The Daily - A Military Crackdown in Sudan

Episode Date: June 24, 2019

A military crackdown in Sudan has left more than 100 pro-democracy protesters dead, just weeks after the military offered support in overthrowing the country’s dictator. Our colleague spoke with us ...from Sudan’s capital, Khartoum. Guest: Declan Walsh, the Cairo bureau chief for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading:Lt. Gen. Mohamed Hamdan, the leader of the paramilitary forces that carried out the killings, is now considered by many to be the de facto ruler of Sudan.Listen to an episode of “The Daily” about the fall of Sudan’s longtime dictator, President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, who was deposed by his own generals in May.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 From The New York Times, I'm Michael Bavaro. This is The Daily. Today, a military-led massacre in Sudan has left more than 100 protesters dead, just weeks after the military had offered its support to those protesters in overthrowing the country's dictator. Declan Walsh is in Sudan's capital, Khartoum. It's Monday, June 24th. Sir Declan, where did we leave things when we last spoke with you? So the last time we spoke, the protesters here in Sudan had scored a huge victory.
Starting point is 00:00:50 After months of street protests against military rule, they had just managed to topple Omar Hassan al-Bashir. After 30 years in power, Omar al-Bashir is now being kept in solitary confinement in a prison in Khartoum. He is the dictator who had been ruling Sudan for 30 years and they'd gotten rid of him. But after they got rid of Bashir, army generals took control of the country. I, the defense minister and the head of the high security committee,
Starting point is 00:01:18 announced the uprooting of the previous regime. I also announced the formation of a transitional military council that will manage the state for a transitional military council that will manage the state for a two-year period. We are going to shepherd this country through this transitional period, maybe for two years or three years, and at the end of that we'll hold an election. And the post-Russians said no. They said, we don't trust you. We've had enough of military rule. We want a transition to a civilian-led government now. So what they want is a non-military government.
Starting point is 00:01:59 They want civilian-run Sudan. That's right. And so there was this struggle going on. You had thousands and thousands of Sudanese, young Sudanese, were camped at the gates of the military's headquarters, effectively blocking people from entering and leaving via the main entrance. And inside those gates, you had the country's most powerful military generals telling the protesters, it's okay, we're going to keep calm, we're all going to talk our way out of this.
Starting point is 00:02:39 And that went on for weeks and weeks. It dragged on into the holy month of Ramadan. You know, people went back to work, but they would go down to the protest area after work. They would sit down and have their evening meal, break their fast, and then many of those people would spend the night at the protest site just to make the point that they didn't want to leave until they got what they had come for. All through the month of May, the momentum of these protests continued. The protesters are not willing to back down from their demand. And yet there are signs that the generals are losing patience
Starting point is 00:03:14 and the tension starts to build. And then all that comes to a head early in the morning of June 3rd. And what happens on the morning of June 3rd? The night before, there had been a rainstorm. So the ground was sodden. The electricity in the area had been turned off. And now you had these thousands of protesters
Starting point is 00:03:38 tucked in for the night, fast asleep. And then at 5 a.m. that morning, thousands of soldiers descend on the area suddenly. They come from all directions. They're led by soldiers from this paramilitary force called the Rapid Support Forces, and they rampage through the protest area. They burn the tents that people are sleeping in. They start firing their guns first in the air, then directly at some of the protesters. We've seen these images of hundreds of people running for their lives down the streets, captured on video by many of the protesters themselves. There are accounts, my witnesses, that at least several dozen women were raped, perhaps many more.
Starting point is 00:04:22 At least several dozen women were raped, perhaps many more. They dumped the bodies of some of the people who had been killed in the Nile. And by the end of that morning, this paramilitary group had managed to push all of these protesters off the protest site and sent them scattering into the neighborhoods around. The protest leaders and the doctors groups that work with them have so far counted 128 people killed on that day and also in similar clear-outs that took place in 13 towns across Sudan on that same morning. Declan, were you able to speak with any of the protesters in the aftermath of this attack? Yes. In the days after the attack,
Starting point is 00:05:13 I tracked down as many people as I could who had lived through these events. I'm going to record your voice, if that's OK. And it was one person in particular I thought would be interesting. She was this young woman named Alaa Salah, who, to the outside world at least, had become the face of Sudan's process. And Ela, you are an architecture student, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:41 Which school are you studying at? Sudan International University. She featured in this very striking photograph where she was standing on the roof of a car addressing hundreds of people, wearing a flowing white robe with gold jewellery and holding a finger aloft. And people saw this as the embodiment of the youth, of the defiance,
Starting point is 00:06:07 of the prominent role of women in the protest movement. And where were you on June 3rd? So she had been protesting the night before, but went home to sleep in her own bed. She got home at about 2.30 in the morning. And she said she was not able to sleep because on Facebook, people had started to get wind that something was afoot. on Facebook, people had started to get wind that something was afoot. Soldiers massing in greater numbers than normal in the neighborhoods around the protest area. So she started seeing these warnings. She was not able to sleep. And then, of course, at five o'clock, people started sending
Starting point is 00:06:58 these frantic messages, including her own friends, saying that this attack effectively was underway. including her own friends, saying that this attack effectively was underway. So she left her house and she rushed down to the protest area to see if she could get in. She wanted to get back to the protest area, but she couldn't arrive because of the military. They were closing the roads. The military by then, because of course this was a pre-planned operation, they had sealed off the entire area. a pre-planned operation, they had sealed off the entire area. And so she was forced to stand back and watch as these messages started to flood in from her own friends about what was happening to them.
Starting point is 00:07:35 Okay, one of her friends died. Oh, I'm sorry. And some of them got injured and they were in hospitals. One of her friends beat him until they broke his hands. Her hand, his hand. She said she couldn't see when she saw it. She felt sad, she wanted to cry so hard. She felt deeply bad.
Starting point is 00:08:01 And then the internet went out. And suddenly they had no more news on what was going on. The military had cut the cord on their principal form of communications. During the protests against Bashir, state media and the regular TV stations and newspapers couldn't be relied on to say what was going on against this man who was so powerful. So the protesters had used social media in a very powerful way to get out the message
Starting point is 00:08:34 about what they were doing and to provide images that rallied people. And the military understood acutely what had helped the protests that ousted President Bashir back in April. And they were determined not to let the same thing happen again. Al-Assal said something very interesting to me. She said, Darfur has come to Khartoum. And what does she mean by that?
Starting point is 00:09:14 That's a reference to the man who ordered these attacks and who had carried out atrocities in the western province of Darfur many years before. His name is General Mohamed Hamdan. Everybody here calls him Hemeti. Hemeti. Hemeti is this man who comes from one of the poorest and most remote parts of the country. He was recruited by the government to be a commander in one of these militias called the Janjaweed. The Khartoum government denies helping the Janjaweed, but officials here say the militiamen are armed by the central authorities
Starting point is 00:09:48 and get tactical support from government military aircraft. To effectively carry out its dirty work in Darfur, it wanted to quell an insurgency led by people from an ethnically African background, and it armed and coordinated this militia called the Janjawee that carried out attacks, not just against rebels, but against civilians. Hundreds of thousands of people, 300,000 people died during that conflict. And President Bashir himself faced genocide accusations at the International Criminal Court as a result of his role in that conflict. We concluded, I concluded, that genocide has been committed in Darfur and that the government of Sudan and the Janjaweed bear responsibility. And then later, about five years ago, President
Starting point is 00:10:37 Bashir started repurposing the Janjaweed into this new force, which he called the Rapid Support Forces. He made them a formerly a paramilitary group. Is the RSF the same thing as those Janjaweed into this new force, which he called the Rapid Support Forces. He made them a formally a paramilitary group. Is the RSF the same thing as those Janjaweed militias? Well, there are slight differences in terms of the recruitment, but yes, they are exactly the same thugs. And he started to use them not just to fight in Darfur, but also in other parts of Sudan where rebellions had erupted. the fight in Darfur, but also in other parts of Sudan where rebellions had erupted. So Hemeti had played a role as a commander in Darfur. But when the protests started and when Bashir was overthrown,
Starting point is 00:11:17 General Hemeti portrayed himself as being on the side of the protesters. We want free and fair elections and for the Sudanese people to pick who they want. And then on June 3rd, of course, Hemeti effectively pulled the rug from under all of those people and he sent his troops onto the streets of Khartoum. So these protesters had placed their trust, in a sense, in the wrong man. These protesters did not think that this man was going to turn his guns on them in the same way as he had done in Darfur so many years earlier. And it turned out that they were wrong. And across Sudan, so many people were left wondering, how could their country's military justify this use of violence against a group of
Starting point is 00:12:00 unarmed civilians who said that all they wanted was a return to democracy in the country. And so last week, I went to Sudan's military headquarters, where General Hemeti was now sitting in an office close to the top floor. And I asked him. We'll be right back. So Declan, take me through the day that you went to visit this general, Hemeti. So it starts with the drive through the deserted protest area. By now, this whole place has become unrecognizable from what it was just a couple of weeks ago. There's no longer any people there. And there are these soldiers hanging out on the streets who have started to whitewash the graffiti from the walls that the protesters had put up.
Starting point is 00:12:58 And we drive through the gates into the military headquarters. And after a period of waiting, we are ushered into this huge office. First of all, he's saying he's sorry for being late, and we are welcome here, and we hope he's giving the information. And the man himself is sitting there in this huge armchair, surrounded by courtiers and advisors and people who are bringing him food, very much like someone who's looking like he's at home and who's enjoying the trappings of the office that he has now come to occupy. And what did he say?
Starting point is 00:13:56 You have this American envoy. He's due to come to Khartoum. I think today I'm sure he's going to meet with you. What's your message going to be for him? Before coming here, he said he's coming here to tell the army to stop killing civilians. What will you respond to him? Initially, he was pretty evasive. And then he tried to turn the focus away from the soldiers and onto the protesters themselves. He tried to portray the protesters as these degenerate young people who were doing drugs, drinking alcohol, bringing chaos to the streets of Khartoum, and which his soldiers needed to correct. Something really ashamed happened, and he
Starting point is 00:14:38 doesn't want to say it, but he said it. He told me this very lurid story about how one of the protesters had flashed his penis at a soldier. He was implying that they were not good Muslims and that their behavior had gotten out of control. And then they had taken five people who were being detained in the same building and they paraded them in front of me. Young guys who were barefoot, some of them in rags, and they were just made to stand there in front of me. I was not allowed to ask any questions. He's making an argument that the protesters deserve this. Totally. He's trying to turn the lens away from his own men and towards the people that they're accused of carrying out these acts of violence against. that shows tents being burned. There are people, doctors, who spoke about bullets being fired into their clinics
Starting point is 00:15:48 and women being raped, sexually assaulted. Now people are saying that this is just the same Janjaweed who did the same atrocities in Darfur, that nothing has changed. And then he went for a more legalistic approach. He said, well... The minister of judiciary, they are now looking after these things that you asked now,
Starting point is 00:16:12 and he cannot say anything because he doesn't want to destroy the decision of the minister of the judiciary. There is an official investigation underway, and I do not want to prejudice the results of that, so I'm not going to comment any further. That sounds with respect that sounds like a good excuse that sounds like a way for you not to talk about the most serious accusations that are being made against you now
Starting point is 00:16:36 people people people outside they want to know the answer to this because they've heard about the killings and they would like to know what your response is. You are the head of the RSF. Excuse me. He's saying, yeah, he's saying when he say anything during the investigation, this is against the law. You know, in the United States even. When there is this investigation going, that's the law. He's following the law. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I didn't really expect I was going to get a straight answer from him about the terrible accusations that had been made against his men from June 3rd. But I did want to get a sense of how he views himself sitting now suddenly in this seat of power. Do you intend to enter politics? How he views himself sitting now suddenly in this seat of power.
Starting point is 00:17:27 Do you intend to enter politics? There's a rumor that you're setting up a political party, is that right? Where is he headed? What are his ambitions? What can we expect from him in the future? First of all, I hate politicians. And I don't like politician people at all. And I'm not going to be a politician guy. But then in the next breath almost, he said... Because now the work I'm doing is kind of politics.
Starting point is 00:17:51 Because if I didn't be a politic man in that situation now, the country would get into a loss. And I left that interview with this, you know, very self-serving explanation from this man, but also one that made clear that he did not intend to leave that office anytime soon, as far as I could see. And sure enough, just a couple of days later, I went to a village about 40 miles north of Khartoum,
Starting point is 00:18:25 where he held this, what I can only describe as almost like a kind of presidential election rally. A couple of thousand people had gathered in this dusty clearing right by the banks of the Nile, gathered in this dusty clearing right by the banks of the Nile. And Hamedi roars up from Khartoum in this huge convoy with dozens of vehicles heavily armoured with all sorts of guns. And then Hamedi stands up onto the stage and he delivers this speech. He stood there and he held up a stick and he waved it. And to a Sudanese person, that image brings to mind nobody more than the post-president Bashir. That was the way that Bashir spoke to them for 30 years.
Starting point is 00:19:19 And you just couldn't help but have this idea that the Sudanese revolution may have gotten rid of Omar Bashir, but someone who appears to be modeling himself in his image now is setting himself up for some sort of political career in the future. So is this it for the protesters? Is this movement over? When I asked Alassana about this... How do you feel about that political situation now, now that, you know, things have changed? I mean, the image that you were famous for, the photograph,
Starting point is 00:20:02 was an image of hope and inspiring for many people. At this moment now, do you still feel hopeful for the country? She started off by telling me just what a depressing moment this is. You know, she told me that she can't bear to even visit the protest site in front of the military headquarters. And yet... Our hope is very strong. Since day one, when we went to the protest area and we started our revolution, we went out with a big, strong hope. She said, you know what, this is not done yet.
Starting point is 00:20:43 And we're still hoping. We are going to fight still and get our friends and people who got injured, we're going to get their rights back and we're not going to lose hope. And sure enough, last Wednesday evening, I went out to a suburb on the edge of the city where a protest had started again. And you had hundreds of people sitting outside in chairs, even in sofas that they'd pulled out to the front rows of this gathering, listening to political speeches. And it was this really bracing moment where you saw, no, this is not done. And in fact, that meeting was one of several that had taken place across the last number of days
Starting point is 00:21:35 in various parts of Khartoum trying to restart this revolution, get people to move past the depression of what happened on June 3rd, and to really instill a sense of hope again in the idea that Sudan's revolution is not yet over. There were a couple of moments where people raised this chant of Madaniya, which means civilian rule, and the whole place rolls and everybody shouts it together. Declan, thank you very much.
Starting point is 00:22:18 Thank you, Michael. We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today. If the leadership of Iran behaves badly, then it's going to be a very, very bad day for them. Over the weekend, the president held out the possibility of a diplomatic solution to the standoff,
Starting point is 00:22:56 saying he is eager to work with Iran if it gives up its aggressive behavior and its ambition of developing a nuclear weapon. If Iran wants to become a wealthy nation again, become a prosperous nation, we'll call it, let's make Iran great again. Does that make sense? Make Iran great again. It's okay with me. But they're never going to do it if they think in five or six years they're going to have a nuclear weapon.
Starting point is 00:23:26 And a well-known advice columnist, E. Jean Carroll, is accusing President Trump of raping her inside the dressing room of a high-end Manhattan department store in the mid-1990s. Trump has vehemently denied the allegation, saying he had never even met Carroll. But a photograph surfaced over the weekend showing Trump speaking with Carroll at a party in 1987. That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.

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