In the name of God Almighty who created Heaven and Earth and
all human beings with different skin colours but as equals. Amen.
Distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen, good evening.
On behalf of the Committee of Dinka Chiefs and on my own behalf,
I am delighted to receive the award from Anti-Slavery International
for this year. I thank Anti-Slavery International for its continued
efforts to highlight the important issue of abduction of Southern
Sudanese women and children during the two-decade long civil war.
I would like to seize this opportunity to shed some light on this
inhuman and degrading practice, which caused so much suffering
to our people; thousands of these innocent people are still suffering
even at this very moment.
Abduction of women and children in Southern Sudan started in
early 1986, during the era of the last democratically elected
government. Most of the raids and abductions took place in the
Bahr el Ghazal region and they involved members of the Dinka tribe.
The abductions took place during the civil war between the Sudan
Government and the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) and the
Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM). In our opinion, the
abductions, which were carried out by Murahaleen militia,
were politically motivated. Their purpose was to weaken the SPLA
and the SPLM, which were predominantly Dinka at the time.
After the Government of National Salvation seized power in a
military coup in 1989, abductions not only continued, but in fact
increased significantly. Fear among the civilian population increased
because these abductions were accompanied by a host of other atrocities,
including the burning down of villages, wanton killing of innocent
people, and looting of cattle and other property.
It is important to note that apart from Murahaleen militia,
the Sudan Armed Forces and other militia groups, such as Popular
Defence Force (PDF), were also involved in these raids and abductions.
Abduction of women and children continued unabated during the
1990s until May 2002. Since then they stopped due to the progress
achieved at the peace talks between the Government for National
Salvation and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement.
We estimate that between 14,000 and 20,000 people were abducted
during this period and most of them were transported to areas
in Western Kordofan and Southern Darfur, where they were forced
to work without pay. All of the forces involved in raiding villages
and abducting women and children Murahaleen militia,
Mujahideen militia, the Popular Defence Force and Sudan
Armed Forces had a common interest: they used their victims
as unpaid labour such as carrying out domestic work, looking after
cattle, collecting water and firewood. They raped women and girls
or they forced these victims to marry them or their relatives.
I come from a village called Ajok west of Aweil Town in the Bahr
el Ghazal region of Southern Sudan. I remember a fierce fight
erupting between the Sudan People's Liberation Army and various
militia groups in my village in 1986. As a result of this battle,
the vast majority of our local people including myself
were displaced. For the first time in my life, I was forced
to desert my village and went to Aweil. Then I travelled to Wau
and eventually to Khartoum, just like many other displaced citizens.
Some of my fellow local community members, who were displaced,
went to neighbouring regions of Kordofan and Darfur.
In 1987, we started to receive information about some women and
children who had been abducted during the battles and taken to
Western Kordofan and Southern Darfur. Then a delegation made up
of the relatives of the abductees arrived in Khartoum and met
me and other Dinka chiefs. We had a big gathering which involved
100 people and we discussed what could be done. I proposed that
we register the names of the abducted women and children and record
any essential information. The meeting accepted this proposal
and six chiefs, including myself, were elected to oversee this
work on 6 June 1989. This step heralded the formation of the Committee
of Dinka Chiefs under my chairmanship.
The Committee then started its work in earnest. Our mandate was
to return abducted women and children. The Committee recorded
the names of 14,000 women and children abducted between 10 June
1989 and 1997. Unfortunately, the Committee faced a number of
significant challenges. Some members of the Committee were arrested
and detained. Three others were killed in Khartoum, Darfur and
other states in Northern Sudan because of government opposition
to the work of the Committee of Dinka Chiefs.
In this difficult and dangerous environment, we needed international
solidarity and support in order to continue our work. Therefore,
the Committee of Dinka Chiefs informed the embassies of the European
and African countries and the United States, which were present
in Sudan, about these challenges. We received support from, and
I would like to seize this opportunity to thank, the British Embassy,
Save the Children UK, the German Embassy, the Dutch Embassy and
all the international non-governmental organisations especially
the Swedish Save the Children Fund, Sudan Council of Churches,
Christian Solidarity International and the Rift Valley Institute.
The Dinka Committee estimates that a further 6,000 people were
abducted into slavery between 1997 and 2002. However, I am delighted
to inform you that out of all the people abducted into slavery
during the civil war, 4,500 people have so far been freed and
returned to their villages safely, including thousands of children
who were born into captivity.
Let me tell you about Adut Jel, one of the people we have been
able to help. Adut is from Aweil town, in Southern Sudan. When
the civil war started, Adut escaped the violence in Aweil and
went to another town, Malek Alel, with her three children, where
she hoped they would be safe. But one night, Adut was woken by
the sound of gun shots. The militia was carrying out a raid. Some
villagers were killed, others were abducted. Adut was taken with
her children.
They were taken to Southern Darfur by horse and on foot, a journey
that took 20 days. Adut's son was four and her daughters were
three and two years old. They weren't allowed to talk. Her children
kept asking why they were leaving. She told them they had to keep
quiet or they would be killed.
When they reached Darfur, they were put to work as labourers
for several different masters, weeding and harvesting vegetables,
cultivating watermelon, millet and groundnut. They had to get
up at 5am to work in the garden, after which they would grind
the millet and eat. They only had plastic sheets on which to sleep
under a shelter that was open to the wind and rain, while the
masters were in their houses.
Adut and the others were given no money for their work. They
were guarded to make sure they worked hard and at first they were
beaten. After the first year the beatings stopped, but they were
still guarded so they could not escape. Adut's children also had
to work as soon as they were old enough, taking the sheep and
cows out for grazing. Adut thinks her ordeal lasted about seven
years.
The Dinka Committee identified Adut and released her about three
years ago. We brought her to a transit camp in Aweil and reunited
her with her family.
Adut told me that she is very happy now because she has been
released from a life of hardship. She said that it is the worst
thing to be taken from your home to someone else's place and have
to work for them.
The achievements of the Committee of Dinka Chiefs also include
raising public awareness about the issue in Sudan and abroad.
This resulted in international organisations campaigning for the
resolution of the problem of the abduction of women and children
into slavery. Secondly, the Government of Sudan appointed the
Committee for Eradication of the Abduction of Women and Children
(CEAWC) in 1999, due to the efforts of the Committee of Dinka
Chiefs and continuous external pressure.
Currently, the Committee of Dinka Chiefs is co-operating with
CEAWC to find a just solution to this complex problem. Thirdly,
the Committee of Dinka Chiefs collected information related to
the abducted women and children including their location and brought
the abductees to reception centres both in the South and in Khartoum.
I continue to use my own home in Khartoum as a reception centre
for released abductees who are believed to have relatives in the
area with whom they could be reunited. When financial resources
become available, the Committee will arrange to return the abductees
to their villages and families. These are significant achievements.
However, I believe more needs to be done.
On behalf of the Committee of Dinka Chiefs, I would like to take
this opportunity to appeal to the international community. First,
I urge that you support the Committee to enable us to return abducted
women and children to their villages, families and relatives.
I also urge you to contribute to and help us with establishing
projects to rehabilitate and re-integrated the abducted women
and children into their original local communities as well as
the provision of the essential services to meet their needs. Finally,
I urge all governments, international NGOs and the United Nations
to exert maximal efforts to prevent recurrence of such a human
tragedy in other areas of Sudan, such as Darfur, and more widely
in Africa or the rest of the world.
Slavery is an inhuman and degrading practice which must not be
allowed to persist in the 21st century. We must put an end to
slavery. This is a moral imperative.
Thank you.