Showing posts with label Abdul Rahim Dagalo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abdul Rahim Dagalo. Show all posts

Monday, November 10, 2025

Chadian born camel trader Muhammad Hamdan Dagalo Musa "Hemedti" now controls half of Sudan

"SUDANESE speculate that Hemedti sees himself either as president of a breakaway state, or still harbours ambitions to rule all of Sudan.


It's also possible that he sees a future as an all-powerful political puppet master, head of a conglomerate that controls businesses, a mercenary army and a political party. By these means, even if he isn't acceptable as Sudan's public face, he can still pull the strings.


And as Hemedti's troops massacre civilians in el-Fasher, he is confident that he enjoys impunity in a world that does not care much." Read full report.


From BBC News
By Alex de Waal
Africa analyst
Published Tuesday 4 November 2025, 00:42 GMT - full copy:

He made his money selling camels and gold. Now this warlord controls half of Sudan

Image source, ANADOLU VIA GETTY IMAGES


Mohamed Hamdan Dagolo, known as "Hemedti", has emerged as a dominant figure on Sudan's political stage, with his paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) now controlling half of the country.


The RSF scored a notable victory recently when it overran the city of el-Fasher, the last garrison held by the Sudanese army and its local allies in the western region of Darfur.


El-Fasher residents are suffering from famine following the RSF's 18-month siege of the city, a UN-accredited group of food security experts confirmed on Monday.


Feared and loathed by his adversaries, Hemedti is admired by his followers for his tenacity, ruthlessness, and his promise to tear down a discredited state.


Hemedti has humble origins. His family is from the Mahariya section of the camel-herding, Arabic-speaking Rizeigat community that spans Chad and Darfur.


He was born in 1974 or 1975 - like many from a rural background, his date and place of birth were not registered.


Led by his uncle Juma Dagolo, his clan moved into Darfur in the 1970s and 80s, fleeing war and seeking greener pastures and were allowed to settle.


After dropping out of school in his early teens, Hemedti earned money trading camels across the desert to Libya and Egypt.


At the time, Darfur was Sudan's wild west - poor, lawless and neglected by the government of then-President Omar al-Bashir.


Arab militiamen known as the Janjaweed - including a force commanded by Juma Dagolo - were attacking the villages of the indigenous Fur ethnic group.


This cycle of violence led to a full-scale rebellion in 2003, in which Fur fighters were joined by Masalit, Zaghawa and other groups, saying they had been ignored by the country's Arab elite.


In response, Bashir massively expanded the Janjaweed to spearhead his counter-insurgency efforts. They quickly won notoriety for burning, looting, raping and killing.

Image source, GETTY IMAGES. Image caption: 

The atrocities of the Janjaweed militia caused international outrage


Hemedti's unit was among them, with a report by African Union peacekeepers saying it attacked and destroyed the village of Adwa in November 2004, killing 126 people, including 36 children.


A US investigation determined that the Janjaweed were responsible for genocide.


The Darfur conflict was referred to the International Criminal Court (ICC), which brought charges against four men, including Bashir, who has denied carrying out genocide.


Hemedti was one of the many Janjaweed commanders deemed too junior to be in the prosecutor's sights at that time.


Just one, the Janjaweed "colonel of colonels", Ali Abdel Rahman Kushayb, was brought to court.


Last month he was found guilty on 27 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity and he will be sentenced on 19 November.


In the years following the height of the violence in 2004, Hemedti played his cards skilfully, rising to become head of a powerful paramilitary force, a corporate empire, and a political machine.


It is a story of opportunism and entrepreneurship. He briefly mutinied, demanding back-pay for his soldiers, promotions and a political position for his brother. Bashir gave him most of what he wanted and Hemedti rejoined the fold.


Later, when other Janjaweed units mutinied, Hemedti led the government forces that defeated them, in the process taking control of Darfur's biggest artisanal gold mine at a place called Jebel Amir.


Rapidly, Hemedti's family company Al-Gunaid became Sudan's largest gold exporter.


In 2013, Hemedti asked - and got - formal status as head of a new paramilitary group, the RSF, reporting directly to Bashir.


The Janjaweed were folded into the RSF, getting new uniforms, vehicles and weapons - and also officers from the regular army who were brought in to help with the upgrade.

Image source, AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES. Image caption:

The RSF was an ally of the army, before they fell out


The RSF scored an important victory against the Darfur rebels, did less well in fighting an insurgency in the Nuba Mountains adjacent to South Sudan, and took a subcontract to police the border with Libya.


Ostensibly curbing illicit migration from Africa over the desert to the Mediterranean, Hemedti's commanders also excelled in extortion and, reportedly, people-trafficking.


In 2015, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) called on the Sudanese army to send troops to fight against the Houthis in Yemen.


The contingent was commanded by a general who had fought in Darfur, Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, now the head of the army at war with the RSF.


Hemedti saw a chance and negotiated a separate, private deal with both Saudi Arabia and the UAE to provide RSF mercenaries.


The Abu Dhabi connection proved most consequential. It was the beginning of a close relationship with the Emirati president, Mohamed bin Zayed


Young Sudanese men - and increasingly from neighbouring countries too - trekked to the RSF recruiting centres for cash payments of up to $6,000 (£4,500) on signing up.


Hemedti struck a partnership with Russia's Wagner Group, receiving training in return for commercial dealings, including in gold.


He visited Moscow to formalise the deal, and was there on the day that Russia invaded Ukraine. After the war in Sudan broke out, he denied the RSF was getting help from Wagner.


Although the RSF's main combat units were increasingly professionalised, it also encompassed a coalition of irregular old-style ethnic militia.


As the regime faced mounting popular protests, Bashir ordered Hemedti's units to the capital, Khartoum.


Punning on his name, the president dubbed him himayti, "my protector", seeing the RSF as a counterweight to potential coup makers in the regular army and national security.


It was a miscalculation. In April 2019, a vibrant camp of civic protesters surrounded the military headquarters demanding democracy.


Bashir ordered the army to open fire on them. The top generals - Hemedti among them - met and decided to depose Bashir instead. The democracy movement celebrated.

Image source, AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES. Image caption: The RSF leader turned on then-President Omar al-Bashir, helping to depose him


For a time, Hemedti was lionised as the fresh face of Sudan's future. Youthful, personable, actively meeting diverse social groups, and positioning himself as the challenger to the country's historic establishment, he tried to change his political colours. That lasted just a few weeks.


As he and the joint head of the ruling military council, Burhan, stalled on handing power to civilians, the protesters stepped up their rallies, and Hemedti unleashed the RSF, which killed hundreds of people, raped women, and threw men into the River Nile with bricks tied to their ankles, according to a report by campaign group Human Rights Watch (HRW), external.


Hemedti has denied the RSF committed atrocities.


Pressed by the quartet of countries formed to promote peace and democracy in Sudan - the US, UK, Saudi Arabia and the UAE - the generals and the civilians agreed to a compromise drafted by African mediators.


For two years, there was an unstable coexistence of a military-dominated sovereign council and a civilian cabinet.


As a cabinet-appointed committee investigating the companies owned by the army, security and RSF closed in on its final report - which was set to expose how Hemedti was fast expanding his corporate empire - Burhan and Hemedti dismissed the civilians and took power.


But the coup-masters fell out. Burhan demanded that the RSF come under army command.


Hemedti resisted. Days before a deadline in April 2023 to resolve this issue, RSF units moved to surround the army headquarters and seize key bases and the national palace in Khartoum.


The putsch failed. Instead, Khartoum became a war zone as the rival forces fought street by street.


Violence exploded in Darfur, with RSF units mounting a vicious campaign against the Masalit people.


The UN estimates as many as 15,000 civilians died, and the US described it as genocide. The RSF denied the allegation.


RSF commanders circulated videos of their fighters torturing and killing, advertising the atrocities and their sense of impunity.


The RSF and its allied militia rampaged across Sudan, pillaging cities, markets, universities, and hospitals.


An avalanche of looted goods are for sale in what are popularly known as "Dagolo markets" reaching beyond Sudan into Chad and other neighbouring countries. The RSF has denied its fighters are involved in looting.


Trapped in the national palace under attack from artillery and airstrikes, Hemedti was badly injured in the early weeks of the conflict and disappeared from public view.


When he reappeared months later he showed no remorse for atrocities and was no less determined to win the war on the battlefield.

Image source, REUTERS. Image caption: 

The war in Sudan has forced millions of people to flee their homes


The RSF has acquired modern weapons including sophisticated drones, that it has used to strike Burhan's de facto capital, Port Sudan, and which played a crucial role in the assault on el-Fasher.


Investigative reporting by, among others, the New York Times, has documented that these are transported through an airstrip and supply base built by the UAE just inside Chad. The UAE denies that it is arming the RSF.


With this weaponry, the RSF is locked in a strategic stalemate with its former partner, the Sudanese army.


Hemedti is trying to build a political coalition, including some civilian groups and armed movements, most notably his former adversaries in the Nuba Mountains.


He has formed a parallel "Government of Peace and Unity", taking the chairmanship for himself.


With the capture of el-Fasher, the RSF now controls almost all the inhabited territory west of the Nile.


Following escalating reports of mass killings and widespread condemnation, Hemedti declared an investigation into what he called violations committed by his soldiers during the taking of the city.


Sudanese speculate that Hemedti sees himself either as president of a breakaway state, or still harbours ambitions to rule all of Sudan.


It's also possible that he sees a future as an all-powerful political puppet master, head of a conglomerate that controls businesses, a mercenary army and a political party. By these means, even if he isn't acceptable as Sudan's public face, he can still pull the strings.


And as Hemedti's troops massacre civilians in el-Fasher, he is confident that he enjoys impunity in a world that does not care much.


Alex de Waal is the executive director of the World Peace Foundation at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University in the US.


More about the conflict in Sudan

A simple guide to the war in Sudan

'I was accused of spying and beaten' - a boy's escape from captured Sudan city

New videos show executions after RSF militia takes key Sudan city

'We saw people murdered in front of us' - Sudan siege survivors speak to the BBC

Reports of mass killings in Sudan have echoes of its dark past

Sudan's fertile region where food is rotting amid famine and war


View original: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3vn17r29v9o


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Saturday, April 15, 2023

Sudan army & rival force clash. Sudan mounts air strikes. Khartoum clashes escalate. Slipping into abyss

NOTE from Sudan Watch Editor: The international community has condemned the escalation of violence in Sudan's capital Khartoum. 


The UN has voiced concern over a possible escalation of tensions in Sudan. 


The head of the United Nations mission in Sudan called Saturday for an "immediate" end to fighting between the regular army and paramilitaries. 


India and United Kingdom on Saturday advised its citizens in Sudan to stay indoors amid heavy firing in Sudan. 


Egypt also urged all Sudanese parties to protect the lives of the citizens and prioritise the higher interests of their nation. 


Jordan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates said it is checking up on Jordanians residing in Sudan following the ongoing security developments


United Arab Emirates has called for restraint. 


Saudi Arabia’s airline Saudia has announced suspending all flights to and from Sudan until further notice. 


Flydubai has cancelled flights to Sudan due to the current situation in the country. 


Sudan situation is ‘fragile’ says the US secretary of state Antony Blinken. 


Here is a snapshot of some fast-moving news published online today.


From: BBC News LIVE online 

Saturday 15 April 2023

Edited by Rob Corp and Alexandra Fouché


Sudan mounts air strikes as Khartoum clashes escalate


Summary


Gunfire and explosions are heard in the Sudanese capital Khartoum as a power struggle between the country's army and paramilitaries escalates


Tensions have increased between the government and the powerful Rapid Support Forces in recent days


Reports suggest Khartoum's airport is under the control of the RSF and gunfire has been heard in the northern city of Merowe, Reuters reported


Sudanese groups and the ruling military junta failed to reach an agreement last week over transitioning to a civilian-led government


One of the issues holding up a deal is integrating the Rapid Support Forces with the army


A power struggle between Sudan's army and paramilitaries has seen fighting erupt between armed factions in the capital Khartoum and other cities


The RSF claims to be in control of key sites in the capital but the army insists it remains in control


The African Union, leading Arab states and the US have called for an end to the fighting and a resumption of talks aimed at restoring a civilian government


Sudanese groups and the ruling military junta failed to reach an agreement last week on a handover of power

View source and updates: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/world-africa-65285254

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From: The Associated Press - full copy

Saturday 15 April 2023 c.13:40 hrs GMT UK

By Jack Jeffery 

Associated Press writer Jon Gambrell in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, contributed to this report.

Sudan’s army and rival force clash, wider conflict feared


KHARTOUM, Sudan (AP) — Fierce clashes between Sudan’s military and the country’s powerful paramilitary force erupted Saturday in the capital and elsewhere in the African nation, raising fears of a wider conflict in the chaos-stricken country.


In Khartoum, the sound of heavy firing could be heard in a number of areas, including the city center and the neighborhood of Bahri.


In a series of statements, the Rapid Support Forces militia accused the army of attacking its forces at one of its bases in south Khartoum. 


They claimed they seized the city’s airport and “completely controlled” Khartoum’s Republican Palace, the seat of the country’s presidency. 


The group also said it seized an airport and air base in the northern city of Merowe some 350 kilometers (215 miles) northwest of Khartoum. The Associated Press was unable to verify those claims.


The Sudanese army said fighting broke out after RSF troops tried to attack its forces in the southern part of the capital, accusing the group of trying to take control of strategic locations in Khartoum, including the palace. 


The military also declared the RSF a rebel force and described the paramilitary’s statements as “lies.”


A military official told the AP that fighter jets took off from a military base north of Omdurman and attacked the RSF’s positions in and around Khartoum. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief the media.


The clashes came as tensions between the military and the RSF have escalated in recent months, forcing a delay in the signing of an internationally backed deal with political parties to revive the country’s democratic transition.


Saudi Arabia’s national airline said one of its Airbus A330s was involved in “an accident” after video showed it on fire on the tarmac at Khartoum International Airport amid the fighting.


Saudia said in a statement Saturday that all its flights were suspended after the incident. It did not elaborate on the cause of the “accident” though it appeared the aircraft got caught in the crossfire of the Rapid Support Forces and Sudanese soldiers fighting around the airfield.


Another plane also appeared to have caught fire in the attack. Flight-tracking website FlightRadar24 identified it as a SkyUp Airlines 737. SkyUp is a Kyiv, Ukraine-based airline. It did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


Other commercial aircraft trying to land at the airport began turning around to head back to their originating airport.


Tensions between the army and the paramilitary stem from a disagreement over how the RSF, headed by Gen. Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, should be integrated into the military and what authority should oversee the process. 


The merger is a key condition of Sudan’s unsigned transition agreement.


However, the army-RSF rivalry dates back to the rule of autocratic former president Omar al-Bashir, who was ousted in 2019. 


Under al-Bashir, the paramilitary force grew out of former militias known as janjaweed that carried out a brutal crackdown in Sudan’s Darfur region during the decades of conflict there.


In a rare televised speech Thursday, a top army general warned of potential clashes with paramilitary forces, accusing it of deploying forces in Khartoum and other areas of Sudan without the army’s consent. 


The RSF defended the presence of its forces in an earlier statement.


The RSF recently deployed troops near Merowe. Also, videos that circulated on social media Thursday showed what appeared to be RSF-armed vehicles being transported into Khartoum, farther to the south.


According to a statement issued by the Sudan Doctors Committee — a part of the country’s pro-democracy movement — clashes have led to ”varying injuries.” 


The military also said the fighting resulted in a number of casualties but provided no further details.


The U.S. Ambassador to Sudan, John Godfrey, wrote online that he was “currently sheltering in place with the Embassy team, as Sudanese throughout Khartoum and elsewhere are doing.”


“Escalation of tensions within the military component to direct fighting is extremely dangerous,” Godfrey wrote. “I urgently call on senior military leaders to stop the fighting.”


In Saturday’s statement, the RSF said it was contacted by three former rebel leaders who hold government positions in an apparent bid to de-escalate the conflict.


In a joint statement, civilian signatories to December’s framework agreement also called for an immediate de-escalation. “We call on the leadership of the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces to stop hostilities immediately,” it said.


Sudan has been marred in turmoil since October 2021, when a coup overthrew a Western-back government, dashing Sudanese aspirations for democratic rule after three decades of autocracy and repression under Islamist ruler Omar al-Bashir.

Smoke is seen rising from a neighborhood in Khartoum, Sudan, Saturday, April 15, 2023. Fierce clashes between Sudan’s military and the country’s powerful paramilitary erupted in the capital and elsewhere in the African nation after weeks of escalating tensions between the two forces. The fighting raised fears of a wider conflict in the chaos-stricken nation. (AP Photos/Marwan Ali)

View original:

https://apnews.com/article/sudan-khartoum-firing-coup-deal-85464b8f9b7eaf1f7ec77eb7337d7881


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From: France24.com - full copy

By Agence France Presse A.F.P. www.afp.com

Issued on 15/04/2023 - 11:34

Modified 15/04/2023 - 14:47


Fighting rocks Sudan capital as army battles paramilitaries


PHOTO 1/6 Heavy smoke billows over Khartoum airport where the Sudanese army accuses a rival paramilitary force of setting fire to civilian aircraft © - / AFP


Khartoum (AFP) – Air strikes and artillery exchanges rocked the Sudanese capital Saturday as paramilitaries and the regular army traded attacks on each other's bases, days after the army warned the country was at a "dangerous" turning point.


The paramilitaries said they were in control of the presidential place as well as Khartoum airport, claims denied by the army, as civilian leaders called for an immediate ceasefire to prevent the country's "total collapse".


The doctors' union said three civilians had been killed, including at Khartoum airport and in North Kordofan state, and at least nine others wounded.


The eruption of violence came after weeks of deepening tensions between military leader Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and his number two, paramilitary commander Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, over the planned integration of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) into the regular army.


The army said it had carried out air strikes against RSF bases in Khartoum. "The Sudanese air force destroyed Tiba and Soba camps," it said in a statement.


Military leader Burhan has been at loggerheads with his number two, the RSF commander, over talks to finalise a deal to return the country to civilian rule and end the crisis sparked by their 2021 coup.

PHOTO 2/6 Regular army soldiers deploy in Khartoum as fighting with a rival paramilitary force rages elsewhere in the Sudanese capital © - / AFP


The RSF said its forces had taken control of Khartoum airport, after witnesses reported seeing truckloads of fighters entering the airport compound, as well as the presidential palace and other key sites.


Its claims were quickly denied by the army, who said the airport and other bases remain under their "full control", publishing a photograph of black smoke billowing from what it said was the RSF headquarters.


The army also accused the paramilitaries of burning civilian airliners at the airport, and Saudi flag carrier Saudia said it had suspended all flights to and from Sudan until further notice after one of its Airbus A330 planes "was involved in an accident".


RSF chief Daglo vowed no let-up. "We will not stop fighting until we capture all the army bases and the honourable members of the armed forces join us," he told Al Jazeera.


'Sweeping attack'


Created in 2013, the RSF emerged from the Janjaweed militia that then president Omar al-Bashir unleashed against non-Arab ethnic minorities in the western Darfur region a decade earlier, drawing accusations of war crimes.

PHOTO 3/6 MAP Khartoum © / AFP


A plan to integrate the RSF into the regular army is one of the key points of contention, analysts have said.


Eleventh-hour haggling between the two men has twice forced postponement of the signing of an agreement with civilian factions setting out a roadmap for the transition.


Witnesses also reported clashes around the state media building in Khartoum's sister city Omdurman, as well near Burhan's residence and in Khartoum North.


Outside the capital, witness Eissa Adam said explosions and gunfire had been heard across the North Darfur state capital of El Fasher, where civilians were hunkered down inside their homes.


The two sides traded blame for starting the fighting.


The RSF said they were "surprised Saturday with a large force from the army entering camps", reporting a "sweeping attack with all kinds of heavy and light weapons".

PHOTO 4/6 Members of Sudan's Rapid Support Forces (RSF) pictured in 2019: the unit emerged from the Janjaweed militia of Darfur © ASHRAF SHAZLY / AFP


Army spokesman Brigadier General Nabil Abdallah said the paramilitaries launched the fighting, attacking "several army camps in Khartoum and elsewhere around Sudan".


"Clashes are ongoing and the army is carrying out its duty to safeguard the country", he added.


'Slipping into abyss'


The military's civilian interlocutors called on both sides "to immediately cease hostilities and spare the country slipping into the abyss of total collapse."


Their plea was echoed by US ambassador John Godfrey, who tweeted that he "woke up to the deeply disturbing sounds of gunfire and fighting" and was "currently sheltering in place with the embassy team, as Sudanese throughout Khartoum and elsewhere are doing".

PHOTO 5/6 Sudan's army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, pictured on December 5, 2022 © ASHRAF SHAZLY / AFP


"Escalation of tensions within the military component to direct fighting is extremely dangerous. I urgently call on senior military leaders to stop the fighting," he said.


The head of the United Nations mission in Sudan Volker Perthes called for an "immediate" ceasefire.


"Perthes has reached out to both parties asking them for an immediate cessation of fighting to ensure the safety of the Sudanese people and to spare the country from further violence," the UN mission said.

PHOTO 6/6 Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, Sudan's paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) commander, pictured on June 8, 2022 © ASHRAF SHAZLY / AFP


Western governments had been warning of the dangers of all-out fighting between the rival security forces since the army issued its warning to the paramilitaries on Thursday.


In recent months, Daglo has said the 2021 coup was a "mistake" that failed to bring about change in Sudan and reinvigorated remnants of Bashir's regime, which was ousted by the army in 2019 following month of mass protests.


Burhan, a career soldier from northern Sudan who rose the ranks under Bashir's three-decade rule, maintained that the coup was "necessary" to bring more groups into the political process.


© 2023 AFP

View original here: 

https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20230415-fighting-rocks-sudan-capital-as-regular-army-battles-paramilitaries


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Chad closes border with Sudan

The central African country of Chad has closed its 872-mile (1,403 km) eastern border with Sudan "until further notice", Reuters news agency reports.

"Chad appeals to the regional and international community as well as to all friendly countries to prioritise a return to peace," the government said in a statement.

Source: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/world-africa-65285254_

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