By JARED FERRIE, IRIN
In Summary
Weapons manufactured by China and sold to Sudan have been
funnelled to rebels in South Sudan, where two Chinese peacekeepers were
recently killed.
The London-based Conflict Armament Research group said that in
May it documented 1,300 boxes of ammunition captured by the government
military, which is still referred to by its civil war-era name, the
Sudan People’s Liberation Army. Government forces captured the
ammunition from a rebel faction of the military known as the SPLA in
Opposition, or SPLA-IO.
The ammunition was discovered in northern Unity State, which
borders Sudan, and the boxes had been painted to obscure shipping
information that showed they originated in China, said Justine
Fleischner, group’s South Sudan researcher.
“Despite these efforts, we have identified that the materiel was
part of a 2014 consignment to Sudan’s National Intelligence and
Security Service,” she said.
“The consignment date also suggests that the materiel was very quickly diverted to the SPLA-IO in Unity State, presumably by NISS. China is still struggling to co-ordinate its policy between the different actors in the Sudans”
“The consignment date also suggests that the materiel was very quickly diverted to the SPLA-IO in Unity State, presumably by NISS. China is still struggling to co-ordinate its policy between the different actors in the Sudans”
The discovery highlights China’s complicated relationship with
both countries, as a long time ally of Sudan as well as a supporter of
newly independent South Sudan, where it has major investments in oil.
The find also suggests recent — and potentially ongoing —
support to rebels in South Sudan by Sudan, which would be particularly
egregious as Khartoum has pledged troops to a proposed African Union
peacekeeping force for its neighbour.
“Sudan is playing every card in its hand to ensure it has
influence in South Sudan,” said Luke Patey, a senior researcher at the
Danish Institute for International Studies and author of a book about
Chinese and Indian oil investments in the countries.
“China is still struggling to co-ordinate its policy between different actors in the Sudans,” he said.
China’s Foreign Ministry in Beijing did not respond to questions
about arms deals and its continued commitment to the peacekeeping
mission in South Sudan, where it has 1,059 soldiers.
South Sudan declared independence from Sudan in 2011 after
fighting a decades-long civil war (the second, after an earlier
1955-1972 iteration), during which China sold weapons to the government
and China National Petroleum Corp invested heavily in oil production.
A disputed border drawn up at Independence put three quarters of
the oil reserves in South Sudan, while most processing facilities and
the pipelines to the coast remained in Sudan.
China was then in the awkward position of having to work closely
with both countries while border clashes erupted sporadically and Sudan
continued to back anti-government militias in the south. That
relationship became even messier when South Sudan descended into its own
civil war.
In December 2013, tensions within South Sudan’s ruling party
boiled over and it split into two factions, roughly along ethnic lines.
President Salva Kiir, from the Dinka ethnic group, remains head of the
government, while Riek Machar, who is Nuer, leads the breakaway SPLA-IO.
A peace process brokered by the AU stumbled along as both sides
committed atrocities against civilians, including rapes and mass murder.
Kiir and Machar finally signed a peace agreement and Machar returned to
the capital, Juba, but the short-lived deal broke down this month.
Hundreds were killed when fighting erupted in Juba just weeks
ago, including two Chinese peacekeepers who died when gove
Machar fled back to the bush, and his own fractured party has
nominated a new vice president whom Kiir now says he recognises. Once
again, the country teeters on the brink of all-out war.
The recent discovery of Chinese arms captured from Machar’s
forces in oil-rich Unity State is only the latest example of China’s
complicated weapons dealing in Sudan and South Sudan.
Last June, CAR released a report documenting Chinese ammunition
and rifles that had been airdropped to SPLA-IO forces in eastern Jonglei
State. The ammunition was “identical to ammunition supplied by Khartoum
to South Sudanese rebel forces in 2012”, the Conflict Arms Monitoring
group said.
Chief supplier
The Sudanese government in Khartoum was not only providing
anti-Juba militias with Chinese weapons in 2012; Sudan also used Chinese
rockets against South Sudan when the countries engaged in a brief
border war. South Sudanese forces overran oil fields in the the disputed
border region of Heglig and Sudan launched airstrikes in Unity State.
In 2014, China was selling arms to both countries, and it was
the largest supplier to South Sudan that year, according to data from
the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.
After Chinese arms sales to South Sudan in the midst of the
civil war were exposed, Beijing stopped shipments, abrogating the
contract between Juba and its state-owned arms manufacturer, China North
Industries Group Corp, or Norinco.
The monitoring group’s documentation in May of Chinese arms
supplied to Sudan, which apparently then provided them to the SPLA-IO,
shows that China is still struggling to come up with a coherent policy
in the region.
“China appears unwilling to intervene too deeply in Sudan’s
affairs, and unwilling or unable to rein in Chinese arms dealers, such
as Norinco,” said Mr Patey.
China isn’t the only country attempting to negotiate its role in the region.
China isn’t the only country attempting to negotiate its role in the region.
“China is a close partner to Sudan, while the US has held
economic sanctions over Sudan for two decades,” said Patey. “But in
actuality both China and the US struggle to exert any control over Sudan
or South Sudan’s behaviour.”
Likewise, African efforts to impose peace have so far been stymied.
When war broke out in South Sudan, Uganda provided military
backing to the government, thus ensuring that the rebel SPLA-IO would
never see it as an honest broker. With Sudan providing arms to the
rebels, Juba’s long history of distrust has only deepened. Kiir has
categorically rejected the proposal by the AU to send troops –
potentially including Sudanese soldiers – to bolster the UN mission.
It’s hard to see a way out of the morass that South Sudan has
become, but Mr Patey said one way forward would be for the AU and the UN
to provide more support to civil society and political groups that are
not involved in the fighting.
“Over and over again only those carrying arms gain political
respect from the international community,” he said. “It’s a worrying
signal to send.rnment forces
shelled their position outside the UN mission in South Sudan.
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