Darfur Online Feb2004

 

 

Findings

 

The
Sudanese government and government backed Arab militias are perpetrating
violent attacks on civilian populations in

Darfur
, Sudan
.  On
February
18, 2004
, CPG received confirmation of government backed Arab militia raids in the
town of


Shatatya


and its surrounding villages, which resulted in the massacre of 81 civilians.  Sources
also reported that the militias abducted 32 adolescent girls from
Mugjar, a town on the Sudanese side of the
Sudan-Chad border.  (CPG Press Release).  Additionally,
CPG has received numerous unconfirmed reports of Arab militia raids and aerial
bombings in

Darfur
.

 

The violence in Darfur

has caused hundred of thousands of
people to flee their homes.  Restricted
access to the region has impeded the delivery of international aid to these
refugees and internally displaced people, causing international humanitarian
groups to warn of an imminent humanitarian disaster. 


Center for the Prevention of Genocide

 

Civilians
Targeted by Continued Fighting in
Darfur


,
Sudan
:

An Impending  Humanitarian
Crisis

 

 

The Center for the Prevention of Genocide (CPG) is deeply
concerned by the deteriorating conditions in
Darfur


,
Sudan
. 
Refugees fleeing escalating violence in that province have reported
systematic human rights abuses against unarmed civilians, including women and
children.  They have described the
looting and burning of villages by government supported Arab militias,
including the Janjaweed and the Muraheleen,
as well as air raids carried out by the Sudanese air force.  Thus far, the violence in
Darfur
has led to the deaths of an estimated
4,000 civilians and to the internal and external displacement of at least
800,000 people.  Approximately 700,000 of
these people are internally displaced, and more than 100,000 of these people have
fled
Sudan
in search of safety across the Chad
border.

 

The remoteness of the region and restrictions imposed by the
Sudanese government have severely limited international humanitarian
organizations’ access to those in need of assistance, but the few organizations
that are operating on the Chad-Sudan border have warned of worsening conditions
in refugee camps and of a looming humanitarian emergency should additional
resources not reach the region soon.

 

 

History

 

For nearly two decades, Sudan

has endured a bloody civil war as
Northern and Southern armed forces have fought for control of the country’s
valuable oil reserves.  (BBC: “Country
Profile:
Sudan

”). 
Though a proposed peace agreement between the Sudanese government and
the main rebel group, the Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA), has raised
hopes that stability finally will come to the region, fighting in the
Darfur

province in Western Sudan
continues.  (IRIN News: “Sudan

Peace Talks Resume in Kenya

,” Feb.18, 2004; “Special Report II: Chad

and the Darfur

Conflict,” Feb. 16, 2004
; “More Pressure on Parties Urged in
Prelude to Talks Resumption,”
Feb. 5, 2004
.)

 

Historically, both nomad groups, including the Albala,
Zeilat, and Mahamid, and
settled farmers, such as the Fur, the Masalit, and
the Zaghawa, have inhabited
Darfur

. 
These groups, aside from occasional conflicts over the region’s
increasingly scarce land, generally have peacefully coexisted.  Additionally, the majority of the peoples
living in the
Darfur

region are Sunni Muslims, and ethnic divisions have been less
clear than those which have divided Northern and
Southern Sudan
throughout its civil war. 

Escalating violence in Darfur

, however, has magnified those ethnic differences, and the perpetrators of the
violence have sought to manipulate the differences to their own ends.  As Amnesty International reported in its Feburary 3, 2004 report on the conflict in Darfur, “[t]he attackers portray themselves as ‘Arabs,’ the
civilians being attacked are called ‘Blacks’ or even ‘slaves,’ and some groups
allege that the violence in Darfur represents an
attempt “to drive all ‘Africans’ away from Darfur.”  (Amnesty International: “
Sudan

Darfur

: ‘Too Many People Killed for no Reason,’” Feb. 3, 2004
.)  The
increasing ethnic tone of the conflict has raised concerns among international
humanitarian organizations that an ethnically motivated genocide has begun in
Darfur

.



Darfur

’s
current period of violence began in
February 2003 when two regional opposition groups, the Sudan Liberation
Movement Army (SLM/A) and the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), formally
took up arms against the Sudanese government. 
The rebel groups allege that the government has marginalized and
impoverished the
Darfur

region by consistently favoring the Arab populations to
the detriment of Black Africans.  The rebles demand greater autonomy for
Darfur

and a larger share of the country’s
natural resources. 
(Amnesty International: “Sudan

Darfur

: ‘Too Many People Killed for no Reason,’” Feb. 3, 2004
.)  The Sudanese government has met this rebellion with aerial
bombing raids on villages and by assisting Arab militias, including the
Janjaweed
and the

Murahaleen
,
in their attacks on villagers.  As of
mid-February 2004, the violence has driven more than 800,000 people from their
homes in
Darfur

.  Estimates of those
killed reach into the thousands.  (U.N.
Wire: “Sudan Government Targeting Civilians, Rights Group Says,”
Feb.
4, 2004

; The Independent: “Sudan

Accused of ‘vicious invisible war’ Against its Citizens,” Feb.3, 2004). 

 

 

Key Players

 

The Sudanese Government is officially located in the northern city of Khartoum

and is led by Omar Al-Bashir.  Al-Bashir leads an
authoritarian regime comprised of a elite group of
supporters, which have sought to enforce strict Islamic law throughout the
country.  Under Al-Bashir’s
rule,
Sudan

has endured a protracted and bloody civil
war that has claimed the lives of approximately two million Sudanese.  (2003 CIA World Factbook).

 

The Sudan
Liberation Movement Army (SLM/A) is an opposition group led by John Garang and was created in 2001 by the people of Darfur

. 
The SLM/A, together with another opposition group, the Justice and
Equality Movement, began an armed resistance against the Sudanese government in
February 2003.  The rebels are protesting
what they perceive as the Sudanese government’s neglect of the region and have
demanded some form of self-determination for
Darfur

. 
The SLM/A is the only major opposition group included in the recent
peace negotiations with the Sudanese government.

 

The Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) also is an opposition group fighting
against the Sudanese government’s control of
Darfur

. 
Like the SLM/A, the JEM challenges the Sudanese government’s rule in
Darfur

and alleges that the government has
impoverished the region.  JEM, however,
has not been included in peace talks between the government and the SLM/A.

 

The Janjaweedis one of many armed Arab militias
operating in
Darfur

.  The
Janjaweed
travel on horseback and on camels.
  Reportedly, they have the support of the
Sudanese government to attack villages in
Darfur

, destroying homes and killing civilians.

 

The Internally Displaced Peoples (IDPs)
and Refugees
are located
across or near
Sudan

’s border with Chad

. 
According to recent international news reports, more than 700,000 people
are internally displaced as a result of the violence in
Darfur

and more than 100,000 refugees have fled
the violence by crossing the Sudanese border into
Chad

. 
These IDPs and refugees are primarily
civilians, and a large percentage of them are women and children.  (U.N. Wire: “Sudan Government Targeting
Civilians, Rights Group Says,”
Feb. 4, 2004
; The Independent: “Sudan

Accused of ‘vicious invisible war’ Against its Citizens,” Feb.3, 2004). 

 

 

Nature of
the Abuse

 

Because of the remote location of Darfur
and because international relief organizations have had only very limited
access to the region, reports of the ongoing human rights abuses have been slow
to emerge.  Interviews with refugees in
Chad

, however, have revealed that the principal
methods of terrorization of
Darfur

’s
civilian population are regular aerial
bombings and Arab militia raids. 
(Amnesty International: “Sudan

Darfur

: ‘Too Many People Killed for no Reason,’” Feb. 3, 2004
; IRIN News: “Dialogue on Humanitarian Access in Darfur

,” Feb. 4, 2004
.) 

 

Large numbers of refugees consistently have told interviewers from
Amnesty International, UNICEF, and UNHCR of repeated attacks on civilians by
Arab militias, including the Janjaweed.  These militias, often accompanied by armed Sudanese
soldiers, loot and burn villages, abduct and rape women and children, and kill
unarmed civilian villagers.  The fear and
destruction brought by the militia attacks have caused hundreds of thousands of
people to flee their homes.. 
(Amnesty
International: “
Sudan

Darfur

: ‘Too Many People Killed for no Reason,’” Feb. 3, 2004
.) 

 

The refugees also have described aerial bombings of villages, and
international relief workers operating on the Chadian side of the Chad-Sudan
border have confirmed hearing loud explosions and treating increasing numbers
of patients suffering from shrapnel injuries. 
Supporting the refugees’ and international aid workers’ accounts of the
bombings are international news media reports that Sudanese military aircraft
dropped bombs on the border
village

of

Tine

, Chad

at the end of January 2004.  At a minimum, these bombings confirm Sudanese
government complicity in the humanitarian crisis in
Darfur

. 
(IRIN News: “Hundreds Killed on Daily Air Raids on Darfur
Villages,” Jan. 29, 2004; “18,000 Sudanese Flee into Chad Within 10 Days,” Jan.
28, 2004; “Sudanese Bombs Dropped on Chad Town; Three Killed,” Jan. 30, 2004.)

 

 

Humanitarian
Crisis

 

The
few international humanitarian organizations operating in the region are
warning of an imminent humanitarian catastrophe should substantial
international assistance not arrive quickly. 
Refugees arrive in the
Chad

border region often having walked for days across
rough terrain.  The flimsy shelters in
which they must live once they reach a location of relative safety provide them
with little protection from the piercing daytime sun or from the cold nighttime
temperatures.  Indeed some recently
arrived refugees have to survive without any shelter at all and sleep in the
bush.  International aid workers are
struggling to provide food, medicine, and security to these refugees, who often
arrive on the
Chad

side of the border suffering from malnutrition, diarrhea, and
infections.  (Amnesty International:
“Sudan Darfur: ‘Too Many People Killed for no Reason,’”
Feb.
3, 2004

; IRIN News: “Darfur

’s
Invisible Refugees Living Rough in Eastern Chad
,” Feb. 4, 2004
).

 

The
IDPs have not fared any better than the refugees, and
generally receive no assistance at all because they are mostly inaccessible to
the international aid organizations. 
Like the refugees, the IDPs suffer from
malnutrition, lack of shelter, disease, and insecurity.  Just this week (
February 17, 2004
), Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), one international aid organization
operating in the region, reported “‘catastrophic mortality rates’ among the
internally displaced persons … due to displacement, ‘critical living
conditions’ and inadequate food supplies.”  
Additionally, the MSF workers “found a total of 258 severely
malnourished and 1,190 moderately malnourished children at several sites.”   (MSF Press Release: “Massive Aid Urgently
Needed in
Darfur


,

Sudan

,” Feb. 17, 2004
).









CPG Compilation of Unconfirmed Massacres
in
Darfur


,
Sudan





The Center for the Prevention of Genocide has monitored conditions in
Darfur

since the summer of 2003. Unconfirmed
reports from the
Darfur

community indicate at least nine massacres have occurred,
the most recent of which was on
January 20, 2004
. 
Eleven elderly people perished in that massacre, which occurred in
villages around north and south of Kuttum.  In addition to the massacres, numerous
incidents of looting, rape, torture, and abduction have been reported.  Unfortunately, the travel ban on the region
has made neutral third party confirmation extraordinarily difficult to obtain.

 

{Probably want to put
something about the Feb 10 massacre here. 
I don’t have the details.}

 

Survivors of the massacres and their families, sometimes through
the Sudanese exile communities, have provided CPG with the following accounts
of violence:

 

 

Date: January 20, 2004

Location: Various
villages to the north and south of Kuttum

Victims:  11 elderly civilians killed and 24 villages destroyed
in Janjaweed
raids

 

Civilians
Killed
:

1.   Mohammed Adam Kahleel

2.   Issa Abakar Khaleel

3.   Abdulaziz Mohammed Noor

4.   Yousid Mohammed Jummah

5.   Tiganie Ahmed Yagoub

6.   Mohammed Abdulmajeed

7.   Ismael Yahya

8.   Yousif Abdullah

9.   Maryam Ishag

10.Khadeeja Yagoub Mohammed

11.Khadeeja Ahmed

 

Villages
Destroyed
:

1.   Jakhana

2.   Tarainga

3.   Loobous

4.   Naro

5.   Boori

6.   Taraigna

7.   Amoo

8.   Bargna

9.   Jurbaidah

10.Saadallah

11.Daibaynayra

12.Riyah

13.Togjow

14.Hilat

15.Sawo Sawo

16.Adrbay

17.Dingajurie

18.Amar

19.Gairy

20.Dibs

21.Izairiq

22.Diringo

23.Tonga


Fogo

24.Meeri

 

Date:January 18, 2004

Location: Villages 25 kilometers north of Kuttum

Victims:  9
villages destroyed by Janjaweed
raids

 

Villages
Destroyed
:

 

1. Hilat
Abdulghani

2. The remaining huts of Hilat Faki

3.
Abdulshakoor
primary school

4.

Abdulshakoor
medical clinic

5.

Orgulo
village

6.

Ortogus
village

7.

Boey
village

8.
Eraidah Hilat Malik

9. Eraidah Kabeer

 

Date:January 18, 2004

Location: A village 17 kilometers west of Kuttum

Victims: One village destroyed and
its villagers driven from their homes

 

Village
Destroyed
:

 

1.  Jondo

 

Date:January 16, 2004

Location: 25 kilometers west of Kuttum
town.

Victims:  4
civilians killed and 8 wounded

 

Civilians Killed:

 

1. Ismael
Mohammed Adam

2. Fatima Ali Adam

3. Hawa Ismael Mohammed
Adam

4. Abdulsalam Ali Adam

 

Civilians Wounded:

 

1.  Haroon Ibrahim Salih

2.  Sabir Ismael Mohammed

3.  Hawa Ibrahim Abdulkareem

4.  Kaltoom Issa Babikir

5.  Aziza Issa Babikir

6.  Hawa Ali Ibrahim

7.  Halima Haroom Ibahim

8.  Khadeeja Ali Adam



Date:
January 15, 2004

Location: A village 25 kilometers north of Kuttum
town

Victims:  One village destroyed by aerial bombings and villagers forced to flee
their homes

 

Village
Destroyed
:

 

1.     

Shaka



 

 

 

 

{The following information is not in the
emails Rich gave me about massacres, so I have no way to check/cross check
it.  Someone should figure out where it
originated and make sure there is no duplication.  I also think it would be good to put these
lists in chronological order.

Finally, Rich gave me transcripts of Sudan
Videos
which discuss the destruction.  I was not
sure what to do with that information, so I have not included it.}

 

Date: February 2, 2003

Location: Al Fasher

Victims: 2 civilians killed

1.     

Mokhtar

Bush Kabeir, 72 years

2.     

Yagoub

Alyas (m) 30 years old

 

Date:January 10, 2004

Location: The below villages are spread from 15-40km north to
northwest, and west to southwest of Kuttum town, in
Northern




Darfur




State

.

Victims:  23 villages killed

1.     

Jakhana

, over 100 houses.

2.     

Tarainga

, around 15 houses.

3.     

Loobous

, over 100 houses.

4.     

Naro

,
over 80 houses.

5.     

Boori

,
around 50 houses.

6.     

Taraigna



7.     

Amoo

,
west, east, and mid of the district, over 100 houses, including the two schools
and clinic.

8.     

Bargna

, about 40 houses.

9.     

Jurbaidah

, about 50 houses.

10. 
Saadallah

, 15 houses.

11. 
Daibaynayra

, unknown.

12. 
Riyah

, about 20 houses.

13. 
Togjow

, about 25 houses.

14. 
Hilat

Odo, about 10 houses.

15. 
Sawo

Sawo, about 20 houses.

16. 
Adrbay

, about 20 houses.

17. 
Dingajurie

, about 25 houses.

18. 
Amar

, about 100 houses.

19. 
Gairy

, about 60 houses.

20. 
Dibs, over 100 houses.

21. 
Izairiq

, about 50 houses.

22. 
Diringo

, about 50 houses.

23. 
Tonga Fogo, unknown.

 

 

 

Date:January 10, 2004

Location: The below villages are spread from 15-40km north to
northwest, and west to southwest of Kuttum town, in
Northern




Darfur




State

.

Victims: 10 civilians killed

1.     

Mohammed
Adam Kahleel, above 80yrs old.

2.     

Issa


Abakar Khaleel, above 80
yrs old.

3.     

Abdulaziz

Mohammed Noor, around 70 yrs old.

4.     

Yousif

Mohammed Jummah, between 60 to 70yrs old.

5.     

Tiganie

Ahmed Yagoub, above 50 yrs old.

6.     

Mohammed
Abdulmajeed, age not known.

Ismael Yahya, above 70yrs
old.

7.     

Yousif

Abdulah, around 50 yrs old.

8.     

Maryam

Ishag (f), age not known.

9.     

Khadeeja

Yagoub Mohammed, an aged female.

10. 
Khadeeja

Ahmed, above 60 yrs old.

 

 

 

Date:               January 1, 2004

Location:        Teyrigo
, Nabgayah, Tewary, Sally and Wastany




Villages

– about 15-20       
km to the north of Kass city

Victims:          19 civilians killed

1.     
 

Mohamed
Omar (m) 70 years  (Teyringo)

2.     
Halimah

Haroun (f), 72 years  ( Teyringo)

3.     
Fatimah

Mossa (f) 74 years  (Teyringo)

4.     
Fatimah

Haroun (f), 47 years  (Teyringo)

5.     
Azeldein

Mohamed Abaker (m) 30
years  (Teyringo)

6.     
Abkaer

Hassan Haroun
(m), 74 years  (Teyringo)

7.     
Idriss

Ahmed Khateir (m), 27
years  (Teyringo)

8.     
Mohamed Osman
(m), 60 years  (Teyringo)

9.     
Abdelmotalib

Mohamed Abaker(m), 50
years  (Teyringo)

10. 
Omar Abdallulh
(m) 65 years (Nabgayah)

11. 
Yousf

(m), 55 years 
(Nabgayah)

12. 
Yahya

Mohamed Abaker (m) 25
years  (Nabgayah)

13. 
Samia

Abdelhameid, one year (Tewary)

14. 
Ahmed Janibared
(m), 71 years  (Tewary)

15. 
Abdelmajed

Abelhameid (m), 64
years  ( Sally)

16. 
Abdelraziq

Abdelhameid (m), 20
years  ( Sally)

17. 
Altaheir

Aldoum (m), 29 years  ( Wastany)

18. 
Abdelatif

Zakriah Abdelrhman
(m), 26 years  (Wastany)

19. 
Ismaeil

Mohamed Hassan (m) 34
years  (Bro)

 

 

 

 

Date:           October 1, 2003

Location:    Kidineer
and Kito
villages in Jabal Mara area

Victims:      10 civilians killed

 

1.     

A- civilians 
killed
in Kidineer:

1- Abbas Hassab Allah Hasab Al Rasool (m),60 years .
 

2- Abdulla Hasab Al Arasool Hassabo (m), 28
years   

3- Abdulla Adam Sharaf
(m), 55 years 

4- Hashim Abdul Malik (m),
23 years 

5- Howaida Abdulla Mohd. (f), 19 years

2.     

B- civilians killed in Kito:

1- Ayisha Abu Qasim (f), 30
years       

2- Mohd. Yousif  (m), 35 years 


3- Ahmed Ishaq  (m), 35 years 

4- Halima Abdul Rahman
(f), 22 years 

5- Abdullah Arbab (m), 18 years

 

 

 

Date:         August 15, 2003

Location:  Laga
village – about 50 km to the south-west of Kuttum town

Victims:    20 civilians killed

1.     

Mohammed Ahmed Fadhal, 77 yrs, Reciter.

2.     

 Adam Badullah Mohammed Abbo, 36 yrs, Farmer.

3.     

  Mohammed Ahmed
Mohammed Abbo, 66 yrs ,
Farmer.

4.     

Salih

Mohammed Abbo,
60 yrs, Farmer.

5.     

Ismael

Abdullah Marmaraih,.

6.     

Abdullah Ismael Abdullah Marmariah, 45 yrs, Farmer.

7.     

Mohammed Suliman Rahmah,
75 yrs, the Imam of the Mosque.

8.     

  Is’haq
Adam Mohammed, 75 yrs, Farmer.

9.     

Mohammed Ali Fadhal, 60 yrs, Farmer.

10. 
Abdullah Mohammed Hussain, 40 yrs, Farmer.

11. 
Ahmed Abdulmowla,
41 yrs, Farmer.

12. 
Abdullah Babikir
Abdullah, 39 yrs, Farmer.

13. 
Mohammed Omar Suliman, 42 yrs, Farmer.

14. 
Salih

Jabal, 47 yrs
old, Farmer.

15. 
Is’haq

Ibrahim Sombo, 35 yrs, Farmer.

16. 
Mohammed Abdullah Adam, 30 yrs , Farmer.

17. 
Abdullah Suliman
Ahmed, 50 yrs, Farmer.

18. 
Babikir

Abdulmahmood Ibrahim, 75 yrs old, Farmer.

19. 
Ismael

Adam Jabrallah,
40 yrs old, Farmer.

20. 
Fatimah

Yousif (f), 40
yrs old, Housewife

 

 

Date:           July 25 – August 5, 2003

Location:    Kutum
province

Victims:      123 civilians killed



 



A – civilians killed in Kutum
city:

1.        Ali Suleiman, 83yrs , Retired Soldier

2.        ElSir Ali Suleiman, 37
yrs,

3.        Adam Mahmoud Fadl, 21 yrs,Student

4.        Amin Mahmoud Fadl,18 yrs, Student

5.        
Hassan
Mahmoud Fadl,
16 yrs, Student

6.
       
Elsadig
Abdelkarim, 23 yrs, Student

7.
       Mohammed Salim Ali, 13 yrs, Pupil

8.
       Abdelrahman Abkr,18 yrs, Student

9.        Samar Mohammed
ahmed
(f), 17
yrs, Student

10.        
Asil
Ishag, 23 yrs, Student

11.
       Shamal Abu Aha,
43 yrs, Police

12.        Faisal Abu Aha, 24, Student

13.
       Mohammed Khatir,
61 yrs, Merchant

14.        Adam Mohammed Khatir,
29 yrs, Merchant

15.        Abbas Eltigani Abdelrahman, 44 yrs,
Merchant

16.        Gar
Elnabi
, 37 yrs, Teacher

17.        Ibrahim Aldoma, 51yrs, Merchant

18.        
Hanan
Eisa, 39 yrs, House wife (mother of
19&20)

19.
       Ahmed
Haroon
 Adam , 11
yrs

20.        Mohammed  Haroon Adam,  9 yrs

21.        Sherif Mohammed , 40 yrs,  Merchant

22.        
Nooreldin
Fadl Hussein, 43 yrs, Mechanic

23.
       Noorein Fadl Hussein, 41 yrs, Merchant

24.    
   Mohammed Fadl Hussein, 37 yrs, Tailor

25.        Abdalla Abkr (Koshonwa), 38 yrs,  Policeman

26.        Abdelrahman Fadl, 31 yrs,  Policeman

27.        
Nooreldin
Ahmed, 29 yrs       

28.
       
Khadiga
Rabih, 45 yrs, (mother of 29-31)

29.
       
Salim
Ali, 21 yrs

30.
       
Elfatih
Ali, 9 yrs

31.
       
Mawoda
Ali, 14 yrs

32.
       Yahia Ahmed, 23
yrs,  Student

33.        Ismail Abdalla, 33 yrs, Merchant

34.        
Mohamedain
Guma’, 76 yrs       

35.
       Sherif hamid Ali, 74 yrs,  Merchant

36.        
Amna
Adam Mohammed, 69 yrs, Housewife

37.
       
Noor
Abu Banda, 31 yrs        

38.
       
Abdalla
Geri, 27 yrs

39.
       Haroon Ishag, 27 yrs, executed in the hosiptal

40.        Mohammed Adam Salim, 79 yrs

41.
       
Abkr
Abdelrahman, 61 yrs

42.
       
Isra’a
 Mohammed Adam, 14 yrs, Student

 

B – civilians killed in Goor Elnaeem area:

1.        Mohammed Mansoor Nahar, 85 yrs       

2.        
Mansoor
Nahar, 43 yrs

3.
       
Aldood
Batil Gawee, 84
yrs

4.
       Hamid Aldood Batil Gawee,  76 yrs

5.        
Shartaei
Sharif Guma’,
86 yrs

6.
       
Arga
Sherif Guma’,
71 yrs

7.
       
Yagoub
Arga Sherif,
15 yrs

8.
       Ali Alamin
Balal, 90 yrs

9.
       
Elsadig
Osman Dogo, 53
yrs

10.
       
Makka
Nasr Mahmoud (f), 56 yrs

11.
       
Hawa
Abkr Mustfa
Ahmed (f), 14 yrs

12.
       
Zakria
Hassaboo, 60 yrs

13.
       
Fangar
Abdelkarim, 88 yrs

14.
       
Ibrahim
Arba’a, 79 yrs

15.
       
Ibrahim
Gabir Gawee,
66 yrs

16.
       
Ibrahim
Zaid Eltayeb,
53 yrs

17.
       Abbas Abdalla Khalil,
 40
yrs

18.        Mustafa Hamcdan
Hanoon, 66 yrs

19.
       
Amani
Arga Sherif Guma’ (f), 9 yrs

20.
       
Haroon
Abkr Adam Dago, 23 yrs

21.
       Omer Maskei, 65 yrs

22.
       
Noor
Elnil, 80 yrs

23.
       
Ibrahim
Guma’, 76 yrs

24.
       
Mukhtar
Adam Ali, 51 yrs

25.
       
Dawood
Alnoor Arga,
20 yrs

26.
       Hussein Hassan Gabir, 73 yrs

27.
       
Abkr
Suleiman Geero, 83 yrs

28.
       
Siddig
Ali, 18 yrs

29.
       
Ismail
Khatir Abdelgadir,
15 yrs

30.
       Idris Adam Ali,  74 yrs

31.        
Ibrahim
Adam Belal, 51 yrs

32.
       Gokinda Adam belal, 55 yrs

33.
       Abdelkarim Huda Abdelrahman, 62 yrs

34.

   
   Abdelaziz
Younis Yahia,
12 yrs

35.
       
Hamid
Arga Haroon,
76 yrs

36.
       
Yahia
Adam Alnoor, 19 yrs

37.
       
Aldin
Adam Yahia, 69 yrs

38.
       
Abdalla
Ahmed Bashr, 57 yrs

39.
       
Mahmoud
Mohammed Musa, 43 yrs

40.
       
Gamal
Hammad, 49 yrs

41.
       
Elsadig
Abdalla Younis,
61 yrs

42.
       
Karima
Galba Abdelrahman
(f), 76 yrs

43.
       Hassan Alnoor Dogo,
 3
yrs





C – civilians killed in Abu Gidad area:

1.        Ahmed Adam Abdalla , 86
yrs

2.        
Musa
Tukhla, 83 yrs

3.
       
Babiker
Barka, 15 yrs

4.
       
Fadl
Harran, 32 yrs

5.
       Adam Gadadia,
23 yrs

6.
       
Habba
Mansour Harif,
62 yrs

7.
       
Dawood
Arga Koti, 98
yrs

8.
       
Bushara
Aldom, 68 yrs

9.
       
Khalifa
Hussein, 59 yrs

10.
       
Ibrahim
Abdelkarim Rabih,
77 yrs

11.
       
Haroon
Ibrahim Mohammed, 7 yrs

12.
       
Amani
Suleiman Musa (f), 16 yrs

13.
       
Siddig
Abbo Abdalla,
66 yrs

14.
       
Siddig
Abdalla Bosch, 82 yrs

15.
       
Mahmoud
Galba Abdelrahman,
57 yrs

16.
       Adam Ahmed Abdalla, 39 yrs

17.
       Adam Yahia Adam, 70 yrs

18.
       
Dawood
Hussein Koti, 57 yrs

19.
       
Salih
Bushara Aldoma,
38 yrs

20.
       Mohammed Idris Dahia, 17 yrs

21.
       
Bashir
Dahia Hamid,
78 yrs

22.
       Abkr Musa Yagoub, 18 yrs

23.    
   Abkr Ali , 72
yrs

24.        Suleiman Ibrahim,
11 yrs

25.
       
Elsadig
Moammed Adam, 47 yrs

26.
       
Ateem
Haroon Suleiman, 56 yrs

27.
       
Ibrahim
Idris Hussein, 66 yrs

28.
       
Barka
Dawood Gardia,
80 yrs

29.
       Mohammed Yousif, 66 yrs

30.
       
Arkori
Nair Suleiman, 62 yrs

31.
       
Abdaziz
Abdelgabar Mohammed, 85 yrs

32.
       
Mahdi
abdalla Hussein, 90 yrs

33.
       
Fugar
Abdelkarim Abdalla,
69 yrs

34.
       
Ismail
Nahar, 14 yrs

35.
       Mohammed Abdelrahman Yagoub, 65 yrs

36.
       
Eltigani
Melik Eltayeb,
39 yrs

37.
       
Bahreldin
Bakheit, 18 yrs

38.
       Gabir Ahmed Fadl, 81 yrs





D – civilians killed in Kereinga area

1.        Mohammed Adam
Harran
, 37 yrs

2.        
Gibdog
Ismail Ahmed, 70 yrs

3.
       Elsadig Mohammedain Adam,  78 yrs

4.        Mohammed Gabir
Door, 66 yrs

5.
       
Idris
Mursal Eisa,
98 yrs

6.
       
Yahia
Adam Asso, 16 yrs

7.
       
Dooda
Hassan Gabir,
59 yrs

8.
       Adam Ahmed Gama’a,  45 yrs

9.
       Yagoub Khalifa,
55 yrs

10.

   
   Mariam
Hassan Gabir
(f), 9 yrs

11.
       Maymoona Hassan Gabir (f),  11 yrs

12.        
Ishag
Hamid, 77 yrs

13.
       
Saeed
Abdelaziz Younis,
68 yrs

14.
       Mohammed Alnoor
Mustafa, 81 yrs

 

 

 

Date:          August 1, 2003

Location:   villages in Jabir and Abara areas – about 50 km to the north of Kutum

Victims:     29 civilians killed

1.     

1)        Sheik Hamid
Mohamed Adam

2)        Sheik Mussa Abdalla

3)        Ismail Mohamed

4)        Adam Yagoub Adam

5)        Attahir Abdalla

6)        Mohamedein Ibrahim

7)        Abbaker Mohamed Adam

8)        Khadija Mohamed
Suleiman

9)        Abdalrahman Ahmed

10)        Adam Abdalla Mohamed

11)        Osman Mohamed

12)        Ibrahim Abbas

13)        Mohamed Adam Haroun

14)        Adam Ahmed Mohamed

15)        Mohamed Ahmed

16)        Ibrahim Adam Abdalrahman

17)        Adam Abdalrasul

18)        Mohamed Ahmed Idris

19)        Abdalaziz Abbaker

20)        Omar Abdalla Adam

21)        Adam Idris Abdalla

22)        Alhaj Abdelrahman Abdalla

23)        Alhaj Adam Mohamed

24)        Adam Ahmed Ali

25)        Abdalla Adam Dawalbei

26)        Abbaker Abdalla

27)        Abakker Abdalla

28)        Adam Ahmed Haroun

29)        Babiker Yagoub

 

 

Date:           July 29, 2003

Location:    Atra
and Gouz Wadmaein
villages – north-west of Kutom province

Victims:     59 civilians killed

A- civilians
killed in Atar village :

1- Yahya Alton Alnur

2-Adam Adlum Suliman

3- Abdelrhamn Daffa Suliman

4- Salh Assai Aldoum

5- Mohamed Idriss Dahia

6- Dawoud Issa Altoum

7- Abakar Mussa Yaghoub

8- Babker Haroun Ahmed

9- Alsadiq Mohamed Adam

10 Mohamed Ibrahim Yousif

11- Ahmed Abdelkarim Murssal

12 Suliman Ibrahim

13 Abakar Ali Reziq

14 Bshier Dahia Nok



B- civilians killed in Gouz Wadmaein
village:

1-Sherti Shrief Jumma

2-Hamed Daowud Baki

3-Suliman Suliman Mussa

4-Sediq Abohamed

5- Sediq Abdallah Bush

6-Haj Alnur Niel Dalam

7- Idriss Adam Ali

8-Omar Maki Saeid

9-Abdelkarim Jaltah

10-Mohamed Jaltah Shakren

11-Hassan Alnur

12-Adam Ahmed Abdalla

13-Mussa Alur Alkhalla Abdelall

14-Adam Gri Arkul

15-Bdar Hassan Jaber

16-Abakar Skb Saghrio

17-Abakar Brssah Jangha

18 Ibrahim Adam Altyb

19-Roudah Hassan Hamed

20 Zakria Yahya Zakria

21- Daoud Alnur Arabi

22-Yaghoub Arja Sherief

23-Mukhtar Adam Ali

24-Makkah Nassr Mahmoud

25-Mohamed Mansur Nhar

26-Abdelkariem Hari Abdelrhman

27-Ibrahim Abdelkarim Taour

28-Hamed Arjah

29- Abdelaziz Youns Yahia

30- Idain Adam Yahia

31-Yaya Adam Saeid

32-Hiah Mansur Khrief

33-Ali Alamien Blal

34-Daoud Ibrahim Mahmoud

35-Yagub Khalifa Yasien

36-Ibrahim Arbab Adam

37-Mansur Nahar Abdeljabar

38-Mohamed Youns Arja

39-Abdalla Ahmed Bshier

40-Sharief Jumah

41-Hamied Daoud Baki

42- Kjar Abdelkariem

43-Ibrahim Jaber Kou

44-Ismaeil Nazer Abdalla

45- Alsadiq Issmaeil Deigo

 

 

Date:           July 24-26, 2003

Location:    Shoba
town – about 7km to the south of the Kabkabbya
city

Victims:      22 civilians killed

 

1)    
   Adam Mohamed Mussa (80 years)

2)        Ishaq Abbaker Haroun (78 years)

3)        Abdalla Abbaker Omar (75 years)

4)        Mohamed Eid (70 years)

5)        Mohamed Adam Tarra (70
years)

6)        Ismail Adam Tarra (63 years)

7)        Ali Adam Suliman (70
years)

8)        Sideeg Adam Suliman (68 years)

9)        Mussa Dawoud (60 years)

10)         Yahya Mohamed Slami (45 years)

11)        Mohamed Idris Adam (28
years)

12)        Mohamed Ishaq Atteem (23 years)

13)        Nuraddeen Sideeg Adam (13 years)

14)        Khatir Saleh Mohamed (32 years)

15)        Ahmed Adam Hussein (25 years)

16)        Ahmed Asheik (years
65)

17)        Adam Adam (45 years)

18)        Suliman Bilal (55 years)

19)        Ali Baker (50 years)

20)        Adam Ibrahim (45
years)

21)        Halima Bukra (80 years)

22)        Mohamed Ahmed Bukhari
(55 years)

 

 

 

Date:           June 17-19, 2003

Location:    Komra
area – 75 km to the west of Al-Fasher
(the capital of
Northern




Darfur




State


Victims:      10 civilians

1- Mutasm Abdullah Haroun Suliman (Male) 19 years – Student

2- Ibrahim Hamid (Male) 50
years- Sheikh (Religious leader)

3- Hamid Mohamed Abdullah (Male)  35years – Farmer

4- Mohammadain Ibrahim
(Male), 41 years old

5- Ismael Mohammed (Male) –Farmer

6- Adam Yagoub (Male), 50 years – farmer

7- Ibrahim Suliman Abdulrasool (Male), 45 years – farmer

8- Mohamed Adam Haroun (Male) 40 years – farmer

9- Sarkab Adam (Male) – 47 years – farmer

10- Khadeeja Mohammed Suliman
(Female) 30 years- housewife



Date:          June 14, 2003

Location:   Marrah
village – 80-95km to the north-west of Nertitay town in Nyala province

Victims:     9 civilians killed

 1-        Adam Ali Ibrahim (Male) 35 years

2-        Abakker Hassan (Male) 28 years

3-        Halima Abakkar ( Female)  28 years

4-        Ashaah Abbakar ( Female) 12 years  

5-        Osman Ibrahim Ali (Male)30 years  

6-        Haroun Abdallah (Male) 40 years

7-        Mohamed Geikha (Male)
37 years

8-        Halima Mohamed Adam
(Female) 35 years

9-        Abdel-Aziz Mohamed Albashier (Male) 17 years