The Drift Back to War: Insecurity and Militarization in the Nuba Mountains (HSBA Issue Brief 12)

Submitted by Lionel Kosirnik on 28 January, 2021

The Drift Back to War: Insecurity and Militarization in the Nuba Mountains examines insecurity and militarization in the Nuba Mountains and surrounding areas, a region that has been overshadowed in recent years by the Darfur conflict and, more recently, the insecurity in Abyei.

Supply and Demand: Arms Flows and Holdings in Sudan (HSBA Issue Brief 15)

Submitted by Lionel Kosirnik on 28 January, 2021

Supply and Demand: Arms Flows and Holdings in Sudan reviews small arms supply and demand among the spectrum of armed actors in Sudan, highlighting recent trends and developments. It also describes the primary supply chains and mechanisms by which these arms transfers take place.

Also available in ARABIC.

Business as Usual: Arms Flows to Darfur 2009-12 (HSBA Issue Brief 20)

Submitted by Lionel Kosirnik on 28 January, 2021

After nine years of rebellion, proxy arming, and shifting alignments between the Government of Sudan (GoS) and both Arab and non-Arab populations in the region, the Darfur conflict appears little closer to resolution than it did in 2003. 1 Successive mediation efforts—in Abuja (2006), Tripoli (2007), and Doha (2009–12), among other initiatives—have not bridged the gaps between Khartoum and the multiplicity of Darfur armed opposition groups. In fact, although some parts of Darfur have become appreciably more peaceful, the last 18 months has witnessed an evolution of the conflict as a whole.

Displaced and Immiserated: The Shilluk of Upper Nile in South Sudan’s civil war, 2014–19

Submitted by Lionel Kosirnik on 14 January, 2021

The civil war that began in South Sudan in December 2013 has had dire consequences for the Shilluk people of Upper Nile, with civilians killed, villages and buildings destroyed, and humanitarian aid blocked. Although exact figures are elusive, estimates suggest that as much as 50 per cent of the Shilluk population has left the country during the current civil war—a figure that rises to 80 per cent if internally displaced people are included.

Identity and Self-determination: The Fertit Opposition in South Sudan

Submitted by Lionel Kosirnik on 14 January, 2021

The Fertit community is a minority group in South Sudan that inhabit the former Western Bahr el Ghazal state. Out of it grew an opposition that came to form one of the many groups to take up arms against the Dinka dominated government in Juba and align with Riek Machar’s opposition coalition, the SPLA-IO. 

War Crimes and Punishment: The Terrain Compound Attack and Military Accountability in South Sudan, 2016–18

Submitted by Lionel Kosirnik on 14 January, 2021

On 11 July 2016, government forces stormed Terrain, a residential compound in Juba, South Sudan. Systematic violence, looting, and vandalism ensued—including one fatality, multiple incidents of rape and torture, as well as destroyed property.

Insecure Power and Violence: The Rise and Fall of Paul Malong and the Mathiang Anyoor

Submitted by Lionel Kosirnik on 14 January, 2021

When civil war broke out in South Sudan in December 2013, thousands of soldiers defected from the Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) and joined the opposition. In response, elites loyal to Kiir’s government mobilized fighters to bolster depleted SPLA forces. One of these groups was known as the Mathiang Anyoor, originally an informal northern-border defence force that would later integrate into the SPLA where its alleged role in some of the conflict’s worst atrocities would unfold.