Al-Bashir vows to bring peace as demos called in Sudan's war zones

Sudanese protesters chant slogans against President Omar Al-Bashir during a demonstration in Omdurman. (AFP)
Updated 28 January 2019
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Al-Bashir vows to bring peace as demos called in Sudan's war zones

  • Russian ‘state and private instructors’ present in Sudan
  • For years, anger has been mounting across Sudan over growing economic hardships

KHARTOUM: President Omar Al-Bashir vowed on Monday to bring peace in the state of South Kordofan where Sudanese forces are fighting rebels, as protesters planned to hold anti-government rallies in the country’s conflict zones.

Deadly protests triggered by a government decision to raise the price of bread have rocked the east African country for weeks.

The demonstrations have spiraled into nationwide rallies against the government of Al-Bashir, who swept to power in an Islamist-backed coup in 1989.

Officials say 30 people have died in the violence since the protests first erupted on Dec. 19 in the farming town of Atbara, before spreading to Khartoum and other regions. Rights groups say more than 40 people have been killed.

On Monday, Al-Bashir vowed to work to bring peace in South Kordofan, a region ravaged by a deadly conflict between government forces and rebels since 2011.

“Our top priority is to bring peace to this area,” Al-Bashir, dressed in military uniform, told a crowd of cheering supporters at a televised rally in Kadguli, the capital of South Kordofan.

“We are ready to go to any length to bring peace to this area. We will undertake all efforts that will bring peace to this area.”

In 2011, fighting erupted in the states of South Kordofan and Blue Nile, both bordering South Sudan, eight years after a brutal conflict broke out in the country’s western region of Darfur.

Tens of thousands of people have been killed in the three conflicts and millions displaced over the years after ethnic minority rebels took up arms against Khartoum, accusing it of economic and political marginalization.

Al-Bashir is wanted by the Hague-based International Criminal Court on charges of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide related to the war in Darfur. He denies the charges.

The Sudanese Professionals Association leading the protest campaign has called for rallies in the three conflict zones of Darfur, Blue Nile and South Kordofan on Monday.

Rallies have also been called in other states and in camps for internally displaced people “to show our people’s rejection of the dictator,” the association said in a statement on Sunday.

For years, anger has been mounting across Sudan over growing economic hardships and deteriorating living conditions.

Meanwhile, Moscow on Monday said it had sent “instructors” to Sudan, where demonstrators have been protesting against Al-Bashir for weeks, following reports of sightings of Russian-speaking soldiers in Khartoum.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov did not specify who the “instructors” were, but said they were in Sudan “absolutely legitimately.”

“There are really instructors there, they have been working for some time, a considerable time,” Peskov told journalists. “This is in the framework of Russia-Sudan bilateral relations, absolutely legitimately.”

“Of course our instructors are in Sudan,” Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov said, Interfax reported.

“There are both private and state instructors” who have been asked to “help with preparing personnel,” Bogdanov said.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova last week said “representatives of private security firms” were working in Sudan but had “nothing to do with Russia’s government structures.”

She said they were training personnel for Sudan’s “institutions of force,” which could refer to law enforcement or military.

Russian President Vladimir Putin met Al-Bashir last July in Moscow where the Sudanese leader said Russia was playing an important role in “preparing Sudanese military personnel” in the framework of bilateral cooperation.

British newspaper The Times said that Russian mercenaries in Sudan were part of the so-called Wagner private security group, a mercurial company sending soldiers to a number of conflicts overseas.

Russian reports alleged in late 2018 that dozens of Wagner mercenaries were in the country.

The secretive group has also been active in the Central African Republic, according to reports. Last year three Russian journalists investigating its activities in the country were murdered.

Russian officials have labeled the crime a violent robbery.


How Israeli settlers are forcing Palestinian farmers off their land with near-total impunity

Updated 5 sec ago
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How Israeli settlers are forcing Palestinian farmers off their land with near-total impunity

  • From pepper spray to armed threats, Palestinian farmers say intimidation has become routine in the Jordan Valley
  • Activists and rights groups say settler attacks on Palestinian farmers are not isolated events but part of a broader campaign

LONDON: In a scene that Palestinian officials and rights groups say has become routine in the occupied West Bank, Israeli settlers reportedly attacked farmers from the Bisharat family in mid-January as they plowed their land in Mofiya, in the northern Jordan Valley.
Witnesses said the settlers assaulted the farmers with pepper spray before calling in Israeli soldiers. Israeli forces later detained two sons of Youssef Hussein Asmar Bisharat, Hussein and Mohammed, according to Mutaz Bisharat, a Palestinian official from Tubas.
“This is the daily reality in the Jordan Valley,” Bisharat told Arab News. “It is repeated across all Palestinian communities.”
He described a consistent pattern: “Settlers assault citizens; the occupation army intervenes in favor of the settlers; Palestinians who try to defend themselves and their land are arrested; the occupation police file complaints against Palestinians.”
In late December, Israeli settlers ambushed farmers from the Palestinian Abu Al-Tayyib family as they worked their land east of the Khirbet Yarza area. The settlers held the farmers for more than three hours, filming the encounter as it unfolded, according to Bisharat.
The incident, which took place on Dec. 26 east of the Khirbet Yarza area, escalated further when a settler pointed a weapon at Mahdi Daraghmeh, head of the Malih village council, and threatened to shoot him.
The settler confiscated Daraghmeh’s car keys and detained him for nearly an hour.
Rights groups and activists say such attacks are not isolated but part of a broader strategy to force Palestinians off their land.
“The settlers who are perpetrating the attacks explicitly say their goal is expulsion of Palestinians,” Israeli activist Aviv Tatarsky told Arab News.
“Israeli police and army give no protection to the attacked communities but rather often join the attacking settlers and arrest, assault and at times shoot their Palestinian victims.”
He said that perpetrators “enjoy almost complete impunity.” Prosecution of settler crimes in the Israeli courts “rarely happens,” he said.
“The violent settlers enjoy vocal support from prominent Israeli rabbis and government ministers along with funding and weapons which the state gives them.
“All these indicate that the goal of expelling Palestinian communities, and ultimately ethnically cleansing the West Bank (to) become an Israeli state project.”
Data collected by humanitarian organizations underscore the scale of the violence. In a June 2025 report, Insecurity Insight said Palestinian farmers were attacked or threatened at least 276 times between Oct. 7, 2023, and Dec. 31, 2024.
Those incidents, the group said, involved settlers and Israeli security forces using firearms to intimidate farmers or physically assaulting them — in some cases with crowbars — “to force them to leave their land.” More than a third occurred during the olive harvest.
The Colonization and Wall Resistance Commission reported in November that at least 259 attacks against Palestinian farmers had been recorded since the harvest season began in October, including 41 carried out by the Israeli army and 218 by settlers.
UN data indicates a wider pattern. In 2025, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, or OCHA, documented more than 1,800 settler attacks causing casualties or property damage across about 280 West Bank communities.
That amounts to an average of five incidents a day — the highest daily rate since OCHA began tracking such attacks in 2006, the agency said in a humanitarian update on Jan. 7.
Israeli human rights group B’Tselem said Israeli violence in the West Bank is part of a wider campaign across the occupied Palestinian territories.
In its July 2025 report, “Our Genocide,” the group said that alongside the onslaught on Gaza following the Hamas-led Oct. 7, 2023, attack, a parallel campaign has unfolded in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem.
“The regime and the military perpetrating genocide in Gaza are the same ones bombing refugee camps, killing hundreds of civilians, and carrying out policies of forcible transfer and dispossession on an unprecedented scale across the West Bank,” the organization wrote.
Local groups have echoed those warnings. On Jan. 13, Jordan Valley Solidarity, a grassroots community network, said Palestinian villages in the northern Jordan Valley face relentless attacks by “armed settlers and occupation forces.”
“Settlers are roaming around the villages, intimidating and attacking local Palestinians, often followed by occupation forces acting on spurious allegations, coming to arrest the victims of settler attacks or to issue further threats,” the group wrote on its website.
Days earlier, the Times of Israel reported that 26 Palestinian families fled Ras Ein El-Auja, one of the last remaining Palestinian Bedouin villages in the Jordan Valley, after harassment by settlers from nearby unauthorized outposts became unbearable.
The outlet said Israel’s military and the local settlement council did not respond to requests for comment.
Israel routinely says it condemns such violence and investigates specific incidents.
On the ground, however, rights groups and media reports allege the army and police largely enable or ignore attacks on Palestinian farmers, with only limited, case-by-case disciplinary action when abuses are exposed.
The Jordan Valley makes up about 30 percent of the West Bank. About 90 percent of its lands were categorized under the Oslo Agreement as Area C — over which Israel retains control of security and land-management.
The area was intended to form a core part of a future Palestinian state. However, there are 37 Israeli settlements and dozens of settler outposts in this area, according to Rasheed Khudeiri, a farmer and activist with the Jordan Valley Solidarity campaign.
He told Amnesty International in December that the outposts are not established by the state but by settlers who take over the land and natural resources with impunity.
Around 39 percent of the Jordan Valley lands are categorized by the Israeli authorities as natural reserves and military firing zones and are off limits for Palestinians.
Khudeiri said Israeli authorities have granted sweeping powers to settlement councils, allowing them to seize land and water resources. “In the northern Jordan Valley area alone, settlers have taken over seven water springs that Palestinians depend on for livelihoods,” he said.
“Herding settlers don’t only steal our natural resources, they also appropriate our culture, heritage and lifestyle. Settlers in outposts herd cattle and sheep, build mud houses and make Palestinian dairy products.”
Recent weeks have seen an escalation in land seizures. On Jan. 4, Bisharat said, settlers drove a herd of cattle into the Humsah Basaliya community, trampling wheat fields belonging to Palestinian farmers Hail Mahmoud Bisharat and Mahmoud Hail Mahmoud Bisharat.
In late December, settler groups fenced off land near homes in the Al-Hadidiya area “to besiege residents and prevent them from cultivating their land,” Bisharat said.
Despite the pressure, Palestinian farmers have returned in recent weeks to plow the fields they say were seized by settlers, seeking to reclaim their land amid mounting restrictions.
On Dec. 26, a settler attempted to stop farmers in the Humsah Al-Fouqa area from plowing their fields, threatening to involve the Israeli army and confiscate their tractors.
The Palestinian farmers, however, refused to comply and defied the settlers’ threats. They continued working and managed to plow more than 40 hectares by evening, Bisharat said.
Earlier, on Dec. 14, about 20 hectares in the Al-Farisiya area were plowed by Palestinian landowners and residents with support from the Al-Maleh and Bedouin Communities Village Council, international solidarity activists, and lawyers.
“These lands that we were able to cultivate had been seized and fenced off by settlers a month earlier,” Bisharat said.
The following day, however, Israeli forces raided agricultural land in Ein Al-Hilweh and Wadi Al-Faw while it was being cultivated. They confiscated tractors belonging to the Palestinian Ministry of Agriculture, but the tractors were later released after ownership documents were presented, Bisharat said.
On Dec. 16, “as part of continued efforts to reclaim seized land, about 300 dunams (30 hectares) in Khirbet Al-Farisiya and Ein Al-Hilweh were planted and plowed,” he added, noting that funding was provided by international institutions, the Colonization and Wall Resistance Commission, and local officials.
International reactions have increasingly framed attacks on Palestinian farmers as part of a broader pattern of forcible displacement and de facto annexation. Concrete consequences, however, have remained limited and largely symbolic.
In an October 2025 statement, UN human rights offices in Palestine said rising settler violence, often backed by Israeli forces, is being used to “consolidate annexation” in clear violation of international law, destroying livelihoods and pushing Palestinian communities off their land.