Shadows In the shadows of Jebel Marra, in the province of Darfur, from Nyala to El Geneina there’s barely a building left standing. The schools and the mosques of the tribal Fur, the homes of the Masalit farmers, are smashed and looted beyond repair in violence past all comprehending. Their women raped, their men folk dead, from villages in the thousands they’ve fled across the boarder to camps in Chad where their suffering knows no ending. The vast destruction is systematic carried out with ruthless military logic. With people left hungry or terminally sick it smacks of ethnic cleansing. No one remains to sow the seed and fast behind the Janjaweed the Arab shepherds bring camels to feed among the orchards and fields. Just coincidence? or was it planned to give these nomads the upper hand in the African farmer’s ancestral land. The question, no answer yields. Khartoum and the Arab Alliance protest that they do not support the current unrest. It’s not what the evidence would suggest. El Bashir and his men are lying. In the shadows of Jebel Marra, in the province of Darfur, from Nyala to El Geneina a land and its people are dying. Sandy Wetton Cape Town, August 2004 |