64 Civil Society Organizations Call on Canada to Respond to Crisis in Sudan
The Right Honourable Justin Trudeau, P.C., M.P.
Prime Minister of Canada
Office of the Prime Minister
Cc: Hon. Melanie Joly, P.C., M.P., Minister of Foreign Affairs
Hon. Ahmed Hussen, P.C., M.P., Minister of International Development
Hon. Marc Miller, P.C., M.P., Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship
David Morrison, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs
Christopher MacLennan, Deputy Minister of International Development
Ali Ehsassi, M.P., Chair, Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Development (FAEE)
Fayçal El-Khoury, M.P., Chair, Subcommittee on International Human Rights of the FAEE
Rob Oliphant, P.C., M.P., Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Foreign Affairs
Anita Vandenbeld, M.P., Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of International Development
Jacqueline O’Neil, Canada’s Ambassador for Women, Peace and Security
Dear Prime Minister,
We write to you out of deep concern over the surging crisis in Sudan, to urge the Canadian government to take strong measures to address what is the world’s largest humanitarian crisis by numbers. October 2024 was one of the deadliest months so far, with hundreds killed in Al-Jazeera, Darfur and Khartoum states. The scale of human suffering and atrocities, already horrific, is expected to worsen in the coming weeks and months. It has now been 20 months of brutal war between the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitary and the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF). Since then, 11 million people have been forced to flee their homes, and 3 million have fled to neighbouring countries. This is the largest displacement crisis in the world. Recently published figures place the number of people killed due to the violence in Khartoum alone to be 26,000. Others estimate that around 150,000 civilians around Sudan have died from conflict, starvation, disease, and the consequences of the collapse of infrastructure. Up to 25 million – half the country’s population – are in need of aid. UN experts warned last month that 97 percent of Sudan’s internally displaced (IDPs), as well as civilians in their homes, are facing severe hunger, and have accused the SAF and RSF of using ‘starvation tactics’ against 25 million civilians.
Diplomatic efforts and peace talks since April 2023 have had little effect. Humanitarian actors have limited access and funding to reach those most in need. There is a disconcerting lack of attention from the world and the world’s media, which enables the warring parties and their supporters to continue committing atrocities and violations of international humanitarian law with impunity. Both warring parties are using food as a weapon of war by routinely blocking humanitarian aid, including to besieged and displaced populations already suffering famine conditions. Atrocities include ethnically-targeted violence and massacres and the widespread use of rape and conflict-related sexual violence. The UN Fact-Finding Mission on the Sudan has indicated that many of the violations may amount to crimes against humanity. Women and girls are experiencing the worst impacts of the conflict, including sexual violence used as a weapon of war.
The longer the international community collectively fails to address the war in Sudan, the more entrenched, complex, and catastrophic the crisis will be. Decisive action by the international community is urgently needed now.
We note the complexity of this conflict, and acknowledge Canada’s efforts to respond to humanitarian needs and to ensure women’s voices are included in dialogues. Nevertheless, it is clear that the SAF and RSF have no interest in peace. SAF and RSF agreements to protect civilians and facilitate humanitarian access have had little impact on the ground, and the warring parties have not respected any ceasefire agreements. It is therefore incumbent upon the international community, including Canada, to put pressure on the external actors that are arming and supporting the warring parties, creating conditions for a prolonged conflict, and to take other measures, detailed below, to address violations of human rights and international humanitarian law by warring parties.
Recommendations
We, the undersigned Canadian and international organizations and Sudanese civil society organizations and diaspora groups, call on the Government of Canada to urgently support an end to the fighting, and enhance its political and material support for the Sudanese people and for Sudan’s path toward a peaceful and democratic future.
- We acknowledge the support that the Government of Canada has provided over the years for Sudan’s civil society, and recent efforts to re-establish some Canadian diplomatic presence in the region.
- We acknowledge and pay respect to Sudan’s organized and resilient civil society movements, and urge Canada to engage with Sudanese peacebuilders and frontline humanitarian actors.
We urge the Government of Canada to:
- Appoint a Special Envoy for Sudan to push for political momentum to end the war. The Envoy’s mandate should include leading Canada’s diplomatic engagement and coordination with international partners related to Sudan, and serving as a focal point for engagement with Sudan’s civil society. The Envoy should work with all mechanisms working towards peace, and with the African Union to pursue collaborative regional solutions, taking into account the severe regional impacts. The Envoy’s mandate should also be consistent with the goals and spirit of Canada’s national action plan on Women, Peace and Security, including explicit attention to the protection and participation of women (in all their diversity) and LGBTQI+ people.
- Participate in a Parliamentary ‘Friends of Sudan’ group. Canadian civil society organizations are advocating for the formation of an all-party, non-partisan Parliamentary ‘Friends of Sudan’ group, to act as an ongoing forum for Parliamentarians to share knowledge and advocate for a peaceful future for Sudan, propose actions parliamentarians and government can take, and engage with civil society and experts on Sudan.
- Name and work to hold to account the external actors fueling the war – primarily the United Arab Emirates, as well as Russia, Egypt and Iran. U.N. experts have found credible evidence that the UAE is supplying large quantities of weapons and ammunition to the RSF via eastern Chad.
- Actively work towards establishment of a mechanism for protection of civilians with a strong mandate to protect women and girls under the UN Security Council Resolution 1325 specifically addressing women’s human rights in conflict, and create a monitoring and reporting mechanism on the widespread conflict-related sexual violence (CRSV) in the Sudan war.
- Work with international partners to refer the situation of Sudan to the International Criminal Court (ICC) so that the ICC’s jurisdiction is extended to include all conflict areas in Sudan where war crimes and crimes against humanity were allegedly committed. And commit to extend support to the work of the independent fact-finding mission to document and investigate widespread violations across Sudan.
- Advocate for an extension of the arms embargo on Darfur to the whole of Sudan. It has been verified that large quantities of recently manufactured or transferred weaponry from China, Russia, Serbia, Turkey, the UAE and Yemen are being imported into Sudan, and in some cases diverted into Darfur.
- Extend and strengthen its current sanctions regime to target more of the extensive business and financial networks of the armed groups perpetuating the war. Gold is playing a critical role in fuelling the war in Sudan. As recommended by Sudan Transparency and Policy Tracker, any gold sourced from Sudan should be designated as a Conflict Mineral.
- Urgently address the discriminatory delays and restrictions on the family reunification program for Sudan. The failures of this program’s structure and implementation have been widely reported. To date, not a single Sudanese citizen has been brought to Canada under this program, which was launched in February 2024. This stands in sharp contrast to the 960,000 Ukrainians affected by war who were granted visas. Canada should implement an expansive humanitarian pathway for Sudanese refugees.
- Bolster Canada’s humanitarian response and action, through:
- Scaling up funding. As we approach the end of 2024, the Sudan humanitarian appeal, which requires $2.7 billion to assist 14.7 million people, is only 57% funded. Canada must urgently step up to disburse its commitments and identify new funding in order to prevent a large-scale famine from taking hold. This must include funding to address the regional humanitarian responses.
- Directing at least 25% of Canada’s humanitarian funding towards local frontline responders and initiatives. Volunteer-run community kitchens, health services, and emergency response rooms have enabled many Sudanese people in conflict or displacement zones to survive the war so far. With few exceptions, international organizations and NGOs have limited access to conflict regions, or face conditions that make operations impossible. International donor organizations are beginning to recognize that mutual aid initiatives in Sudan have access to many of the populations most in need. These groups are funded mostly by the Sudanese diaspora, and run under extreme pressure, with few resources. (See: Why mutual aid initiatives are the best approach of financing communal service provision in war and post war Sudan. Atar English, 3rd issue, April 22, 2024.
- Advocating for the inclusion in humanitarian aid structures of Sudanese civil society organizations working cross-border that are able to channel aid to populations most in need.
- Improving access to humanitarian aid for especially vulnerable groups of Sudanese civilians, including LGBTQI+ people and people with disabilities.
- Support the survival of Sudanese civil society, particularly women’s organizations, women’s peacebuilding initiatives, and human rights groups working in exile in places like Egypt, Uganda, and Chad, as well as grassroots actors that will be the building blocks of any future democratic inclusive government in Sudan. Canada has previously supported Sudanese civil society – particularly women’s rights organizations – to build their capacity during the 2019-2021 political transition period. Specifically, financing for women’s rights and women-led organizations should be prioritized.
We request a response to this letter and a meeting to follow up on the recommendations. For further information please contact Amani Khalfan (akhalfan@interpares.ca) of the Canadian Civil Society Working Group on Sudan.
Signed by the following Canadian, international, and Sudanese and regional organizations and individuals:
Canadian and International Organizations
AidWatch Canada
Alliance for South Asian AIDS Prevention
AQOCI (Association québécoise des organismes de coopération internationale)
Alongside Hope
Barbra Schlifer Commemorative Clinic
BC Council for International Cooperation
Canada for Africa Group
Canada’s Feminist Forum for Afghanistan
Canadian Foodgrains Bank
Canadian Labour Congress
Canadian Lutheran World Relief (CLWR)
Canadian Physicians for Aid and Relief
Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE)
Cooperation Canada
Equality Fund
Health Partners International Canada
Hungry For Life International
Inter Pares
International Women’s Rights Project
International Service for Human Rights
John Humphrey Centre for Peace and Human Rights
KAIROS Canadian Ecumenical Justice Initiatives
Kentro Christian Network
Manitoba Women for Women of South Sudan Inc.
Manitoba Council for International Cooperation
McLeod Group
OCASI (Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Immigrants)
Ontario Council for International Cooperation
Presbyterian World Service & Development
Public Service Alliance of Canada – Alliance de la Fonction publique du Canada
Rainbow Railroad
Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights
Refugees International
Rooftops Canada – Abri International
Rural Refugee Rights Network
Saltspring Island United Church, Social Justice Committee
Saskatchewan Council for International Cooperation
SHE Associates
Sudanese Canadian Association of Waterloo Region and Wellington County
Sudanese Community Association of Ontario (SCAON)
Sudanese Community of Windsor & Essex
Sudanese Cultural League of Edmonton
Sudanese Montreal Group
There Management Consulting Inc.
WILPF Canada (Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom)
World Renew Canada
Sudanese and Regional Organizations
Almostaqbal for Enlightenment and Development
Bunyan Sudan
Bunyan AlSudan Women’s Platform
Fikra for Studies and Development
Governance Programming Overseas (UK/Sudan)
ITUC Africa – Africa Regional Organization of the International Trade Union Confederation
National Sudanese Women Association
Nora organization for combating violence against women
SAGIA (Sudanese Association for Gender Inclusion and Advocacy)
SIHA Network (The Strategic Initiative for Women in the Horn of Africa)
SORD (Sudanese Organization for Research and Development)
Sudanese Women Rights Action
Sudanese Artists Group
SWRC
Sudan Peace and Security Monitor
The Regional Coalition for Women Human Rights Defenders in South West Asia and North Africa (WHRDMENA)
Women Against War Initiative /Sudan
Individuals
Adila Salih Elobeid, Associate Professor, Ahfad University for Women
Alex Neve, Senior Fellow, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs, University of Ottawa
Dr. Amal Abdalla
Amani Al Khabir
Amel Gorani, Independent consultant
Beth Woroniuk
Bonnie Campbell, Professor Emeritus, Université du Québec à Montréal
Brian K Murphy, NGO policy analyst, refugee advocate
Dia Da Costa, Professor, University of Alberta
Dip Kapoor, Professor, University of Alberta
Douglas Scott Proudfoot, Former Chair of the GAC Sudan Task Force
Durria Hassan Khair, Human rights & gender activist
Elfadil Elsharief
Elizabeth Aluk Andrea Chol, Human rights advocate
Gamila Elkarib, Women’s rights activist
Faisal Albashir
Firoze Manji, Publisher, Daraja Press
Iman Elkhatim
Laura Macdonald, Professor, Carleton University
Dr. Lynn Judith Gillespie
Maha Babeker
Dr. Mark Kersten, University of the Fraser Valley
Dr. Nahid Azad, MD
Nicholas Coghlan, First Head of the Canadian Office (Sudan); ex-Ambassador of Canada (South Sudan)
Pablo Idahosa, Professor Emeritus, York University
Patrice Cineus
M Emad Tahir, McGill University
Dr. Makere Stewart-Harawira, University of Alberta
Marvin Koop, Long term peacebuilding work in Sudan
Maryam Hussien
Mohamed Bashir, McGill University
Mohamed Elfaki
Mohamed Kodi
Omer Abbas Salih Hussein
Omar Ahmed Bashir
Rabab Elkarib
Ranjan Datta, Faculty, Bangladeshi-Canadian Organization
Samah Ata El Manan
Samah Alseddeg, MD
Sami Atabani
Samia Ahmed Nihar, Activist and member of women’s initiatives
Stephen Brown, Professor, University of Ottawa
Suha Elamin
Tag Elkhazin, Professor, Nubian Heritage Society Canada (NUSAC)
Xan Dagenais, Human rights campaigner
Zainab Doleeb, MD, Physician