Kenyan forces intervene in southern Somalia to battle the al-Shabab Islamist militia. Shabab has engaged in terrorist activities in Somalia, Uganda, and Kenya, and is allied with al-Qaida.
Kenya and the Transitional Somali government are supported by the United States. And, can it be a coincidence that this intevention by an American-allied African nation takes place only two days after President Obama announces the American intervention in the Lord’s Resistance Army Insurgency that has bedeviled Uganda, southern Sudan, Congo, and the Central African Republic? Note that Uganda, has thousands of troops in Somalia in support of the transitional government.
Southern Sudan erupted in more violence this week as more than 170 people died in ethnic battles This latest round of the back and forth violence in Jonglei state. Approximately 12 villages were burned down and thousands of people were forced to flee by the violence. The incident is only the latest in a series of violent ethnic confrontations in the area.
This latest attack was in retaliation for a raid by the Nuer ethnic group in March, 2009 on villages inhabited by the Murle ethnic group in Pibor Country. That fighting killed between 450 and 750 people. Both groups traditionally conduct cattle raids on each other, but the level of violence is much greater than in the past.
United Nations officials believe the large amounts of modern weaponry left over from the decades-long Sudanese Civil War, which ended in 2005 are helping to fuel the bloodshed. Sudan has other problems of course, with the long-running Darfur conflict, ongoing hostility with neighboring Chad, and the possibility that the peace deal between South Sudan and the central government may be in jeopardy. And of course, the Sudanese leader, President Bashir, is facing indictment as a war criminal…
Chadian rebels clash with gov’t forces in capital; head toward presidential palace–Associated Press, February 2, 2008
Hundreds of rebels penetrated the capital of Chad today, clashing with government troops and moving on the presidential palace after a three-day advance through the oil-producing central African nation, officials and witnesses said.
Chad’s ambassador to Ethiopia said the capital had not fallen and that President Idriss Deby was "fine" in his palace.
"The situation is under control," ambassador Cherif Mahamat Zene told The Associated Press. "The head of state is fine in his palace … It’s true that there are some rebels who have entered the city, but to say the city has fallen is false."
A French military spokesman, Col. Thierry Burkhard, said that Chadian government forces were pushing rebels away from the presidential palace but that the outcome of the fighting today remained unclear. To read the rest of the story, click the link above.
The main rebel group in Chad, the Union of Forces for Democracy and Development (UFDD), has declared war on France. France, along with Austria, Sweden, Ireland, and other European Union members, are putting together a 3,500 man peacekeeping force in response to the warfare in Chad and neighboring Sudan’s Darfur region. The rebels allege French involvement in the war on the side of the government.
The UFDD is a coalition of several small rebel armies who seek to overthrow the government of President Idriss Deby, who invaded Chad himself in 1990 to overthrow the then-President Hissene Habre. Chad’s proven method of regime-change is through the barrel of a gun, with multiple coups, rebellions, interventions, and invasions in its history as an independent nation.
Since France freed Chad from its bondage as a piece of its decaying colonial empire in 1960, French troops and air power have intervened several times in the nation’s unending series of civil wars and rebellions. The current rebels allege French aid to the government, it is most likely true, based on France’s past actions in Chad and other former colonies.
As to why France may be motivated to get involved in a war not its own, one only needs to look at the fact that in 2003, Chad became an exporter of oil.
Sources:
Chadians declare war on France–Telegraph.uk
Chad-Central African Republic-Sudan Conflicts
A new battle between government troops and rebels in eastern Chad Chad Sudan
In the past,
France
Darfur, Chad conflicts spread to neighbor—
Seattle
Central African Rep. forces regain town –By Joseph Benamsse
Fierce battle erupts in east Chad: Heavy fighting has taken place between Chad’s government troops and rebels in the east of the country.—BBC Dec. 9, 2006
A Look at Africa and its Wars: 12.04.06
Africa is home to several long-standing wars and conflicts, some of which have smoldered on for years, and now threaten to erupt into larger regional conflicts. Of particular concern is the arc of countries from Chad and the Central African Republic (CAR) in north-central Africa through Sudan to the Horn of Africa nations of Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Somalia .As with many of the world’s conflicts in the early years of the 21st Century, the long shadow of the Global War on Terror reaches into this bloody corner of this lost continent.
Sudan:
In the Sudan, warfare returned to the largely Black, Christian south for the first time since a peace agreement was implemented in 2005. The fighting took place between the former rebels, the Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA), and a northern (meaning Arab Muslim) militia led by Major Gen Gabriel Tang. After the SPLA trounced the militia, Tang’s men took refuge in a Sudanese Army base at the Nile River port of Malakal.The following day, the Sudanese Army returned with heavy weapons (tanks and artillery), and retook the town, inflicting severe damage. Several hundred soldiers and civilians perished in the fighting.
With the ongoing war in Darfur, Sudan does not need a resurgence of the southern war.
‘Hundreds killed’ in Sudan battle—BBC, Nov. 30, 2006
And speaking of Darfur, the fighting there continues, as the Darfurian rebels attack the Sudanese Army and launch raids on the country’s oil supply. This war has already taken an estimated 400,000 lives. The UN seems helpless to act with any resolve; meanwhile Chad is increasing its aid to the Darfurians, even as Sudan aids Chadian rebels while setting the murderous Janjaweed militia upon refugee camps and towns on the Chad side of the desert border.
Sudan army suffers Darfur defeats—BBC, Oct. 17, 2006
On the positive side, the Sudan government and the Eastern Front rebel group (made up of rebels from the Beja and Rashidiya Arab groups) work to implement a new peace agreement signed in October.This agreement ended 12 years of rebellion in the Red Sea states near the border with Eritrea .Sudan accused Eritrea of aiding these rebel groups.
Sudan’s Interlocking Wars—BBC, May 10, 2006