects need more water.
The 450,000
Dinka, Shilluk, and Nuer who are directly affected feared the drastic changes
the canal would bring to their way of life. They could not accept the prospect
of life without the migration to the toich
(swamp area) during the dry season, where they find fish and improve the
milk yield of their cows. They also feared the prospect of alien people being
settled in their midst and the possibility of conflict. Rumors that Egyptian
farmers would be sent to the canal area sparked student riots in Juba in
November 1984. There was justifiable mistrust of the project from southerners,
who saw the north and Egypt benefiting, while their own way of life was being
irreversibly changed, and not for the better. By drying out the swamps and
taking away the “grass curtain”, the canal would open up the entire Sudd area
for mechanized farming, the domain of the Jellaba.
It would also allow the government to move its military equipment and troops
into the south with greater ease. Thus, the project’s giant earth-excavating
machine, the biggest in the world, was one of the SPLA’s earliest targets, much
to the chagrin of the governments of Sudan and Egypt.
Land: The fertile savannah plains of acacia trees and tall
grass are where the “breadbasket” was envisioned. More predictable rains make
these plains suitable for sorghum, millet, maize, sesame, groundnuts, and
cotton. The huge expansion of large-scale mechanized farming, which constantly
devours new land, spread into southern Kordofan and into the northern parts of
Upper Nile Province. The owners of the mechanized farms, having exhausted vast
tracts of land in the north, pushed inexorably southwards into areas inhabited
by the Nilotic tribes, the major cattle economies of the south. Having seen how
the local people were squeezed off their land elsewhere, the people in the
south and in the Nuba Mountains were hostile to this incursion. Their response was to challenge the
intruders by force of arms.
In spite of
armed resistance, the NIF government is planning the distribution of some 17
million feddans among its supporters in the Jonglei Canal area. As mentioned
earlier, in one single day, the government has allocated 16.5 million feddans
in southern Darfur to its clientele.
Lesson eight: War and violence are most tragic in a
heterocultural society.
The case of the Nuba conflict
Before the
onset of violent conflict in the Nuba Mountains, the diverse Nuba people were
fully aware only of their clan affiliations. They neither perceived themselves
as a Nuba nation nor actively sought to be one. Their relations with their Arab
(Baggara) neighbors, the Hawazma and
Misiriya, were good to tolerable.
They exchanged goods and services, and intermarriage was an acceptable
practice, especially with Muslim Nuba. At the beginning of the conflict, many
Nuba even sided with the government because they perceived the conflict to be a
political discord rather than ethnic or economic strife.
Along with
other factors, the war has been crucial in bringing out and solidifying the
awareness of the Nuba as belonging to a larger ethnic group, a united and
quasi-homogeneous Nuba people. As a result, many Nuba increasingly perceive the
conflict as an ethnic conflict. There is even a small core of angry Nuba who
believe that all Arabs should be thrown out of the Nuba Mountains in a final,
radical solution. For this group, ethnicity has already crossed the threshold
from perception to cause of the violent conflict. The longer the war continues,
the greater the probability that more Nuba people will join the ranks of those
who fight for the ethnic cause.
In fact, it
is difficult to characterise the Nuba society as either a monocultural or a
multicultural society. The current mountain society is an excellent example of
what Jacques Chevalier and Daniel Buckles call a heterocultural society.[11]
The Nuba have never been a monocultural group. They are generally aware of the
common destiny and other values that unite them, but they are also conscious of
the differences. After 200 years of sharing the mountains with the Nuba, the
Baggara exhibit similar heterocultural features. This intra-group diversity has
arisen from Baggara-Nuba interdependence and the relative isolation of the two
groups in their fairly secluded hill clusters. Nuba and Baggara cultures have
overlapped and permeated each other. However politically improper it may sound
today, every Baggara embodies dynamic elements of Nuba culture and vice versa.
Nuba-Baggara relations, be they cooperative or conflictual, have been
instrumental in shaping their heterocultural society, and because these
relations are in constant flux, Nuba-ness and Baggara-ness are dynamic
identities, impossible to solidify in monocultural or multicultural casts. War
in such a society is particularly tragic because it cuts deep wounds where the
two groups have intermingled, amalgamated, and enriched each other.
Most
violent conflicts are over material resources, actual or perceived. However,
with the passage of time, ethnic, cultural, and religious affiliations seem to
undergo a transformation from abstract ideological categories into concrete
social forces. In a wider sense, these identity issues become contestable
social resources and, hence, possible objects of group strife and violent
conflict. Although usually by-products of fresh conflicts, ethnic, cultural,
and spiritual dichotomies can invert with the progress of a conflict to become
intrinsic causes and, in the process, increase the complexity of a conflict,
thereby reducing the possibility of managing, resolving, and ultimately
transforming it. The Nuba armed conflict is living proof of this
transformation.
Lesson nine: Traditional conflict resolution can only
work if both the conditions and the actors are right
The Borana
and Fur conflicts: Similar features, different outcomes: The
relatively tranquil settings of the Jebel Mara massif in northern Darfur in
western Sudan and of the Boran area of southern Ethiopia were profoundly disrupted
during the 1980s by prolonged drought, which had persisted with minor
interruptions since 1967.
In the
past, when faced with deteriorating natural conditions, people moved to a
nearby virgin land, mobility being a way of African life. There were enough
empty corridors, then. There are practically none now. Climatic variations,
large‑scale mechanized agriculture for export purposes, and urban
consumption, as well as large increases in human and livestock populations,
have all conspired to limit or deny access to new resources. Ultimately, these
ecological buffer zones have gradually lost their distinction as areas of
refuge and as borders of cooperation among neighboring peoples.
With the
persistence of the drought, pastoral groups in the Fur and the Boran areas
began to fall apart. Livestock died in large numbers, and their owners began to
dispose of the rest for next to nothing. Soon after “the year of meat” ended, “the
year of famine” began. The city merchants immediately turned away from the
collapsing economies, leaving them to their own fate. Once both nature and the
market had abandoned the people, their lives turned into a real struggle. These
rural societies became ripe for dislocation, turbulence, and, ultimately, war.
At the height of the drought in the mid‑1980s, violent conflicts erupted
in the Boran and the Fur lands. A closer look at the two conflicts reveals
great similarities in their ecological, political, and social aspects:
In both
conflicts, pastoralists suffering from persistent drought (the Zaghawa and
others in Darfur, and the Abore and others in the Boran area) were seeking
refuge in the lands of the Fur and the Borana, respectively, which are richer
in water and pasture. The conflict is, therefore, taking place along the ecological
borders between rich and impoverished ecozones, the so‑called “desert
versus the oasis syndrome”.
The
emerging need of the pastoralist groups and their animals to stay for
unspecified, long periods in the lands of the Fur and the Borana has led to the
breakdown of all previous mutual agreements that allowed pastoralists limited
access, in times of scarcity, to pasture and water. For example, the “Arab”
pastoralists were previously allowed to enter Jebel Mara from January to the
first rains, usually in May.
In both
cases, there were no inherent ethnic or religious differences between the two
adversaries. The Fur and Arabs are Muslims, the Borana and their opposing 14
ethnic groups have similar traditional religions. Ethnic barriers were easy to
surmount. For example, an Arab pastoralist who settled among the Fur soon
became one with all duties and rights of a typical Fur, and the opposite was
also true. Ethnic antagonisms are more a product of the conflict than a cause
of it. As both regions are far from the capital city and now have little appeal
to traders, government intervention in both conflicts was relatively limited.
In essence, we are dealing here with armed conflicts of local people against
each other, the weak against the weak.
The
introduction of modern arms in the traditional conflict arena is mutual to both
conflicts. This is especially so in Darfur, where the proximity of the
Chadian-Libyan war brought in large amounts of cheap modern weapons and the
possibility of military training of combatants from both sides of the conflict.
For example, the price of an AK47 with accessories was about US$40, far less
than its international price. It was estimated that in 1990 there were more
than 50,000 modern small weapons available in Darfur, one for every man over
the age of 16. Several attempts at resolving the conflicts through peace
conferences initiated by central and regional governments have not succeeded in
bringing peace to the regions.
The Fur and Boran conflicts are typical to the Sahel and Horn of Africa regions. Weakened by prolonged drought, pastoralists and their animals move into areas of better pasture and more water, with the apparent intention of staying there for as long as necessary. Previous agreements that had allowed limited and temporary sharing of water and land resources become no longer binding. The inhabitants of the relatively richer lands refuse entry to the desperate pastoralists, and whenever there is no mitigating powerful third party, the friction ultimately leads to violent confrontation.
The Borana
achieved peace, while the Fur continue the fight: In March 1993, in a great traditional religious
ceremony, the Borana blessed a peace agreement with the Abore and some 14
ethnic groups (including the Konso, Tesmay, Hammer, Dasenech) against whom they
had been fighting in and around the Umo valley, south of Ethiopia near the
Kenyan border.[12] A
year later, the Borana made a similar agreement with their Somali enemies, the
Garri. After years of violence around water holes and grazing lands, and after
all appeals to the government had failed to solicit any positive response, the
elders of the Abore and the Hammer decided it was time to meet the elders of
the Borana to settle the conflict in a fair and equitable way. The first meeting
went well enough for 10 young Borana to visit the Abore on 13 January 1993 to
negotiate details of the peace accord. Meanwhile, as a prelude to peace, all
livestock were allowed free access to the buffer zone between the Borana and
the rest.
It was then
agreed that the peace between the Borana and the Abore could not be complete
without the inclusion of all affected parties. All 14 ethnic groups were
therefore invited to the final and crucial general assembly in the homeland of
the Abore. The meeting took place on 8 March 1993 in Gonderaba, a traditional
religious center of the Abore people. The peace conference affirmed two
fundamental principles to be strictly adhered to in making peace in the region:
First, the
Abore and all other ethnic groups agreed that the Borana had all traditional
rights over their land. Traditional right over land is understood as right of
use, not absolute ownership. Second, the Borana accepted that all rival groups
and their animals had an inalienable right to survival.
To adhere
to both principles, it was decided that the other groups and a limited number
of their animals would be allowed to access Boran lands after harvest time and
could stay there for a limited period, depending on the rain situation. Further
measures were decided upon, namely:
Improving
the quality of life of the people and their herds was thus considered vital for
lasting peace because it entailed greater social security.
What this peace settlement shows is that in times of scarcity the prerequisite for peace is temporary, possibly asymmetric, but certainly sustainable sharing of contested resources, as well as respect of the fundamental right of the stricken people and their animals to survive. The “winner (owner) takes all” mentality and an insistence on so‑called historic rights that totally exclude all others in need is a sure recipe for confrontation.
Why the Fur
conflict continued, or the “boys from town” syndrome: The most obvious cause for the failure to achieve
peace in the Fur conflict was the exclusion of local leadership from peace
negotiations. Professionals from both sides of the conflict dominated all
meetings and peace conferences: teachers, lawyers, medical doctors, and so on,
in other words the “boys from town”.[13]
The boys
from town were not able to understand the significance of two crucial
principles associated with the conflict:
First, in
spite of their apparent temporary economic insignificance, pastoralists and
their animals constitute an organic and important part of the economic and
ecological systems of the region, for the desert and the oasis are inherent
parts of the same ecosystem. Therefore, the problem should not be seen in terms
of “us against them” but in terms of “live and let live”. This solidarity is
necessary for both sides and is not an act of sheer generosity of one side
towards the other.
Second,
land right is not synonymous with absolute ownership of land (i.e. land as mere
economic space). The boys from town consistently argued in terms and concepts
of Western and town law, namely that ownership allows absolute hegemony over
land. Most rural Africans understand customary land right as right of use, not
as absolute, unrestricted ownership. For them land is concrete space, the soil,
the grass, the trees, the hills, the river, the ancestral burying ground, and
the place for rituals. Land is thus economic, social and spiritual space, or
simply, land is life.
Because of
these two principles, it is possible for the local leadership to understand the
necessity for temporary sharing in times of need, namely, the right of other
peoples and their animals to survive. However, instead of dealing with the most
pertinent issues of sustainable sharing of the contested natural resources, the
boys from town spent valuable time quarrelling about the sharing of political power in regional and central government.
They were more concerned with their own town interests than with those of their
respective rural peoples.
Lessons to
learn from this comparison: The first
lesson to be learnt from this comparison of two very similar violent conflicts
and their diametrically opposed conclusions is that in local conflicts local
leaders should be the major actors in conflict resolution. Left to themselves,
most people tend to choose cooperation most of the time, and if provided with
the right assistance, all people will choose cooperation all the time. The
second lesson is that the principle of temporary, asymmetric, and sustainable
sharing in times of crisis is a necessity for conflict resolution and for long‑term
survival, not only for the suffering side but for both adversaries. The third
lesson demands that outsiders appreciate the particular understanding of land
ownership of most traditional African societies, namely that of right of use
rather than of absolute ownership.
The
insistence on so‑called historic rights to ownership of land and other
natural resources and the imposition of urban concepts of ownership on
societies in turmoil cannot facilitate the processes necessary to resolve
simmering or raging conflicts. May the wisdom of the Borana and Abore prevail
in all similar conflicts!
Lesson ten: The internally displaced can be worse off
than refugees
Mobility and migration: The exit option: In many parts of Africa migration has traditionally been a way of life. Some European researchers have attributed African people’s mobility to “discontent with the existing political community”[14] or suggest that faced with a deterioration of circumstances, people either leave (exit) or stay and make their dissatisfaction known (voice).[15]
The
traditional exit option has thus been understood as a reaction to political
coercion or economic hardships. While this explanation may be true for a number
of cases, the most compelling reason to move may have been ecological rather
than political or economic.
Migration
in Africa, as the pastoral way of life clearly shows, was one of the most
important mechanisms to adjust to ecological changes in a continent plagued
with poor soils, pests, unfavorable climate variations and other natural
adversities. Faced with natural or social problems, people moved into
ecologically or socially more friendly areas. Conducive to this tradition of
people’s mobility across Africa were the following factors:
With the
advent of colonialism, however, this situation of unhindered mobility, the exit
option, began to change. It suffered especially drastic limitations in the post‑independence
period. Indeed, large‑scale migration is no longer tolerated and those
who are forced to resort to it are now usually kept in refugee camps as near to
the borders as possible until they can be repatriated. In fact, African
political borders have assumed added significance of late because of increasing
competition for dwindling resources. It is interesting to note in this context
that in spite of all the turmoil and upheavals in Africa, one thing has emerged
unscathed and unchanged, namely the system of the so‑called arbitrary
political borders of the continent. Since its inception, the Organization of
African Unity (OAU) has made it an article of faith to keep the borders intact
and has taken very good care to ensure that they were.
Yet the process of emancipation from colonialism set in motion forces that drastically increased the number of people fleeing from natural and social calamities. The first large‑scale displacement of people occurred in 1957 in Algeria. By 1964, there were about half a million African refugees. The one million mark was passed in 1970 as the anti‑colonial liberation wars intensified in the Portuguese colonies. By the middle of the decade, one third of all internationally recognized refugees in the world were in Africa. By the end of the 1970s, the number rose to four million refugees, and in 1983 the number of African refugees was estimated at between four and six million. Today, of the total 17 million refugees recognized by the UNHCR about one third are Africans.
Some
specific African aspects: In dealing
with issues related to environmental degradation and people mobility, some
specifically African aspects should be taken in consideration:
Conclusion:
Although the NIF government is apparently in tact, its so-called Islamic Project in the Sudan is in tatters. The most obvious manifestation of this grand failure is the overthrow of the political Islamists and their leader Dr. Hassan Elturabi by the Jihadist fraction or Action Islam, headed by the putschist, Ali Osman Mohamed Taha. With the war on terror, the fall of Afghanistan and Iraq, the Jihadists became cornered, nationally, regionally and internationally. The choice was limited: either fundamentally transform or perish. This NIF regime is a master of gesture politics, opportunism and appeasement. The Jihadists will not give up unless desperate. They are ready to fight (with other peoples’ children) to bribe (with other peoples’ money) and to blackmail (with a repertoire of sordid and sleazy connections).
The suffering Sudanese
peoples on both sides of the conflict divide have been promised the heavens,
lasting peace, economic development and social progress. No mention of the rule
law, respect of human rights including women rights or democracy with all it
entails.
Above all, there is scarcely
any mention of transforming the conflict by tackling its structural causes, for
example, reducing the rampant poverty, rehabilitates the collapsed social
services and managing the natural environment in a sustainable way.
The Sudan is a continent of
conflicts. Addressing only the manifestations of social unrest is not enough
and however the authority behind the coming peace treaty may be, if it does not
effectively tackle the structural causes of violent conflicts, it will also
fail and new uprisings will again proliferate.
In the play ‘Galileo’ by B.
Brecht, there is a seen showing the old master in great elation and excitement
having spent the night observing the sky with a newly acquired telescope. When
his landlady enters the room he grabs her from the waist and forces her to
dance and all the while he kept shouting ‘today begin the new times, the new
times begin today! When he at last put the exhausted lady down she asked him
gasping:
‘Herr Galileo, and in these
new times would you be able to pay your rent!
Let us hope that we all
could!
Mohamed Suliman
Rewritten June 2004
London UK
[1] Günther Baechler, Violence Through Environmental Discrimination (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1999).
[2] Mohamed Suliman and Ahmed O. Osman, War in Darfur: The Desert Versus the Oasis Syndrome: Causes, Rwanda Arena and Conflict Model (London: IFAA Publications, 1994).
[3] Baechler, Violence.
[4] Paul Harrison, The Greening of Africa (New York: Penguin & Paladin, 1987).
[5] Katsuyoshi Fukui and John Markakis, Ethnicity and Conflict in the Horn of Africa (London: James Currey and Ohio University Press, 1994).
[6] Thomas Homer-Dixon, “Across the Threshold: Empirical Evidence on Environmental Scarcities as Causes of Violent Conflict,” International Security 19, 1 (1994): 5–40.
[7], “Call it Quit,” New Scientist vol. 158, issue 2135 (1997): 40.
[8] Mohamed Suliman, “Civil War in the Sudan: the Impact of Ecological Degradation,” ENCOP publication No.4 (December 1992).
[9] Suliman, War in Darfur.
[10] Harrison, The Greening of Africa.
[11] Daniel Buckles, Cultivating Peace: Conflict and Collaboration in Natural Resource Management (Ottawa: International Development Research Centre, 1999).
[12] Lothar Bauerochse, “Bauchspeck für
den Frieden,” der überblick 3 (1993).
[13] Suliman, War in Dafur.
[14] Jeffrey Herbst, “Migration, the Politics of Protest and State Consolidation in Africa,” African Affairs 89, 354 (1990): 183–203.
[15] Albert O. Hirschman, Exit, Voice and Loyalty (Cambridge: Harvard Press, 1970).