In more recent times, the emergence of the notion of “the new slavery” has provided other definitions that fit the Sudanese phenomenon. Kevin Bales argues that the special characteristic of slavery is that slaves were property of the master; they are also coerced, and the labor of the slave is at the complete disposal of the slaveholder. Bales also notes that while slavery is fundamentally tied to labor, slavery differs from other types of labor such as wage labor, serfdom, and clientage. Many people doing these other types of labor are also subject to gross exploitation, a practice that disguises slavery as so-called wage labor. In countries as varied as India, Mauritania, Thailand, Brazil, and France, as Bales reports, slaves do not have the right to their own sexuality and to their reproductive capacities. In most cases, they do not have a choice to walk away from their desolate conditions, whether because of physical coercion or economic desperation. They are punished by flogging, confinement, deprivation of food, increasing the amount of work, or sale. As cheap commodities, slaves are bought and sold in ways so subtle that no legal measures can be taken against the slaveholder. New slaveholders or masters, according to Bales, are not concerned with the slaves’ physical and psychological well-being because slaves are easy to obtain, and in fact, slaveholders find it cost-effective to dispose of slaves in order to acquire new ones.8 Nearly all the practices in Sudan fit the definitions. Slavery in Sudan is initiated through violent raiding, which reduces the status of an abducted person from a condition of freedom and citizenship to one of slavery, cheap laborer, and a liability when physically unfit. Most important is that citizenship and entitlement to legal protection are undermined, whether through lack of laws or violation of existing laws, leaving the state unable to protect individual rights. Difficult as it may be to provide a succinct definition of slavery, the organized raiding and kidnapping of Dinka children and women from their communities and their subsequent exploitation in the North indicate that slavery is practiced in Sudan.
The ways Southerners are displaced by raids, civil war, and subsequent famines, exploited as cheap labor, and used by the government as magnets for foreign aid in the North, equally amount to slavery. The raids of Dinka villages force people to seek government protection and therefore migrate to the North. The government classifies them as refugees as a way to solicit foreign disaster relief. When such assistance arrives, the government assumes the responsibility of distributing it, gaining several advantages. Foreign aid gets taxed, and the food is used to coerce people into religious conversion. In this regard, Mark Duffield recently wrote:
Aid policy has furnished a complementary form of desocialization through propagation of the IDP [internally displaced persons] identity and predominance of economistic forms of analysis. What has been the impact of food aid on the role of displaced Dinka as cheap labour? … Since 1989, government of Sudan has consistently pressed to limit food aid to displaced Southerners, arguing that it creates dependency, demeans both the beneficiary and the image of Sudan, and conflicts with the government of Sudan’s plans to integrate them into the national labor force. It was not until 1992, three years after OLS [Operation Life-line Sudan] began and following strong lobbying from the aid community, that displaced Southerners settled around Khartoum were allowed to come under OLS.9 However, this only applied to those displaced people who were settled in formally recognized “peace camps” around the capital; those outside these designated areas received no official aid.10
The degree of suffering inflicted on Southerners by raiding and by the living conditions for captives and the displaced in the North has led many observers and commentators to conclude that the institution of slavery has been resurrected in Sudan.11 The practice in Sudan includes all the realities and images that the word slavery evokes. The focus of this book is not to “prove” the existence of slavery in Sudan, but rather to document, describe, and expose the flagrant abuses of human rights in Sudan since 1983. This book attempts to place the issue of slavery and slavery-like practices in the context of the North-South conflict.
Factors Underlying the Persistence of Slavery
Sudan is a country where old habits die hard. When Samuel Baker, the British explorer of the White Nile, arrived in Khartoum in 1862, almost six decades after England had declared slave trade illegal, he noted that it was the slave trade that kept Khartoum going as a bustling town. Baker observed that a slave trader would sail to the South from Khartoum in the dry season with armed men and find a convenient village. The slavers would surround the village in the night, then just before dawn fall upon the village, burning the huts and shooting to frighten the people. Having caused disarray and turmoil in the village, the slavers would take mostly women and young adults, place forked poles on their shoulders, tie their hands to the pole in front, and bind children to their mothers. Everything the village lived on would be looted—cattle, grain, ivory—and what was of less value to the slavers was destroyed in attempts to render the village so poor that its surviving inhabitants would be forced to collaborate with the slavers on their next excursion against neighboring villages. Probably nothing more monstrous and cruel than this traffic had been experienced in South Sudan. These were indeed painful days that the survivors would have wished to forget. But they have to be recalled by those who wish to understand the recurrent indignities South Sudanese experienced then and continue to experience. By the beginning of the twentieth century, the British had reduced the scale and volume of the slave trade, especially the export of slaves. Yet the physical and moral damage had already been done, and this has continued to cast a dark shadow on the country. Very little has changed, as slavery and its strong foundations in Sudanese society remained critical issues during the twentieth century. These foundations have made it possible for slavery to recur every time the conditions are ripe for it. War, displacement, and poverty function now as triggers for twenty-first-century slavery.
The factors that fueled the practice in the old days persist in Sudan because of the racial setup, religious ideological conflict, poverty, labor exploitation, and political instability. When such conditions escalate in any society, one might add, they almost always trigger slavery or slavery-like practices. The reemergence and increase in slave-raiding expeditions and the sale of victims in Sudan are build upon the racial construction of the country and the cultural ideologies that make up the identity of the Sudanese people. After all, the raiders of the new slavery are radical Muslims, self-perceived as racially superior, and they usually arrive in Nilotic (Nuer and Dinka) areas with no compunctions about killing non-Muslims and non-Arabs, if killing is what it takes in order for them to achieve their desired goals. However, race, religion, ethnicity, and economics could not have brought about the current resurgence of slavery without a strong catalyst. This factor was the second round of the unresolved civil war between the South and the North. The war became the driving force for slavery as well as the shadow that concealed the practices of slavery from the outside world. The war gave government interlocutors the opportunity to explain away the new forms of slavery, or justify the capture of slaves as the inevitable consequence of war. But the point to be made in this book is that the war alone is not a sufficient explanation. Without the strong notions of racial, religious, and cultural superiority held in the North, the war alone would not have caused the resurgence of slavery in Sudan.
Since 1983 northern Arab cattle herdsmen (the Baggara) have carried out government-sponsored systematic attacks against the Dinka of Bahr el-Ghazal to pillage for cattle, to loot grain, and to capture scores of Dinka women and children and sell them into slavery in the North. In the face of all the war-provoked misery in South Sudan, the outside world could not see beyond famine to notice that slavery had become part of the government’s war machine. When the news of slave taking first came to the attention of the outside world, quick statements were made about slavery being exclusively a product of war, not to mention that most people in the West could not really conceive of chattel slavery in this day and age. Later careful examination revealed that it was not just because of war that the Baggara were persuaded to act as executors of northern ambitions. Moreover, longer-term survival issues energized the slave raids. Under these circumstances, we need a better understanding of the forces sparking and sustaining slavery and the slave trade in Sudan. Five