Multiple Armies in Khartoum Raise Security Concerns

The presence of several armies in the Sudanese capital Khartoum has raised security concerns among the people over what they believe may be a struggle for power between them, which will undermine the country’s democratic transition.
Khartoum
hosts the regular army, the Rapid Support Forces, led by First Vice President
of the Sovereign Council, Lt. Gen. Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, Minni Minawi’s Sudan
Liberation Army (SLA), the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) and other forces
that have defected from these groups.
All
of these armed groups freely roam Khartoum. Tensions came to a head after a
clash last week between members of an armed group. The police moved in to
contain the unrest. Another armed group, from Darfur, also seized control of
the Olympic committee building, almost causing an international crisis.
No
one knows the accurate number of gunmen and weapons in Sudan. Estimates put the
figure at more than 4 million arms, which are possessed by civilians and
gunmen. Weapons continue to pour in from neighboring countries, especially
chaos-wracked Libya.
Head
of the United Nations Integrated Assistance Mission in Sudan (UNITAMS), Volker
Perthes warned in a briefing before the Security Council that peace cannot be
achieved with the presence of so many armies.
For
over half a decade, the Sudanese military has always had to contend with
rebellions from within its ranks. Rebel officers would then go on to form their
own militias, leading to various conflicts over the years.
Sudan’s
power-sharing government signed a peace agreement with key rebel groups last
years, a step towards resolving deep-rooted conflicts from the long rule of
ousted leader Omar al-Bashir.
Three
major groups signed the Juba peace agreement, including factions from Darfur.
But two factions with the biggest presence on the ground in Darfur and the
south did not sign.
Along
with the JEM, it was signed by the SLA, from Darfur, and by Malik Agar, leader
of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-N), from the South
Kordofan and Blue Nile regions.
One
major SPLM-N faction, and an SLA faction led by Abdel Wahed el-Nur, did not.
Security
expert Mohammed al-Amin Ismail al-Majzoub noted a flaw in the peace agreement,
saying its security arrangements cover all forces and militias that were
inherited by the transitional government from the former regime. It did not,
however, specify the number of forces included in the merger of groups.
“The devil lies in the details,” he
added, noting that the agreement was vague in how it should be implemented.
He
denied that the ruling authorities were concerned about the deployment of these
forces in Khartoum, warning, however, that they cannot rule out the possibility
of clashes erupting between.
“We have seen security shortcomings in
Khartoum, which used to be among the safest capitals in the world,” he
remarked. “The authorities are not concerned that these armies would seek to
seize power, but rather they fear that they would become embroiled in clashes
with the regular forces.”
He therefore urged the need for the security and defense council to meet to determine the numbers of these forces and kick off security arrangements, even if the financial means for them are not yet available.