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Africa: Horn
Chadian soldiers kill 69 Sudanese Arab militiamen
2004-06-18
RIGHT ON CHAD!!
Soldiers killed 69 Sudanese Arab militiamen who had crossed the border from neighboring Sudan to raid a Chadian village near the border, the communications minister said on Friday.
"Janjaweed? What's the fuss? They ain't so tough if you're armed, too..."
I keep saying this. Arm the Furians. Teach them how to handle RPGs, rifles and mortars, and tell them to defend their villages. They will.
The attack in Birak, 6 kilometers (4 miles) from the border, on Thursday is likely to strain relations between Sudan and Chad, which has been leading efforts to end a 16-month rebellion in the Darfur region of neighboring western Sudan.
Now they're leading efforts to keep the Sudanese camel lice out of their country...
During the clash the army also captured two of the militia, known as janjaweed and who are fighting in the war in Darfur, said Mouckhtar Wawa Dahab. Dahab said he had no details of Chadian casualties or any more information on the attack.
"I dunno. They just showed up, so we shot them all. We weren't takin' notes..."
"I need say no more!"
On May 9 hundreds of Sudanese Arab militiamen raided a village inside Chad, sparking fighting between the gunmen and the Chadian army that killed dozens of civilians, 60 of the militia and one Chadian army officer.
The Chadians sound like they're pretty good shots. Either that, or the janjaweed had been smoking too much... ummm... janjaweed.
More than 110,000 Sudanese have fled to eastern Chad, but the Arab militia has been conducting cross-border raids for months, stealing livestock and terrorizing Sudanese refugees and Chadian civilians.
Unless they run into the Chadian army. Who trained the Chadian army? Bhutan?
Two Darfur rebel groups - the Sudan Liberation Army and the Justice and Equality Movement, drawn from black African tribes which have traditionally inhabited the area - took up arms in February 2003, saying they were fighting for a greater share of Sudan’s wealth and power for their impoverished region. Chadian President Idriss Deby has been leading mediation efforts to end the conflict and on April 8, the warring parties signed a cease-fire agreement to allow humanitarian agencies into the area at talks in N’djamena, the Chadian capital.
That worked well, didn't it?
Both the rebels and the government promised to observe a cease-fire to let humanitarian aid reach the region but raids by the Sudanese Arab militia have continued.
Posted by:Mark Espinola

#9  See previous post.
Posted by: Raptor   2004-06-18 9:06:02 PM  

#8  MHW/Chuck/Eric/Steve. I fully agree and the 'nuff said' news is great to hear!

The people of Chad and those poor people in the Sudan being slaughtered by the barbaric jihadees should demand action by the U.N. but if they refuse to act allied Coalition forces should lend all the support they can muster to the good guys.

After this latest brutal murder of another innocent American civilian by Saudi Wahhabi Islamic killers, Washington must continue assisting Chad's armed forces with whatever they require to totally defeat the forces of evil.

Posted by: Mark Espinola   2004-06-18 7:54:18 PM  

#7  Hot Damn! I hope they ignore the Hudna and go full out.
Posted by: Ptah   2004-06-18 6:05:15 PM  

#6  The Chadian Army mounted machine guns and missles on Range Rovers and drove circles around the Libyans.

It's the Rat Patrol!
Posted by: Steve White   2004-06-18 3:40:51 PM  

#5  Janjaweed has nothing to do with marijuana. The similarity to "Ganga" is purely coincidental. FYI, the word "Ganga" is of Indian origin - not Arab.
Posted by: Scooter McGruder   2004-06-18 1:55:20 PM  

#4  Serious question:

The assassins were a Muslim sect that took their name from hashish. The janjaweed militia, ditto.

What's the signifigance of marijuana in Arab culture? Why do violent movements take its name?
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2004-06-18 1:42:24 PM  

#3  The Army of Chad was assisted in the 1980's by the French Foreign Legion. It currently is under the tutelage of United States Special Forces and the United States Marine Corps. Nuff said.
Posted by: Chuck Simmins   2004-06-18 1:39:31 PM  

#2  Chad defeated a Libyan invasion in the late 1980s. The Chadian Army mounted machine guns and missles on Range Rovers and drove circles around the Libyans.

I really need to do the same thing to survive the Washington Beltway.
Posted by: Eric Jablow   2004-06-18 9:31:16 AM  

#1  I think we are missing a great opportunity here.

Arm the Darfur men with rudimentary weapons. Give them some training. Let them have some Chadian allies.

Result: Lots of dead Arab terrorists. A weaker Sudan National terrorist govt. A stronger position for the southern non-Moslem forces.

Give war a chance.
Posted by: mhw   2004-06-18 9:21:01 AM  

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