You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Africa Horn
Sudan to close Libyan border over rebel threat
2010-07-01
[Al Arabiya Latest] Sudan said on Monday it was closing borders with Libya to protect travelers and traders from attacks by rebels, a likely reference to Darfur insurgents who have taken refuge in Tripoli.

Interior Minister Ibrahim Mahmud Hamid issued the order with the "aim of reorganizing" police along the border, according to a statement on the ministry's website.

Passage on a highway to the boundary "has become subjected to threats and attacks from rebels and outlaws who commit robberies and extortion," the statement said.

"The decision will be enforced starting on the first of July 2010 and until other directives are issued," it said.

Libya's border with Sudan passes through the troubled Darfur region, where the United Nations estimates 300,000 people have died in a war that started in 2003 when ethnic rebels revolted against the Arab-dominated government.

The announcement comes a day after Sudan said it had called on Libya to expel the leader of Darfur's rebel Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) Khalil Ibrahim, accusing him of making statements undermining peace efforts in Darfur and threatening attacks on Khartoum.

If Libya agrees to Sudan's request, one possible exit route for Ibrahim and his followers would be an overland trek across Libya's border, straight into the northwestern tip of Sudan's Darfur region.

Chad, on Libya's southern border, has already refused to take the JEM leader and any offer of a new home in Egypt could spark a diplomatic rift between Khartoum and Cairo.

JEM forces have been involved in clashes with Sudan's army inside Darfur since the rebel group suspended its participation in peace talks in early May. In May 2008, JEM forces travelled hundreds of miles from north Darfur to launch an unprecedented attack on the Khartoum suburb of Omdurman.

Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir and Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi had a telephone conversation last Thursday in which the question of Ibrahim's presence in Tripoli was raised, Sudanese media reported.

The head of Sudanese intelligence, Mohammed al-Atta, was reported to have said at the weekend that Ibrahim's extradition was "imminent," on a website close to the secret services. But this was denied by the rebel group.

"Ibrahim is in Libya and will remain there until he completes talks over the future of Darfur and Sudan" with Gaddafi, JEM spokesman Ahmed Hussein Adam told AFP.

"And even if Sudan said it would close its border with Libya, it doesn't have enough soldiers to do so," he said.
Posted by:Fred

#1  I was just in this area last November.

I can assure you that there is a Libyan border presence( nice guys.), and there is even an Egyptian border presence(Nicer guys, our hosts for most of the trip), but despite my being well inside the Sudanese border for two weeks, there were no signs of any official Sudanese border guards or any other such things. There is essentially no official Sudanese governmental presence anywhere in that country beyond 20 miles from Khartoum. Trust me on this, if you want to go to this part of the world, you don't get there through official processes in Sudan. You come down from Egypt or Libya.

And Chad? Don't get me started. Chad makes the Sudan look like Disneyland on Grad night. The Chadian government having an opinion on who does and who does not cross into their country is beyond parody. Its not a country, its a combination mad max sequel and zombie movie, and its border areas with Libya are notoriously porous.

Let me try to describe the place this article is trying to talk about. This is the very deep part if the Sahara desert. If you are like me, you think "the desert" is the world you see out your window when you drive out to Las Vegas. Its not. The Sahara Desert is unlike anything you have seen in North America. The closest analog we have in the very deep part of the Sonora desert near the Gulf Of California, and even that is an order of magnitude more wet than this part of the world.

Compared to this part of the Sahara, death valley is a verdant garden. When you drive across any part of our western desert, it is dry, but things grow, there is water, it does rain, though sparsely, almost every year. There is Cactus throughout our deserts, there is none in the deep Sahara. This particular part of the Sahara is known by NASA as a perfect analog for Mars and was used as such when the Mars landers were being prepared. When NASA went there in the 90's to study it, they took soil samples and found that 80% of the samples were completely sterile. There is no plant life in this area, none, zip, nada. It rains, when it touches the ground only every decade or every other decade. When I was there, I described it best by saying that the largest spot of exposed water in the area was in our own eyeballs.

There are exactly three wells in the area, all at the base of one mountain. The Libyan border crossing is right on top of one. The other two are hard rock guelta wells. which means that they are catch basins at the bottom of ancient riverbeds. In other words, depending on the water received on the "once a decade" rains, they often go dry.

What this means is that if you are the Sudanese government and want to put a border station out there, you have to bring everything with you. All your water, food and supplies. Its a big logistics challenge and a big cost. Oh, you say your border is big and you need more than one? keep adding it up for each station.

If you are trying to get across this part of the world and you know there is a border station, you go around it. No one is going to come looking for you, so border stations are largely ineffective. Instead, you just camp on the water. Thats what the Libyans have done, as the Egyptians.

The only official military presence in the area is based around Jebel Uweniat. Thats because, thats where the water is - the only water for thousands of miles.

and that water can be measured in cups.

Posted by: frank martin   2010-07-01 18:19  

00:00