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I call the meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting 116 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Development.
Before we begin, I'd like to ask all in-person participants to read the guidelines written on the updated cards on their table.
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format. All witnesses have completed the required connection tests in advance of the meeting.
I'd also like to remind all members of the following points. Please wait until I recognize you by name before you speak. Please do raise your hand if you wish to speak, whether you're participating in person or via Zoom.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2), the committee will now commence its study of the current situation in Sudan.
I'd like to take this opportunity to welcome our three witnesses.
We're grateful to have with us today Ms. Julie Desloges, the acting director of the international humanitarian assistance division, and Ms. Caroline Delany, the director general of southern and eastern Africa bureau. Last, but certainly not least, we're also very grateful to have Ambassador Jacqueline O'Neill, who is our ambassador for women, peace and security.
I understand that there will only be one opening statement and it will be by Ms. Delany.
You have 10 minutes, after which we will open the floor to questions by members. Once we get very close to the 10 minutes, I will be putting up a sign, so you can just kindly start wrapping things up when you see it. That applies not only to your opening remarks, but also to your responses to questions by the members.
With all of that having been explained, welcome.
The floor is yours, Ms. Delany.
Thank you to the committee members for this opportunity to discuss the situation in Sudan.
While the conflict there may seem very far away from Canada, it has important ramifications for Canadian interests in the world. The scale of human suffering, the significant human rights abuses and the potential for broader destabilization in the region make this conflict an important issue for Canadian engagement.
[Translation]
I would like to begin by reminding committee members of the sources of the conflict that is wreaking havoc in Sudan.
Following a military coup in 1989, Omar al‑Bashir seized power. During his 30-year reign, his regime concentrated the vast majority of investment and development efforts in the capital region, to the detriment of the outlying areas.
This has caused grievances among the population living in regions far from Khartoum. Long-standing subnational conflicts in the south led to the separation of South Sudan. At the same time, a conflict erupted in the early 2000s in Darfur that had a significant impact on the civilian population. The situation prompted the International Criminal Court to issue arrest warrants for crimes against humanity and genocide for Omar al‑Bashir.
In 2019, Sudanese men and women demonstrated against the ruling regime and demanded that a civilian-led democratic government be formed. The protests brought about the fall of President Omar al‑Bashir's regime. At the time of the revolution, Sudan was a very poor and fragile country that had suffered from underdevelopment and economic mismanagement for decades. Nevertheless, the international community, including Canada, supported a transition to democracy. Unfortunately, in October 2021, the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces, a paramilitary group, joined forces to illegally overthrow Sudan's civilian transitional government.
After the overthrow, the international community's efforts focused on setting up negotiations between civilian players, political parties, the SAF and the RSF. These efforts gave rise to several months of negotiations between stakeholders to re-establish civilian rule. One of the most controversial issues was the integration of the RSF into the SAF to form a united national army.
Despite these initiatives, negotiations failed to restore civilian, democratic governance after a military confrontation between the SAF and the RSF began on April 15, 2023. It is not yet clear who started the conflict, but fighting in the capital rapidly intensified and spread to other parts of the country. The conflict began 18 months ago. Over time, the situation has become more complex due to the high number of Sudanese and regional players seeking to protect their interests.
[English]
Let me now address the current conditions in Sudan.
Efforts at mediation continue but have not yielded results. Fighting continues across Sudan between the Sudanese Armed Forces, the SAF, and the Rapid Support Forces, the RSF, without any signs of abating.
At the outbreak of the conflict, the SAF quickly relocated government and military operations to Port Sudan on the Red Sea in the eastern part of the country. They maintain control in this region along with the north.
The RSF have consolidated control over most of the Darfur region and earlier this year began pushing south and east toward SAF territory. The RSF still controls much of the capital city and its surrounding areas, although the SAF have recently reclaimed some parts.
As a result, the conditions for civilians in Sudan are among the most dire found in any current conflict. Overall, in Sudan, a country with an estimated population of 48.1 million, over 8.3 million people are internally displaced and more than 2.1 million have fled to neighbouring countries. This makes Sudan the world's largest displacement crisis.
Recent UNICEF estimates also suggest that 17 million children are not in school.
In August, it was confirmed that famine was present in North Darfur, including in the Zamzam camp for internally displaced people south of the capital, El Fasher. The camp is currently hosting at least 500,000 people who have been displaced from other parts of the country.
Sudan is facing the worst levels of food insecurity in its history, with more than half of its population, 26.5 million people, suffering from acute hunger.
Credible reports, including from the UN, have documented widespread violations of international human rights and humanitarian law by all parties to the conflict, including indiscriminate attacks against civilians, ethnically motivated violence and conflict-related sexual violence.
[Translation]
I will now provide an overview of Canada's response to the crisis.
Canada continues to work with its partners in a number of areas. First, Canada provides humanitarian and development assistance that meets the needs of the people affected by the conflict. Since January 2024, Canada has provided over $100 million in humanitarian assistance to Sudan and neighbouring countries.
In addition, Canada has provided $31.5 million in development assistance to Sudan and neighbouring countries for projects aimed at addressing sexual and gender-based violence, as well as for education in emergency situations.
[English]
Second, Canada has maintained a high level of diplomatic engagement on the crisis at different levels and through different fora. For example, Canadian ministers regularly raise the conflict in Sudan in bilateral engagements and with countries in the region as well as in multilateral fora such as at the UN and the G7.
Further, Canada actively engages on Sudan at the UN Human Rights Council, for example, co-sponsoring the resolution in 2023 that created the independent, international fact-finding mission for Sudan, which is mandated to document violations of international human rights and humanitarian law in the interest of pursuing possible measures for accountability and ending impunity.
With the temporary suspension of operations of Canada's embassy to Sudan in Khartoum last April, Canada has shifted its engagement on Sudan to our diplomatic mission in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. This includes deploying new personnel dedicated to Sudan last month.
[Translation]
Third, announced new sanctions under the Special Economic Measures Act in April to address the conflict. Canada has imposed sanctions on six individuals and entities for their direct or indirect involvement in activities undermining peace, security and stability in Sudan, as well as for human rights violations.
Canada continues to closely monitor the situation in Sudan to identify more targets for future action, if required.
[English]
Finally, Canada is working actively to support the foundations of any future peace to be inclusive and democratic. Canada recognizes that there can be no durable peace without the meaningful inclusion of civilians, including women and youth, in mediation efforts.
Canada is also supporting Sudanese civilians and civil society organizations to engage in political dialogue efforts, to mitigate the effects of conflicts on civilians at a local level and to protect human rights defenders and women peace builders.
Further, Canada's ambassador for women, peace and security, Jacqueline O'Neill, who is with us today, was in Geneva in August to support U.S.-led efforts to include Sudanese women in the current ceasefire talks.
In conclusion, the situation in Sudan is unlikely to improve in the short term. The longer the fighting lasts, the greater likelihood of increased engagement by other armed groups and by regional players. This is likely to further entrench the conflict and worsen the humanitarian crisis.
[Translation]
As I said, Canada continues to monitor the situation closely.
We continue to find openings for Canada to carry out its actions and use the tools available to mitigate the impact of the conflict on civilians and encourage a path toward peace and stability.
Thank you for your attention.
I'd be happy to talk about that.
[English]
Certainly. I'd be very happy to share this, and I really thank the committee for focusing on Sudan.
I can speak very specifically to some of the work that has been going on over the last month or month and a half, as well as the work that many have done over the last 20, 30 or 40 years, unfortunately.
I'll share what I can. I want to be respectful, of course, of the safety of the women who've been involved in the mediation effort, as it's an extremely dangerous thing to be involved in. I also don't want to betray their confidences and jeopardize their access to future rounds of talks, but there's certainly much we can say.
I can give a snapshot of the talks that happened in Switzerland, and please cut me off if this is too much context. Very briefly, the U.S. mediation effort gathered people in Sudan. The co-hosts were Switzerland and Saudi Arabia. Observers included the U.A.E., Egypt, the African Union and the UN. The goal was to bring together the two parties, the RSF and the Sudanese Armed Forces, or SAF, and agree on three narrow issues: a ceasefire, increased humanitarian access and monitoring and evaluation mechanisms for an agreement that was reached.
The SAF did not come to the talks. The mediators kept the invitation open and stayed in virtual contact with them. They said it was contact diplomacy, and there were various other ways to be in touch. Those who stayed in Switzerland ended up focusing primarily on humanitarian issues.
The U.S. mediator wanted to ensure that Sudanese women, particularly civilian women, were able to influence the process, so my loose counterpart in the U.S., the Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women's Issues at the state department, convened a group of about 15 Sudanese women, including several young women from diverse locations like those representing Darfur, who came to Geneva—not to the exact site of the talks—for multiple weeks, and they had a number of contacts meeting directly with the special envoy and his team, as well as with the broader group.
The talks unfortunately didn't reach the goal that they intended—specifically, a ceasefire—but there were some specific outcomes that resulted, including the opening of two humanitarian access points to get desperately needed aid into various areas. The women who came together identified shared priorities based around those three narrow talks, and everyone was very specific that this ceasefire negotiation was not meant to replace a broader political and inclusive civilian-led process that has to address the root causes of the issue. It can't just replicate the same power dynamics that led to this conflict in the first place. They provided a lot of very specific points.
If I have time, in one minute I can share a couple of them. Briefly, they influenced the dynamics and the content of the talks themselves—this has been substantiated publicly by the mediator, and Secretary Blinken of the U.S. made the same comments—and they did so in a couple of ways.
They spoke very frankly about the immense trauma and horrors of the horrific situation that they're dealing with. They talked about sexual violence. They talked about people they know, because everyone knows someone who has been raped by either the RSF or the SAF, and they really brought a sense of urgency to the talks.
They talked about the cessation of hostilities, wanting to ensure that sexual violence would be included in any ceasefire agreement as a violation and explicitly named. They talked about the issue of the two armed groups at different checkpoints demanding sex in exchange for passage, access or food, and that being a crisis and a situation that commanders needed to address.
They asked whether, if humanitarian passages are opened, the corpses of people could be returned through those humanitarian access passageways, because there's so much trauma in communities among people who don't know whether their loved ones are dead or aren't able to give them proper burials. They wanted to include that in talks.
They tried to ensure that humanitarian assistance, which Canada often supports, includes dignity kits for women with sanitary products and access to various medical services and supplies that they need.
They also talked about future talks and future negotiations. They were very clear that they want to ensure women are directly included, and they got that assurance from all of the groups that were there in the final declaration from all of the actors.
Thank you for your question.
That's the toughest question, I think.
Many times, in hindsight, these conflicts were visible in advance. As for the signals they saw coming, it's hard at the time to know exactly what the trigger will be.
Canada had a mission and a long-standing engagement in Sudan for quite some time prior to this particular conflict. At the time of the revolution, in 2019, we upgraded the chargé d'affaires to an ambassador in recognition of the toppling of al-Bashir, the president who had had control of the country for 30 years, in order to be able to provide support for that transition to a democratic Sudan. That included reopening the development program that had previously been closed in Sudan, as well as working with IFIs to support the institutions in Sudan to be able to reform and respond to the opportunity that was presented with the end of the al-Bashir regime and the introduction of a civilian-led government.
Unfortunately, what happened subsequently was that the leaders of the RSF and SAF undertook a coup and toppled Prime Minister Hamdok and the civilian-led government, and decided to take power for themselves.
There was a UN mission there at the time, called UNITAMS. Our ambassador was very closely involved in supporting that mission's efforts—as well as like-minded nations, like the U.S., the U.K. and Norway—engaging with the SAF and RSF and encouraging them to return to a process of a civilian-led government.
Ultimately, what has proven to be the case is these are two organizations looking to control Sudan themselves that have decided to solve their disputes through military means. As we are discovering through the very challenging mediation process, the opportunities to encourage them to come to a constructive and peaceful solution are really quite limited.
Thank you to our guests today. Thank you for your work.
Even though it's been over a year, I would just begin by asking you to express our thanks to members of the mission who were evacuated and who continue to work.
In those days following the April 15 eruption of hostilities, I was following hour by hour what was happening in the breach of our mission, which was in a convenient place close to the airport. However, it was also in the worst place, being close to the airport. They were very precarious days, and they were very courageous. I hope you pass that on.
I'm a little less bleak about the future situation than Mr. Bergeron is. I think that my visits to Sudan have shown me the resilience, particularly of the women of Sudan and civil society organizations coming out of al-Bashir's tyranny. I think there was a tremendous resurgence of democratic hopefulness that was a threat to at least two people and their cohorts. I am hopeful.
I want to follow up a little bit on Mr. Epp's comments and questions, because he was getting to an important part.
Within the country there are about 10 million displaced people. There are about eight million internally displaced people and about two million refugees. Folks, that's literally the size of half of the countries of our world. Fifty per cent of the countries have more than 10 million and 50% have fewer than 10 million.
I want to think about the effects on Chad; Central African Republic; Ethiopia in particular; and a little bit on South Sudan, with family connections. I wonder what our capacity is to help the migrating people.
I've been to Al-Fāshir. It's not going to be easy to get in there with aid, because conflict continues. Four hours ago there was a major set of attacks in Sudan with the SAF coming back against the RSF.
What about the other countries? Where are we at, and how can Canadians help?