Order Code IB98043
CRS Issue Brief for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Sudan: Humanitarian Crisis, Peace Talks,
Terrorism, and U.S. Policy
Updated March 19, 2002
Ted Dagne
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

CONTENTS
SUMMARY
MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
Sudan’s Reaction to the September 11th Terrorist Attacks
Special Envoy Danforth’s Mission
Current Developments
The Humanitarian Crisis
Peace Talks
The IGAD Peace Process
Sudan and Terrorism
Sudan and Oil Development
Sudan: Religious Persecution and Slavery
The United States and Sudan
The Bush Administration and Current Policy Debate
The Clinton Administration and Sudan
Selected 106th Congress Legislation
LEGISLATION


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Sudan: Humanitarian Crisis, Peace Talks,
Terrorism, and U.S. Policy
SUMMARY
Sudan, geographically the largest country
talks in September 1994 and returning in July
in Africa, has been ravaged by civil war inter-
1997 after a series of military defeats. In early
mittently for 4 decades. An estimated 2 million
June 2001, President Moi of Kenya convened
people have died over the past decade due to
a high-level Sudan talks in Nairobi, Kenya.
war-related causes and famine, and millions
No progress was made.
have been displaced from their homes. Ac-
cording to the United Nations, an estimated 3
Relations between the United States and
million people are in need of emergency food
Sudan are poor in part because of Khartoum’s
aid. The U.N. has appealed for $190 million
human rights violations, its war policy in the
for 2002.
south, and its support for international terror-
ism, although in recent months relations have
The relief operation is being coordinated
improved somewhat. In November 1997, the
by Operation Lifeline Sudan (OLS), estab-
Clinton Administration imposed comprehen-
lished in 1989 in response to the 1988 humani-
sive sanctions on the NIF government. Presid-
tarian crisis in which over 200,000 people died
ent Bush renewed the sanctions in November
of starvation. The OLS, a consortium of U.N.
2001. On September 6, 2001, President Bush
agencies and three dozen non-governmental
appointed former Senator John Danforth as
organizations (NGOs), operates in both gov-
Special Envoy for peace in the Sudan. In
ernment and rebel-controlled territories.
January 2002, Envoy Danforth spent several
days in Sudan, his second visit to the region.
The 19-year civil war has been and con-
tinues to be a major contributing factor to
On June 15, 1999, the House of Repre-
recurring humanitarian crisis. There have been
sentatives passed H.Con.Res. 75. On Novem-
many failed attempts to end the civil war in
ber 11, 1999, S. 1453, the Sudan Peace Act,
southern Sudan, including efforts by Nigeria,
was passed by a unanimous vote in the Senate.
Kenya, Ethiopia, former President Jimmy
On October 24, 2000, the House passed S.
Carter, and the United States. To that end, the
1453 as amended. On January 25, 2001, Sena-
heads of state from Ethiopia, Eritrea, Kenya
tor Bill Frist introduced S. 180, the Sudan
and Uganda formed a mediation committee
Peace Act. Similar legislation was introduced
under the aegis of the Inter-Governmental
in the House on March 7, 2001. On April 26,
Authority for Development (IGAD) and held
2001, Representative Donald Payne intro-
the first formal negotiations in March 1994.
duced two resolutions on Sudan, H.Con.Res.
The basis of these talks is the Declaration of
113 and H.Con.Res. 112. On June 5, 2001,
Principles (DOP), which includes the right of
Representative Tom Tancredo introduced
self-determination, separation of religion and
H.R. 2052, the Sudan Peace Act. The House
the state (secularism), and a referendum to be
International Relations Committee (HIRC)
held in the south with secession as an option.
passed the legislation. On June 13, 2001, the
Although the National Islamic Front (NIF)
House passed (422-2) the Sudan Peace Act
government reluctantly accepted the DOP in
(H.R. 2052) with amendment. On July 19,
1994, the government in Khartoum has repeat-
2001, the Senate passed S. 180 by unanimous
edly resisted secularism, walking out on peace
consent.
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

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MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
In late February 2002, Sudanese army helicopters fired several rockets into a crowd
of civilians waiting for food distribution by United Nations officials. An estimated 17 people
were killed in the attack, and several hundred were wounded. The government of Sudan
initially denied that it had targeted civilians but apologized later after strong international
condemnations. The United States suspended peace talks with the government, pending full
explanation. Talks resumed after the government of Sudan signed an agreement to protect
civilians from such attacks.

In early March 2002, the leader of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM),
Dr. John Garang, came to the United States for talks with Bush Administration officials.
On March 15, 2002, Garang met with Secretary of State Colin Powell and with senior
officials at the White House. Garang also met with members of Congress, USAID
Administrator Andrew Natsios, and other senior Administration officials.

On March 19, 2002, the Washington Post reported that a top Al-Qaeda member was
captured in Sudan and sent to Egypt. According to the Post article, Abu Anas Liby, wanted
for the 1998 U.S. embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania, is one of the 22 most wanted
terrorists by the Bush Administration. A senior Sudanese official said the story about Liby
was inaccurate. Sudanese officials, while offering to cooperate with the United States on
counter terrorism, have consistently denied the presence of terrorist groups or individuals
in Sudan.

BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
In 1956, Sudan became the first independent (from Britain and Egypt) country in sub-
Saharan Africa. For almost 4 decades, the east African country with a population of 35
million people has been the scene of intermittent conflict. An estimated two million people
have died from war-related causes and famine in southern Sudan, and millions more have been
displaced. The Sudanese conflict, Africa’s longest-running civil war, shows no sign of ending.
The sources of the conflict are deeper and more complicated than the claims of political
leaders and some observers. Religion is a major factor because of the Islamic fundamentalist
agenda of the current government, dominated by the mostly Muslim/Arab north. Southerners,
who are Christian and animist, reject the Islamization of the country and favor a secular
arrangement. Social and economic disparities are also major contributing factors to the
Sudanese conflict.
The abrogation of the 1972 Addis Ababa agreement in 1983, which ended the first phase
of the civil war in the south, by former President Jaffer Nimeri is considered a major
triggering factor in the current civil war. Although the National Islamic Front government,
which ousted the democratically elected civilian government in 1989, has pursued the war in
southern Sudan with vigor, previous governments, both civilian and military, had rejected
southern demands for autonomy and equality. Northern political leaders for decades treated
southerners as second-class citizens and did not see the south as an integral part of the
country. Southern political leaders argue that under successive civilian and military
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governments, political elites in the north have made only superficial attempts to address the
grievances of the south without compromising the north’s dominant economic, political, and
social status. In recent years, most political leaders in the north, now in opposition to the
current government, say that mistakes were made and that they are prepared to correct them.
But the political mood among southerners has sharply shifted in favor of separation from the
north. The current government seems determined to pursue the military option. The war is
costing the government an estimated $1-2 million a day. Economic conditions have
deteriorated significantly, and millions of southern Sudanese are at risk of starvation due to
a serious humanitarian crisis, partly caused by the government’s decision to ban United
Nations relief flights.
Sudan’s Reaction to the September 11th Terrorist Attacks
Sudan’s reactions to the September 11th terrorist attacks and U.S. military actions
against Taliban and Al-Qaeda have been mixed. The leader of Sudan’s National Islamic Front
government, President Omar el-Bashir, who provided a safe haven to Osama bin Laden
between 1991-1996, condemned the terrorist attacks and expressed his government’s
readiness to cooperate in fighting terrorism. Secretary of State Colin Powell called Sudanese
Foreign Minister Mustapha Ismail several days after the terrorist attacks, the first high-level
contact between U.S. and Sudanese officials. Secretary Powell stated that Sudanese officials
offered to cooperate with the United States and appear eager to join the coalition. According
to press reports, U.S. officials confirmed that the NIF government has given U.S. officials
unrestricted access to files of suspected terrorists and suggested that they might be willing to
hand over some of these individuals to U.S. authorities.
Sudanese officials are sending mixed signals about their level of cooperation with the
United States. According to Secretary of State Powell, the NIF government has been “rather
forthcoming in giving us access to certain individuals within the country and in taking other
actions which demonstrate to us a change in attitude.” The Foreign Minister of Sudan, on
the other hand, downplayed the extent of the cooperation described by U.S. officials. He
stated that “Washington has not so far presented Sudan with any list of wanted people ... and
we have not turned over any suspects.” In late September, State Department spokesman,
Richard Boucher told reporters that Sudanese authorities “recently apprehended extremists
within that country whose activities may have contributed to international terrorism.”
Government reaction to U.S. military attacks against Taliban and Al-Qaeda forces in
Afghanistan has been critical. In early October 2001, the government of Sudan issued a
statement criticizing the U.S. military action against Afghanistan, after a cabinet meeting
chaired by President Bashir. The National Assembly of Sudan also criticized the U.S. military
attacks against Afghanistan as “unjustified and lacking legitimacy.” Meanwhile, anti-American
demonstrations in Khartoum have become more frequent in recent weeks. On October 9,
2001, Islamic clerics led several thousand protestors in an anti-American demonstration in
Khartoum. The demonstration was dispersed by police after protestors attempted to storm
the U.S. embassy in Khartoum.
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Special Envoy Danforth’s Mission
On September 6, 2001, President Bush appointed former Senator John Danforth as
Special Envoy for peace in the Sudan. During a White House ceremony, President Bush
stated that “For nearly two decades, the government of Sudan has waged a brutal and
shameful war against its own people. And this is not right, and this must stop.” President
Bush affirmed his Administration’s commitment to “bringing stability to the Sudan.” In
response, Envoy Danforth stated that “the effectiveness of America’s efforts for peace in
Sudan will depend on our communication and cooperation with other interested countries,
including the European Union and countries neighboring Sudan, especially Egypt and Kenya.”
Members of Congress and advocates of Sudan praised the appointment of Senator Danforth.
In late November 2001, Special Envoy John Danforth made his first visit to Sudan and
other neighboring countries to assess the Sudan peace process and humanitarian conditions.
In Khartoum, Envoy Danforth met with President Bashir of Sudan and senior government
officials. In opposition-controlled southern Sudan, he met with senior officials of the Sudan
People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM). In Nairobi, Kenya, Envoy Danforth met with
President Moi and the leader of the SPLM, Dr. John Garang. In Cairo, he met with President
Hosni Mubarak and senior government officials.
In Sudan, Envoy Danforth presented four proposals for the parties to the conflict to
implement as confidence building measures. The four proposals are (1) A cease-fire in the
Nuba Mountains region to facilitate relief assistance; (2) the creation of “tranquility zones”
to administer immunization and provide humanitarian relief assistance; (3) an end to aerial
bombardment of civilian targets; and (4) slave raids in southern Sudan. The government of
Sudan and the SPLM have pledged to assist in the implementation of these proposals. In
early December, a technical team was sent from Washington to discuss details of the four
proposals.
Current Developments
In January 2002, Special Envoy Danforth met with senior government officials in
Khartoum and with Sudan People’s Liberation Army/Movement (SPLA/M) officials in rebel-
controlled Rumbek in southern Sudan to discuss his proposed initiatives. Envoy Danforth’s
mission succeeded in securing a cease-fire agreement in the Nuba and received the support
of the parties on his other two proposals. The parties agreed to the creation of a commission
to investigate allegations of slavery and endorsed a proposal to create “zones of tranquility”
for humanitarian purposes.
In early January 2002, the leader of the Sudan People’s Democratic Front (SPDF), Riek
Machar, and the leader of the SPLA/M, John Garang, signed a declaration of unity in Nairobi,
Kenya. In 1991, Riek Machar split from the SPLA and formed his own faction, and in 1997
he joined the Sudan government as Assistant Vice President, after signing a peace agreement
with President Omar Bashir. In late 2000, Machar left the government and began to negotiate
with the SPLA. Many observers consider the agreement key to reconciliation efforts between
the two main ethnic groups in southern Sudan, the Nuer and Dinka.
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On September 28, 2001, the United Nations Security Council lifted sanctions against
Sudan, which were imposed in 1996. The sanctions reduced the number of Sudanese
diplomats and restricted the entry and transit of Sudanese officials. The sanctions were
imposed to force Sudan to handover three suspects in the assassination attempt of Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak in 1995 in Ethiopia. The vote was 14-0 with the United States
abstaining. The Clinton Administration rejected the lifting of these sanctions in late 2000,
arguing that the Sudanese government had not fully cooperated in the fight against terrorism.
In reaction to the lifting of the sanctions, the Foreign Minister of Sudan, Dr. Mustafa Ismail,
stated that “its timing was a proof that Sudan’s land is free of any terrorist elements.”
In July, a high-level American delegations, headed by U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID) Administrator Andrew Natsios, visited Khartoum as well as the Sudan
People’s Liberation Army (SPLA)-controlled areas in southern Sudan. The delegation
pledged additional humanitarian assistance to north and south Sudan.
In early June 2001, the
heads of state from Kenya, Uganda, Ethiopia, and Eritrea met in Kenya to reactivate the
stalled IGAD peace process. Both the leader of the SPLA, John Garang, and President Omar
Bashir of Sudan attended the talks. The talks failed to produce an agreement. A press release
after the talks stated that there were serious disagreements between the parties on a wide
range of issues.
On June 2, 2001, shortly after the IGAD talks ended, Garang announced the capture of
Raga, an important town in western Bahr el-Ghazal, by SPLA forces. In recent weeks, SPLA
forces have captured several garrison towns in a series of battles in Bahr el-Ghazal and Blue
Nile province. On June 6, 2001, President Bashir ordered the mobilization of forces and
vowed to defeat SPLA forces.
On February 21, 2001, the former Speaker of Parliament and the one-time leader of the
People’s National Front (PNC), Turabi, was arrested with many PNC leaders accused of
collaborating with the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM). The Minister of
Information described the PNC and SPLM agreement to work together for peace as a
“declaration of a political alliance to fight the government, an alliance which does not use
legalized methods and an alliance with a military movement that continues to fight the state
and the Sudanese people and whose agenda and principles are known.”
The Humanitarian Crisis
The current humanitarian crisis in southern Sudan is considered one of the worst in
decades. According to the World Food Program (WFP; [http://www.wfp.org/sudan]),
southern Sudanese “are facing serious food and water shortages due to the combined
disruptions of civil war and drought.” In November 2000, WFP officials appealed for $106.4
million to provide assistance to 2.5 million southern Sudanese. Operation Lifeline Sudan
(OLS), which is the U.N.-coordinated relief effort, was established in 1989 in response to the
death of 250,000 people due to starvation in the southern Sudan. The OLS is a consortium
of UN agencies and 35 non-governmental organizations (NGOs) that provides emergency
relief for civilians living in drought and war-affected areas.
The 18-year civil war, drought, and raids by government-backed militias and rebel
groups have disrupted the distribution of food aid and obstructed assessments of need in
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severely affected areas. The crisis has escalated dramatically since the beginning of 1998. In
January, the SPLA and Khartoum began fighting in the major towns of Wau, Awiel and
Gogrial, displacing hundreds of thousands of people. The scorched-earth techniques used by
pro-government militias have decimated fields and homes and forced tens of thousands of
people to flee the war-torn areas. The government of Sudan (GOS) routinely and deliberately
denies access to areas of southern Sudan to the OLS, according to U.N. relief officials. Many
relief centers and hunger-stricken areas are inaccessible by ground transportation because
roads were destroyed, did not exist or are impassible due to rain and mud. In late March
2001, the United Nations warned that an estimated 3 million people are in need of emergency
food assistance. According to WFP, “parts of the country are experiencing the driest season
in living memory.”
The United States contributed more than $231.1 million in humanitarian assistance in
fiscal year (FY)1999 and, in FY1998, spent more than $106.7 million in response to the
famine. In FY2000, the United States provided a total of $93.7 million in humanitarian
assistance. In FY2001, the United States contributed $154.7 million in humanitarian
assistance. Moreover, the United States is providing development aid in opposition-controlled
areas to build the capacity of civil administration, conflict resolution, and assist indigenous
non-governmental organizations. The Sudan Transition Assistance for Rehabilitation (STAR)
was increased from $2 million in FY1999 to $4.25 in FY2000. The STAR budget for
FY2001 was $4 million. As of March 2002, the United States has provided $34 million in
humanitarian assistance.
Peace Talks
Peace efforts to end the civil war in Sudan have not succeeded in part because of
irreconcilable differences on fundamental issues between the “Arabized” north and southern
rebels. The strong belief by the NIF regime that it could resolve the conflict through military
means has been and continues to be a major impediment to peaceful efforts. Another major
obstacle is NIF’s inflexible position on the role of religion in politics and government. The
government seems to show interest in talks when it is weakened militarily or to buy time to
prepare for another military offensive.
The IGAD Peace Process
Alarmed by the deepening crisis and multiple failed attempts by outside mediators,
members of the Inter-Governmental Authority for Drought and Development (IGADD), later
renamed the Inter-Governmental Authority for Development (IGAD), formed a mediation
committee consisting of two organs, a summit committee of heads of state from Ethiopia,
Eritrea, Kenya and Uganda, and a standing committee composed of their mediators.
Preliminary talks were held in November 1993 and January 1994, and formal negotiations
began in March and May of the same year. Presented at the May meeting, the Declaration of
Principles (DOP) included the following provisions: the right of self-determination with
national unity remaining a high priority, separation of religion and state (secularism), a system
of governance based on multiparty democracy, decentralization through a loose federation
or a confederacy, respect for human rights and a referendum to be held in the south with
secession as an option. The NIF government initially resisted the DOP, particularly self-
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determination and secularism. The SPLM accepted the DOP and the government was later
persuaded by the mediators to accept the DOP.
The IGAD peace process began with the view that the Sudan conflict was having serious
repercussions not only in the country but also in the region, and sought to deal with the root
causes of the conflict. Conditions were ripe for talks since both sides were exhausted from
years of fighting and some members of the IGAD committee were seen by Khartoum as allies.
Relations between the NIF government and members of the Sudan mediating countries were
good, except for Uganda. The ruling parties in both Ethiopia and Eritrea received significant
military assistance and political support from the NIF government during the struggle against
the Mengistu regime. The government of Meles Zenawi in Ethiopia had signed a series of
agreements with the NIF government, including security arrangements. Earlier the two had
cooperated militarily to eject SPLA forces from the border area. Similarly, relations with
Eritrea and Kenya were good. The SPLM accepted the mediators, although it believed two
out of the four were closer to Khartoum, with Kenya seen by both as neutral. The SPLM saw
the DOP as constructive and a good framework for negotiation.
In 1994, relations between Eritrea and Sudan began to deteriorate largely due to Sudan’s
support for an Eritrean opposition group, the Eritrea Islamic Jihad. Meanwhile, serious
opposition to the DOP began to emerge from the NIF government. The most contentious
issues were secularism and self-determination, which the Khartoum government refused to
concede. In July 1994, the polarization of the two sides intensified after the Khartoum
government appointed a hard-line NIF member to its delegation. The Khartoum delegation
professed the government’s commitment to Islamic law as part of a religious and moral
obligation to promote Islam in Sudan and throughout the continent, and refused self-
determination as a ploy to split the country. In September, President Moi of Kenya convened
a meeting of the committee’s heads of state, Sudan’s President al-Bashir and the leader of
SPLA. The Khartoum government walked out of these peace talks, rejecting the DOP.
The military situation intensified with government forces losing ground in 1995 to the
SPLA forces. Meanwhile the government began to look for other mediators in an effort to
undermine the IGAD peace process. The NIF argued that the mediators were hostile toward
Sudan. No further negotiations were held by IGAD until the Khartoum government returned
to the peace process, once again embracing the DOP in July 1997. Loss of military ground
and intense international pressure forced the government to the negotiating table. The return
to the IGAD process was also, in part, in recognition of its failed effort to attract other
mediators. Both parties signed a joint communique in September stating that they would
accept the IGAD framework for peace negotiations.
Further meetings in 1997-1998 sought to narrow divisions between the two sides. The
Khartoum government agreed to negotiate the DOP at the October 1997 meeting, but both
sides were bitterly divided. The SPLM/A demanded an end to Islamic law and the
establishment of a confederation. The Khartoum delegation appeared willing to compromise
on some issues but would only accept a federal system in which power would remain in the
capital. The second round of talks scheduled for April 1998 was canceled to allow more time
for the parties to resolve their differences. The government, eager to secure a cease-fire
agreement, came with positions it had earlier rejected. But the NIF attempt to establish a
cease-fire was rejected by both the SPLM and IGAD as insufficient. The third session was
held in Nairobi from May 4-6, 1998. With Juba, the regional capital under siege, and
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increased military pressure in the east along the Eritrea-Sudan border, the NIF accepted for
the first time self determination for the south.
At Nairobi, the parties disagreed, however, on which territories were considered part of
the south. The Khartoum delegation defined the south as the three provinces of Bahr el
Ghazal, Equatoria, and Upper Nile recognized at independence in January, 1956 and outlined
in the 1972 Addis Ababa Accords. The SPLM/A argued that Southern Kordofan and
Southern Blue Nile and other marginalized areas were part of the south. There were serious
disagreements on the issue of self determination for the south. The duration of the interim
period a referendum on self determination and issues relating to interim arrangements were
shelved by the mediators in part to avoid failure. The question of religion and state remained
unresolved. Both parties agreed to facilitate free and unimpeded flow of humanitarian
assistance to the areas affected by the famine in south Sudan.
The United States and the European Union touted the Nairobi agreement on self-
determination. However, some observers see the agreement on self-determination as a small
step in the right direction after years of stalled efforts. The most contentious and difficult
issues are yet to be tackled by IGAD mediators, including religion and interim arrangements.
Some observers believe that it is too soon to judge if the concession on self-determination
represents a change in Khartoum’s position or a tactical move to buy more time. A follow-up
meeting between the parties took place in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia in early August 1998. The
talks collapsed due to differences on the role of religion in politics. The parties also disagreed
on the territorial definition of southern Sudan for the purpose of referendum. Talks scheduled
for mid-April 1999 were canceled because of the government’s decision to allow time to
review a peace proposal offered by a former southern politician. In February 2000, the parties
met in Nairobi but failed to make progress. In April, the parties once again met in Nairobi.
In early June 2001, President Moi convened the stalled IGAD peace talks in Nairobi. No
progress was made, according to a press release issued at the conclusion of the talks. In
January 2002, IGAD mandated President Moi to merge the IGAD peace process with the
Egypt-Libya Initiative (ELI). Meanwhile, President Moi declared that he will call for a
summit on Sudan before June 2002.
Sudan and Terrorism
Sudan is considered a rogue state by much of the world community because of its
support for international terrorism. The State Department’s 2000 Patterns of Global
Terrorism report said that Sudan “continued to serve as a central hub for several terrorist
groups, including Osama Bin Ladin’s al-Qaida organization. The Sudanese Government also
condoned Iran’s assistance to terrorist and radical Islamist groups operating in and transiting
through Sudan.” According to the report, “Khartoum served as a meeting place, safehaven,
and training hub for members of the Lebanese Hizballah, Egyptian Gama’at al Islamiyya, al-
Jihad, the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, HAMAS, and Abu Nidal organization. Sudan’s support
to these group included the provision of travel documentation, safe passage, and refuge.
Most of the groups maintained offices and other forms of representation in the capital, using
Sudan as a secure base for organizing terrorist operations and assisting compatriots
elsewhere.”
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The United States placed Sudan on the list of states that sponsor terrorism in August
1993 after an exhaustive interagency review and congressional pressure. In announcing the
decision, the Clinton Administration said Sudan “repeatedly provided support for acts of
international terrorism and allows the use of its territory for terrorist groups.” Both the first
Bush and Clinton Administrations had repeatedly warned the NIF government about the
activities of groups such as Hamas, Hezbollah, Abu Nidal, and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad.
Khartoum does not deny the presence of these groups on its territory but rejects
Washington’s description of them as terrorist organizations.
Sudan has also been a safe haven for major terrorist figures. A particularly noteworthy
example is the Saudi-born financier of extremist groups in the Middle East and elsewhere in
the world, Osama bin Laden. He used Sudan as a base of operations until he returned to
Afghanistan in mid 1996, where he had previously been a major financier of Arab volunteers
in the war against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. The GOS claims that it expelled bin
Laden from Sudan due to pressures from the Middle East and the United States. In August
1996, the State Department said bin Laden is “one of the most significant financial sponsors
of Islamic extremist activities in the world today.” According to the Department of State, bin
Laden, who was stripped of his Saudi citizenship in 1994, “had begun financing at least three
terrorist training camps in northern Sudan by 1994,” and his construction company worked
“with Sudanese military officials to transport and provision terrorist training in such camps.”
Bin Laden reportedly moved to Sudan shortly after the 1991 Persian Gulf war and remained
there under the protection of the NIF government until mid-1996. On another front, in early
August 1999, the United Nations announced that it was investigating allegations that the
government of Sudan used chemical or biological weapons in its bombing raids of two
southern towns. A spokesperson for the World Food Program said three of its workers fell
sick after visiting the two towns.
Sudan and Oil Development
The government of Sudan earns an estimated $500 million annually from oil since it
began to export in August 1999. Chevron began oil exploration in the mid-1970s and made
its first discovery in1979. Large reserves in the Upper Nile region of southern Sudan were
discovered in the 1980s. Chevron interrupted its work several times in the mid- and late
1980s after attacks by the SPLA. In 1990, Chevron halted operations and sold its
concessions to Arakis, a Canadian oil company. Arakis was not able to raise the necessary
capital for its projects in Sudan, and due to company financial troubles, it was taken over by
another Canadian oil company, Talisman Energy. In March 1997, Talisman Energy, Petronas
Carigali of Malaysia, PetroChina, a subsidiary of China National Petroleum Company
(CNPC), and Sudapet, Sudan’s national petroleum company, signed an agreement and created
a consortium, the Greater Nile Petroleum Operating Company (GNPOC) for oil production
and construction of a 1,000-mile pipeline. PetroChina holds a 40% share, Petronas 30%,
Talisman Energy 25%, and Sudapet 5% in GNPOC.
The government of Sudan and the oil companies involved in oil development have come
under severe criticism from human rights groups and NGOs. Human rights groups accuse
the government of Sudan of a scorched-earth policy. In a March 2001 report, Christian Aid,
a British-based NGO, declared that “in the oil fields of Sudan, civilians are being killed and
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raped, their villages burnt to the ground.”1 The report blames foreign companies for assisting
the government of Sudan’s war effort by helping “build Sudan’s oil industry, offering finance
and technological expertise and supplies.” According to press reports and the International
Monetary Fund (IMF), the government of Sudan has doubled its military budget since it
began exporting oil. Some observers believe that because of these new oil revenues, the
government may not be interested in negotiating seriously to end the war.
Members of Congress and Sudan advocacy groups have called on the Bush
Administration to impose capital market sanctions on companies involved in the oil industry
of Sudan. The Sudan Peace Act, passed by the House in October 2000, contained a sense of
Congress language for such measures. On April 26, 2001, Representative Payne introduced
H.Con.Res. 113 (for more see legislation section). On June 5, 2001, Representative Tom
Tancredo introduced H.R. 2052, the Sudan Peace Act. On June 13, 2001, the House
amended and passed (422-2) H.R. 2052. H.R. 2052 is similar to H.R. 931, introduced in
March by Representative Tancredo. H.R. 2052 condemns the government of Sudan, calls for
the appointment of a Special Envoy, and requires foreign companies doing business in Sudan
to disclose their activities to the public if they seek access to U.S. capital markets. The
amendment, which passed by voice vote, prohibits companies engaged in oil exploration and
production related activities in Sudan from “raising capital in the United States.” Companies
are also prohibited from trading securities “in any capital market in the United States.” The
Bush Administration opposes the disclosure as well as the capital market sanction provisions
of the Sudan Peace Act. (Washington Post, August 15, 2001)
Human rights groups and Sudan advocacy groups have launched a concerted campaign
to pressure oil companies involved in Sudan. Since late 1999, a divestment campaign has
been underway targeting Talisman Energy. As of April 2001, several U.S. institutions have
divested from Talisman Energy, including the State of New Jersey, the State of California
Public Employees Retirement System, the State of Texas Teachers Pension Plan, and the
State of Wisconsin (late April 2001).
Sudan: Religious Persecution and Slavery
Of the estimated Sudanese population of more than 32.6 million, Sunni Muslims
comprise 70%; animists 25%; and Christians 5%. The NIF government in Khartoum views
itself as the protector of Islam in Sudan. Political opponents are viewed as anti-Islam and the
civil war in southern Sudan is considered a jihad, or Holy War. For the Sudan People’s
Liberation Army (SPLA), the war is to free southerners from political domination and
religious persecution.
The NIF government’s practice of ‘holy war’ is reflected in attacks on civilians in the
south and the Nuba Mountains. Some attackers are wooed in part by the fact that during a
jihad they can keep their booty. The result reportedly has been widespread institutionalized
slavery and massive dislocation. Since 1995, an estimated 40,000 slaves have been redeemed
by Christian Solidarity International (CSI), according to press accounts and CSI. Captured
1 Christian Aid. “The Scorched Earth: Oil and War in Sudan, March 2001”
[http://www.christian-aid.org.uk].
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slaves reportedly are forced to attend Quranic schools, change their names, and sometimes
indoctrinated to fight their own people. Through the government plan of “forced
acculturation,” thousands of children are abducted and forcibly converted to Islam or face
harsh beatings and torture. According to human rights groups and the State Department,
Islamic NGOs deny food and assistance to non-Muslims who refuse to convert to Islam.
Government policies promote Islam as state religion and make non-Muslims unwelcome.
Displaced southerners in squatter camps reportedly are brutally dispersed by the government
and forced to resettle in government-run camps. Near Khartoum, some two million squatters
have been moved and relocated to desert areas since the late 1980s under a government
program to clean the city. Those displaced are barred access to basic health and educational
services. Though the government says it respects all religions and the 1994 Societies
Registration Act gives churches more freedom, Islam influences all laws and policies. The
government of Sudan denies permission to build churches, according to the State Department,
and there have been claims of harassment and arrest of citizens because of their religious
beliefs and practices. The law prevents the building of new churches or proselytizing by
non-Muslims. Missionaries claim to be harassed continually and prevented from doing their
work.
According to a State Department report on International Religious Freedom for 2000,
“The status of respect for religious freedom has not changed fundamentally in recent years,
and, particularly in the south, the Government continues to enforce numerous restrictions.
Authorities continued to restrict the activities of Christians, followers of traditional indigenous
beliefs, and other non-Muslims.” And according to a March 2001 report by the
congressionally established U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, “The
government of Sudan continues to commit egregious human rights abuses–including
widespread bombing of civilian and humanitarian targets, abduction and enslavement by
government-sponsored militias, manipulation of humanitarian assistance as a weapon of war,
and severe restrictions on religious freedom.” The Commission recommended that the Bush
Administration strengthen existing sanctions on Sudan and called for capital market sanctions
against companies involved in oil development in Sudan. The Commission also called for
increased humanitarian funds, appointment of a Special Envoy, and active American
engagement in peace efforts.
The United States has repeatedly condemned the Khartoum government and in some
cases the SPLA for human rights abuses. But American complaints have had little success
in convincing the government to improve human rights conditions. According to the February
2001 Country Reports on Human Rights of the State Department, “the government’s human
rights record remained extremely poor, and although there were some improvements in a few
areas, it continued to commit numerous, serious abuses. Citizens do not have the ability to
change their government peacefully.” According to the same report, “security forces beat
refugees, reportedly raped women abducted during raids, and reportedly on occasion harassed
and detained persons on the basis of their religion.” Abductees were sold into slavery,
according to the State Department. For its part, the government has consistently denied any
participation or sanction of slavery or other human rights violations in Sudan. The
government admits, however, that pro-government militias are engaged in abduction, but
rejects the existence of slavery. The government has been working with the United Nations
Children’s Fund(UNICEF) in a family reunification program since early 2000. In-mid 2000,
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the Sudanese Justice Minister told then U.S. Special Envoy, Harry Johnston, that the
government had reunited several hundred families.
Aerial bombardment of civilian targets has emerged as one of the most serious human
rights issues in U.S.-Sudanese relations. In 2000, the government of Sudan bombed civilian
targets 167 times, and 20 times thus far in 2001, according to the U.S. Committee for
Refugees (USCR), a Washington-based NGO. In November 2000, the government dropped
several bombs at a market in Yei, killing an estimated 18 people and wounding dozens. The
State Department has condemned the government of Sudan on a number of occasions, but
to no avail. The government claims that it is targeting the military bases of the SPLA and that
the SPLA deliberately surrounds its bases with civilians. But human rights groups and non-
governmental organizations (NGOs) working in Sudan argue that the government is
destroying hospitals, schools, and feeding centers. In a September 2000 press release, the
State Department stated that “The United States condemns all Government of Sudan attacks
against civilian targets. These attacks have no military purpose. The targeting of relief planes
endangers the international humanitarian relief effort and increases the risk of starvation for
tens of thousands of Sudanese noncombatants. The United States urges the Government of
Sudan to immediately halt these bombings and cease any activities which interfere with relief
operations in Sudan.”
The United States and Sudan
Relations between the United States and Sudan continue to deteriorate because of
Khartoum’s human rights violations, its war policy in the south, and its support for
international terrorism. In 1967, Sudan broke diplomatic relations with the United States
because of American support for Israel in the Arab-Israel war. Relations were restored after
several months. In 1973, the U.S. Ambassador and the Deputy Chief of Mission were
assassinated in Khartoum by members of the Black September group, who were tried and
sentenced to life imprisonment in Sudan. Relations were further strained when Sudanese
President Nimeri commuted the sentences of the assassins. In response, Washington recalled
its new ambassador. In the mid-1970s, in the face of Soviet expansion in the Horn of Africa
and the fall of Ethiopia into the Soviet sphere of influence, relations with the Nimeri regime
began to improve. Nimeri’s support during Operation Moses, in which an estimated 7,000
Ethiopian Jews were airlifted to Israel through Sudan, further strengthened U.S.-Sudanese
relations, but later contributed to the ouster of Nimeri from power. Relations became strained
once again when the democratically elected government of Sadiq el-Mahdi was ousted in a
military coup in 1989. Since the military takeover, human rights abuses by the military junta
have become a major source of tension between the two countries. The war in the south has
also been a thorny issue in U.S.-Sudanese relations.
Another issue in U.S.-Sudanese relations is Sudan’s role in support of international
terrorism. Some Members of Congress have been instrumental in pushing a tougher Sudan
policy and played a key role in the decision to put Sudan on the list of states that sponsor
terrorism and to appoint a special envoy for Sudan. The State Department rejected
congressional calls for a special envoy in December 1993. The Department argued that a U.S.
special envoy would undermine regional and former President Carter’s peace efforts. In a
December 6, 1993 letter to Members of Congress, the Administration said the appointment
of a special envoy “would send the erroneous impression that the U.S. is becoming directly
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involved, since Khartoum has made it clear that it rejects a role by the U.S. in the peace
process.” However, persistent pressure by some Members of Congress led to a reversal of
State’s position in early 1994, at the insistence of the National Security Council (NSC) at the
White House. The Clinton Administration appointed former Representative Harry Johnston
in late 1999. The Bush Administration appointed former Senator John Danforth in September
2001.
The Bush Administration and Current Policy Debate
In late 2000, Washington defeated efforts to lift United Nations sanctions on Sudan and
prevented Sudan from becoming Africa’s representative in the United Nations Security
Council. Senior U.S. officials met with Sudanese government officials in 2000 to inform
Sudanese officials what it would take to improve relations. U.S. security officials also spent
several months in Khartoum talking with Sudanese security officials on terrorism. President
Bush has mentioned Sudan twice in his speeches in the last 2 months, condemning human
rights violations by the Bashir government. In early March 2001, Secretary of State Colin
Powell told members of the House International Relations Committee that Sudan is a priority
to him and the Administration.
Advocates of a tough U.S. policy towards the NIF government seem prominent in the
policy debate and appear to have the sympathy of senior Administration officials and
Members of Congress from both parties. In recent months, senior congressional leaders
joined Sudan advocates in condemning the government of Sudan. At a recent press
conference on Capitol Hill, Majority Leader Richard Armey (R-TX), Representative Charles
Rangel (D-NY), and the NAACP announced the formation of a bipartisan Sudan Caucus.
Advocates of a tough Sudan policy favor additional sanctions, appointment of a high-profile
Special Envoy, and active U.S. engagement in peace efforts. They oppose the staffing of the
U.S. embassy in Sudan and some favor support for opposition forces. These advocates would
like the United States government to take specific measures to address slavery and aerial
bombardment of civilian targets. Some who favor a policy of engagement argue that the
policy of containment and isolation has failed to produce tangible results and that the United
States itself is now isolated.
A recent report by the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) argues that
the United States should focus on ending the war and engage the government of Sudan in
dialogue.2 The report argues that “in the past 2 years, Sudan’s rising oil production has shifted
the balance of military power in the government’s favor at the same time that significant
internal rifts have surfaced in Khartoum.” The report contends that “in this fluid context, the
United States possesses significant leverage. Among the major powers, it is the lone holdout
in renewing a dialogue with Khartoum.” The authors of the report support the full staffing
of the U.S. embassy, a U.S.-supported peace process, and a “One Sudan, Two Systems”
formula to preserve the unity of the country. The CSIS report drew fire from Sudan activists
and has triggered a sharp debate on U.S. policy toward Sudan.
2 U.S. Policy to End Sudan’s War. Report of the CSIS Task Force on U.S.-Sudan Policy, Feb. 2001.
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The Clinton Administration and Sudan
U.S. policy toward Sudan as articulated by President Clinton in a 1996 letter to President
Isaias of Eritrea supports regional efforts and seeks to isolate the NIF regime for its “wanton”
disregard for human rights, devastating war policy in the south and support for international
terrorism. That policy continues to enjoy strong bi-partisan support in Congress and in the
Horn of Africa region. U.S. policy seems to have pressured the NIF regime to make some
token reforms in late 2000. Although Washington did not call for the forceful removal of the
NIF regime, its support to the “frontline states” (Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Uganda) was seen as
supporting the removal of the NIF regime.
In May 1996, then U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Madeleine Albright,
reportedly called Sudan “a viper’s nest of terrorism.” The United States closed its embassy
in Khartoum in February 1996 and moved the remaining embassy personnel to Nairobi
because of security concerns. Moreover, the U.S. government has imposed a series of
sanctions on the NIF regime over the years. Washington suspended its assistance program
after the NIF-led coup in 1989, placed Sudan on the list of states that sponsor terrorism in
August 1993, and supported United Nations Security Council sanctions on Sudan. The
Clinton Administration expelled one Sudanese embassy official, who had been based in New
York, for suspected links to an alleged plot to bomb the United Nations. (Goshko, John.
“Sudanese Envoy at U.N. Ordered to Leave U.S.” Washington Post, April 11, 1996. A17.)
Another Sudanese diplomat, who was a suspect in the plot, left for Sudan.
On November 22, 1996, President Clinton announced the Administration’s decision to
ban senior Sudanese government officials from entering the United States as called for in
Security Council Resolution 1054. On September 28, 2001, the United Nations Security
Council lifted these sanctions. The Administration actively supported allies in the region
affected by an NIF-sponsored destabilization campaign. The United States has provided an
estimated $20 million in surplus U.S. military equipment to Uganda, Eritrea, and Ethiopia.
The non-lethal military assistance such as uniforms and communications equipment to the
“frontline states” was intended to support them in fending off NIF’s campaign of
destabilization. Observers interpret U.S. support to these countries as a measure to contain,
punish, and facilitate the downfall of the fundamentalist government in Khartoum.
In November 1997, the Clinton Administration imposed comprehensive sanctions on the
NIF government after an exhaustive policy review. The sanctions restrict imports or exports
from Sudan, financial transactions, and prohibit investments. In making his case for the
sanctions, President Clinton stated that “the policies and actions of the government of Sudan,
including continued support for international terrorism; ongoing efforts to destabilize
neighboring governments; the prevalence of human rights violations, including slavery and the
denial of religious freedom, constitute extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign
policy of the United States.” (Text of the executive order can be found at the U.S.
Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control Web site at
[http://www.ustreas.gov/ofac/legal/sudan.html].)
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Selected 106th Congress Legislation
P.L. 106-113, H.R. 3422/H.R. 3194. Brownback Amendment: the amendment
provides the President the authority to provide food aid to “groups engaged in the protection
of civilian populations from attacks by regular government of Sudan forces.” H.R. 3422 was
incorporated into an consolidated appropriations bill, H.R. 3194; it was enacted by cross-
reference when H.R. 3194 was signed into law November 29, 1999.
P.L. 106-570/S. 2943 (Helms). A provision in the bill provides the executive branch
additional authorities to use ESF funds for programs in opposition-held areas of southern
Sudan. The provision also provides exemption for exports in opposition-held areas,
notwithstanding the 1997 executive order. Signed into law December 27, 2000.
H.Con.Res. 75 (Payne). Condemns the National Islamic Front government for its
genocidal war in southern Sudan, support for terrorism, and continued human rights
violations, and for other purposes. Introduced March 24, 1999, passed the House on June
15, 1999.
H.R. 2906 (Watts). Calls for a comprehensive peace solution to the war in Sudan and
codifies existing sanctions. Introduced September 21, 1999.
S. 1453 (Frist). Calls for a comprehensive peace solution to the war in Sudan and
codifies existing sanctions. Introduced July 28, 1999. Passed Senate November 19, 1999.
Passed House October 24, 2000.
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LEGISLATION
H.Con.Res. 112 (Payne)
Calls for an end to slavery in Sudan. Introduced April 26, 2001.
H.Con.Res. 113 (Payne)
Condemns the government of Sudan and urges the Administration to deny foreign
companies doing business in Sudan U.S. capital market access. Introduced April 26, 2001.
H.R. 931 (Tancredo)
Calls for a comprehensive peace solution to the war in Sudan. Introduced March 7,
2001.
H.R. 2052 (Tancredo)
Calls for a comprehensive peace in Sudan, condemns the government of Sudan, requires
foreign companies doing business in Sudan to disclose their activities to the SEC if these
companies are seeking access to U.S. capital market, and prohibits companies engaged in the
oil and gas sector in Sudan from raising capital and trading securities in any capital market
in the United States. Introduced June 5, 2001; referred to Committee on International
Relations. Passed House, amended (422-2), June 13, 2001. (Similar to H.R. 931, introduced
in March by Representative Tancredo.)
S. 180 (Frist)
Calls for a comprehensive peace in Sudan and condemns the government of Sudan for
human rights abuses. Introduced January 25, 2001. Passed Senate July 19, 2001, by
unanimous consent.
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