Hubbry Logo
Musa HilalMusa HilalMain
Open search
Musa Hilal
Community hub
Musa Hilal
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Musa Hilal
Musa Hilal
from Wikipedia

Musa Hilal (Arabic: موسى هلال, romanizedMūsa Hilāl) is a Sudanese Arab tribal chief and militia leader and adviser to the Sudanese Minister of Internal Affairs.[3] His Um Jalul clan exercised tribal leadership of the Arab Mahamid tribe in Darfur.[1] The Mahamid are part of a larger confederation of camel-herding (Abbala) tribes of the Northern Rizeigat.[4] Musa is the leader of the Janjaweed militia, which was responsible for a massive military campaign against civilians in Darfur in 2003, as part of a counterinsurgency effort against Darfur rebel groups. On 21 January 2008, the Federal Government of Sudan announced the nomination of Musa Hilal as the chief advisor of the Ministry of Federal Affairs in Sudan. This position allows Mr. Musa to coordinate with regional leaders surrounding Darfur, as well as with Arab tribal groups, on the relations of the military regime.[5]

Key Information

This political position further permits the military leader power over decisions made in Khartoum pertaining the recruitment of Janjaweed militias.[5] In January 2014 Musa defected from Sudan's ruling National Congress Party, and launched a new movement known as the Sudanese Awakening Revolutionary Council.[6] As of late March 2014 Musa was running his own administration in North Darfur, with his troops controlling Saraf Umra town, Kutum town, Kabkabiya town, and the El Waha area.[7]

He was arrested in November 2017.[8] By the time Sudanese President and National Congress Party leader Omar al-Bashir was deposed April 2019, it was reported that Musa still remained in prison.[9]

On 11 March 2021, Musa Hilal was released after receiving a pardon granted by the Sovereign Council, the institution responsible for the transition in Sudan. Musa Hilal remains under UN sanctions and is accused of serious crimes in Darfur.

Background

[edit]

Musa was born in 1961, belonging to the Mahamid section of northern Rizayqat confederation. His father, Hilal Muhammad Abdallah, had during a long sheikh-ship sought increased influence by welcoming from Chad other Rizayqat tribesmen, a policy pursued also by his rival for tribal leadership, Shaykh Adud Hassaballah of the Mahariya branch.[10]

Janjaweed

[edit]

Musa has acknowledged his role in the recruitment of Janjaweed militias, although he consistently denies that he is part of the military chain of command of the Janjaweed. He claims to be merely an influential sheikh in the area. In his own words: "It is a lie. Janjaweed is a thief. A criminal. I am a tribal leader, with men and women and children who follow me. How can they all be thieves and bandits? It is not possible."[11]

He also reported in an interview by Human Rights Watch on 27 September 2004: "... I am not a criminal. Thank God I’m not afraid. I’ve never had any fear. If there’s a concrete complaint and an investigation is opened against me, I can go to court – nobody is above the law – but not because of allegations made by Ali al Haj and Khalil Ibrahim, who are rebel leaders, who make up dark information and give to the UN, and they put my name on the list. That’s not right."[12]

Musa also claims that actions by the Janjaweed are organized and directed from the federal government in Khartoum under Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir. In a video interview with Human Rights Watch, Musa Hilal stated that the attacks by the militia were directly ordered by the Sudanese government, and noted that "all of the people in the field are led by top army commanders…These people get their orders from the Western command center, and from Khartoum."[13]

According to noted Sudan scholar Alex de Waal, "Mr. Hilal's claim that he has no control over any militia does not bear scrutiny... He is at the center of all of this."[11] In letters to government officials and other tribal leaders, Sheikh Musa Hilal has repeatedly said his fighters are engaged in a jihad, or holy war, and will not disarm even if the government demands it. "We will not retreat," he wrote in one such letter in 2004 to the leaders in Khartoum, "we continue on the road of jihad."[11] Trying to disarm his men, he wrote, would be "cowardly," and impossible to enforce.[11] Another communique from Sheikh Musa's headquarters in 2004, obtained by de Waal, demanded the militias to "change the demography of Darfur and empty it of African tribes."[11]

Accusations

[edit]

Musa Hilal has been accused of inciting ethnic conflicts in some areas in Darfur. In the 1990s, he was imprisoned on criminal charges, which included the murder of 17 people of African descent, and the robbery of the Central Bank of Nyala.[1] In 2003 Musa Hilal was sent to prison in Port Sudan by the governor of North Darfur, but was released in April 2003 supposedly on Vice President Ali Osman Taha’s orders and given the authority to recruit and command militia forces.[14]

After his release Musa Hilal settled in Kebkabiya, where he supposedly organized a meeting to recruit Arab tribesmen from Awlad Rashid, Ireqat and Um Jalul.[15] He is the leader of the Um Jalul tribe, which plays a major role in the attacks in Darfur. He has been named by victims, witnesses of the attacks, and member of the armed force, as second in command of the Janjaweed militias, "border intelligence brigade," in Misteriya.[15] He was reported to have met numerous times with militia leaders to coordinate other village attacks.[15]

Musa Hilal has also been accused of kidnapping women and keeping them imprisoned in West Misteriya, at Jebel Jur Hilal.[16] In 2006, the United Nations imposed travel and financial bans on Musa Hilal.[1] Musa Hilal was quoted as saying, “the travel ban – that would be a humiliation. I am a tribal leader. My reputation comes above anything and everything.”[17]

On 27 February 2008, Mr. Reeves reported the destruction of 30 villages, the assassination of 200 people, the rape of over 200 girls and women, and the kidnapping of 150 women and 200 children.[5] These actions, Reeves argued, were executed by Janjaweed militias under direct order of militia leader, Musa Hilal.[5]

The international pressure that has been building up over the Sudanese government to address the attacks against civilians may force the government to give up Musa Hilal to international authorities.[17] Musa Hilal is said to hold enough information to pose a threat to the Sudanese government if the latter were to turn against him.[17] Thus, the Sudanese government has often dismissed international criticism regarding its decision to promote Musa Hilal to adviser to Federal Affairs Minister Abdel Basit Sabderat. Sudanese President Al Bashir was quoted as saying, “[Musa Hilal] contributed greatly to stability and security in the region."[18]

Influence in Chad

[edit]

In December 2011 it was reported that Musa's daughter, Amani Musa, was going to marry the president of Chad, Idriss Deby.[19] The two were married on 21 January 2012.

See also

[edit]

Notes and references

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Musa Hilal is a Sudanese sheikh and militia leader from the Mahamid subclan of the in , who rose to prominence as the chief commander of government-backed forces mobilized for counter-insurgency against rebels starting in 2003. Previously convicted in 1998 for orchestrating an armed robbery on a bank in that resulted in a policeman's death, Hilal was released from prison that year to recruit and lead nomadic fighters in operations targeting insurgent-held areas and associated villages. His militias, drawn from tribal networks, conducted scorched-earth tactics amid the broader conflict, which empirical accounts link to high civilian casualties but also to disrupting rebel supply lines and control in a region marked by ethnic insurgencies against . Hilal's influence extended to advisory roles under President , though relations soured by 2014 amid disputes over militia integration and resource control, leading to his and clashes with state forces. Arrested in in November 2017 on charges of attacking government convoys, he faced a without consistent legal access and was detained in until receiving a from the Sovereign Council on March 11, 2021. Post-release, Hilal established the Revolutionary Awakening Council to consolidate tribal authority in , positioning himself as a rival to fellow Rizeigat figure Mohamed Dagalo (), commander of the , in intra-Arab power struggles over gold mining and territory. In the erupting in April 2023, Hilal pledged allegiance to the , integrating his fighters under the and forming joint units with allied movements to counter RSF advances in . By early 2025, he publicly asserted the RSF's weakening amid SAF gains, survived assassination attempts attributed to RSF proxies, and brokered accords to seize strategic areas, framing his campaign as defensive preservation of Arab tribal lands against perceived RSF ethnic targeting and external backing. These alignments underscore Hilal's enduring role as a pivotal actor in Sudan's tribal-military dynamics, where loyalties shift with causal incentives of survival, resources, and regime survival rather than ideological consistency.

Early Life and Tribal Background

Family and Clan Origins

Musa Hilal hails from the Mahamid clan, a sub-group of the , one of the largest Arab nomadic pastoralist groups in , , primarily engaged in camel herding (Abbala) in northern Darfur. The , of Arab origin and part of the broader Baggara confederation, have historically migrated across the Darfur-Chad border regions in pursuit of grazing lands, with the Mahamid maintaining tribal authority over areas like Mistariha and Um Jalul. As the paramount sheikh of the Mahamid, Hilal inherited leadership from his father, who served as a sub-clan chief and relocated the family and followers to the Amo district in northern in 1976 to access more fertile pastures amid environmental pressures on traditional nomadic routes. This migration reflected broader patterns of Arab tribal expansion into Fur-dominated territories during the late , driven by desertification and resource competition. Hilal's immediate family includes ties through marriage to influential regional figures, such as former Chadian President , strengthening cross-border clan networks. The Mahamid's position within the Rizeigat has positioned Hilal as a key arbiter in intra-tribal disputes, though his authority has faced challenges from rival sub-clans and leaders like Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo () of the Mahariya section. loyalties remain fluid, with segments aligning variably in conflicts based on , land access, and state incentives rather than rigid hierarchies.

Pre-Conflict Activities

Musa Hilal served as the of the Um Jalul sub-clan within the Mahamid branch of the Rizeigat Arab tribes, exerting authority over an estimated 300,000 Mahamid pastoralists in northern . His leadership focused on managing nomadic herding of camels and cattle, navigating seasonal migrations for grazing lands amid encroaching , and mediating intra- and inter-tribal disputes over and resources. In 1976, Hilal's father relocated the clan from southern areas to the Amo region in northern , seeking more fertile pastures as environmental pressures intensified Arab nomad movements northward. During the and , Hilal commanded a tribal to protect interests, which became entangled in escalating with sedentary non-Arab groups, such as the Fur, over amid population growth and resource scarcity. In December 1989, regional authorities in Al Fasher suspended him from the Native Administration system for one year due to illegal activities, reflecting early tensions between his autonomous tribal governance and state oversight. These pre-war clashes often involved armed raids, with Hilal's group accused of targeting African-descended communities, contributing to a of localized ethnic strife that predated the broader insurgency. By the late , Hilal faced criminal charges stemming from these disputes, including the alleged murder of 17 individuals from non-Arab tribes and robbery linked to the of , though convictions were pursued under pretexts like to sidestep direct confrontation with his tribal influence. He was imprisoned in around 2002, a detention that isolated him from active tribal leadership until his release in April 2003, prompted by a Liberation Army attack on Al Fasher that highlighted state vulnerabilities in . This period underscored Hilal's role as a contentious figure in northern Darfur's volatile pastoralist economy, where tribal militias enforced customary rights amid weak central authority.

Rise During the Darfur Insurgency

Initial Mobilization Against Rebels

The Darfur insurgency erupted in February 2003 when rebel groups, including the (SLM/A) and (JEM), launched attacks on government installations, such as the assault on the Golo airfield on 25 February and the El Fasher airport on 23 April, citing marginalization and neglect by the Sudanese central government. In response, the Sudanese government under President sought to bolster its counterinsurgency efforts by arming and mobilizing nomadic Arab tribal militias, known as , to supplement regular forces perceived as unreliable due to local ethnic ties. Musa Hilal, a prominent of the Mahamid subclan of the Um Jalul in , was released from prison in in April 2003 following the El Fasher attack, having been detained earlier for tribal clashes with rival groups. Sudanese authorities reportedly recruited Hilal directly to organize these militias, providing him with arms, funding, and logistical support from military bases to target rebel-held areas and disrupt their operations. By mid-2003, Hilal had established a primary militia base in Misteriya, North Darfur, distinct from the nearby Sudanese army outpost in Kebkabiya, from which his forces coordinated initial raids against SLM/A and JEM positions. These early mobilizations involved recruiting thousands from Arab nomadic communities, including Mahamid and other allied clans, emphasizing tribal loyalties and promises of land redistribution from non-Arab farming groups supportive of the rebels. Hilal's groups, numbering in the hundreds initially, conducted hit-and-run attacks on rebel supply lines and villages suspected of harboring insurgents, marking the onset of a government-backed proxy strategy that aimed to reclaim control over rural North Darfur without over-relying on under-equipped national troops. This phase saw Hilal's militias integrate with Sudanese military intelligence operations, receiving weapons such as AK-47 rifles and vehicle-mounted machine guns, though accountability for command structures remained opaque, with Hilal denying direct government orchestration in later statements while evidence from survivor accounts and defectors indicated coordinated directives.

Formation and Leadership of Militias

In response to the escalating insurgency, particularly following coordinated rebel attacks on government installations such as the assault on al-Fasher airport on April 25, 2003, Sudanese authorities released Musa Hilal, the nazir of the Mahamid Arab clan within the Northern , from in June 2003 and recruited him to mobilize tribal militias against the rebels. Hilal, who had prior tensions with the regime over land disputes, was directed by officers, including al-Hadi Adam , to organize Arab pastoralist groups, framing the conflict as an Arab defense against Zaghawa-dominated insurgencies. Hilal established a militia base in Misteriya (also spelled Misteriha), , by July 2003, formalizing the Border Guards as a core unit under his command, comprising approximately 3,000 fighters drawn primarily from nomadic Abbala Arab tribes like the Mahamid. The government provided logistical support, including monthly salaries of SDP 300,000 (equivalent to about USD 117 at the time), , heavy weapons, and vehicles such as Land Cruisers for operations coordinated with units. Hilal leveraged his tribal authority to recruit extensively, claiming oversight of up to 300,000 Mahamid tribesmen in , emphasizing loyalty through appeals like "Join us! We have money if you want it. The Arab problem is with the Zaghawa." Under Hilal's leadership, the militias operated with a decentralized structure reliant on clan networks, where he acted as coordinating raids and from Misteriya, while subordinating field commanders from allied Arab groups. This integration of tribal hierarchies with state-backed resources enabled rapid expansion of the —a loose confederation of such militias—into a force by late 2003, though Hilal maintained primary control over Mahamid contingents amid reports of internal rivalries among Arab leaders. Government directives granted these forces impunity, positioning Hilal as a regional commander in North Darfur's counter-rebel efforts.

Operations and Role in Counterinsurgency

Janjaweed Campaigns (2003-2005)

In mid-2003, following the escalation of the insurgency after the Sudan Liberation Army's attack on El Fasher airport on April 25, 2003, Musa Hilal, the nazir of the Mahamid Arab tribe, was released from and recruited by Sudanese government officials, including the governors of North and , to mobilize Arab militias against rebel forces and non-Arab villages perceived as supportive. Operating from a government-established base in Misteriya by July 2003, Hilal coordinated the recruitment of thousands of fighters, primarily from his Um Jalul clan and other Northern Rizeigat groups, providing them with arms, uniforms, and salaries funded by the state—such as 300,000 Sudanese dinars per month (approximately US$117) for mounted fighters. These militias, often referred to as , functioned under Hilal's leadership as the "Liwa al-Jammous" (Buffalo Brigade), integrated with Sudanese army operations and overseen by figures like al-Hadi Adam Hamid. Hilal's forces participated in coordinated assaults starting in June 2003, including a four-day operation against the near Kabkabiya, where camel-mounted militias, supported by Sudanese helicopters, killed approximately 120 people and displaced 60% of the tribe's population. In July 2003, attacks around Kebkabiya, such as on Eid en Nabak village, resulted in the deaths of at least seven civilians, involving around 350 soldiers and militiamen in village burnings and looting. Further operations in July-August 2003 targeted areas like Abu Gamra and Beré in , contributing to a broader campaign that killed over 300 by August 2004, with tactics including mass killings, rape, and systematic destruction of , Masalit, and Zaghawa settlements. Government directives, such as a February 13, 2004, order, explicitly supported Hilal's militias with logistics, including helicopters for reconnaissance and troop transport. By early 2004, despite the ceasefire agreement on April 8, 2004, Hilal's campaigns intensified, with assaults on Tawila on February 27, 2004, and Abu Leha in March, involving , village razings, and seizures that displaced tens of thousands. These operations, often joint with Sudanese forces, aimed at clearing rebel-held areas but extended to civilian targets, resulting in the destruction of hundreds of villages and the displacement of nearly 1 million people by late 2004. Into 2005, Hilal's militias continued low-level activities, including border patrols integrated into the Popular Defense Forces, though the peak of organized campaigns waned as some fighters were absorbed into state structures like the Border Intelligence Guards. Hilal's role drew international scrutiny, with U.S. designations in 2004 naming him a key perpetrator, yet he faced no prosecution at the time.

Expansion and Government Integration

Following his release from house arrest in June 2003, Musa Hilal rapidly expanded his Mahamid Arab militia in , establishing a primary base at Misteriya near Kabkabiya with direct logistical support from Sudanese military helicopters delivering arms and supplies multiple times per week. recruited Hilal to organize efforts against Zaghawa-linked rebels, providing financial incentives and weapons during meetings with regional governors in July 2003; this enabled early operations, including a June 2003 attack on Darok villages north of Kabkabiya that killed approximately 120 civilians and displaced 60 percent of the local population over four days. By mid-2003, Hilal's forces coordinated with Sudanese army units in joint assaults, incorporating heavier weaponry and extending camps around Kutum by 2004 to facilitate broader from nomadic Arab tribes. Government directives formalized this expansion despite a presidential ceasefire declaration on February 9, 2004; a , 2004, order from the sub-locality office explicitly authorized Hilal's "mujahedeen" and volunteers to operate without interference, directing security units to meet their logistical needs and granting impunity for actions against suspected rebels. In late May 2004, Hilal's associates, such as Abu Ashreen, traveled to to receive weapons, medicines, and uniforms, returning via military to sustain amid widened government outreach to tribal leaders post-N'Djamena talks. This support included thrice-weekly helicopter provisions to militia camps like Misteriya, enabling sustained growth even as international scrutiny intensified. Integration into state structures accelerated in 2004, with Hilal's militia formalized under the Border Guards unit—supervised by officers including Lt. Col. Abdel Wahid Saeed Ali Saeed—offering fighters monthly salaries equivalent to SDP 300,000 (approximately USD 117 at the time). By late 2004, following negotiations between Hilal and Lt. Col. Abdel Wahid, most recruits from the Misteriya base underwent training in and were absorbed into paramilitary entities such as the Central Reserve Police, where a dedicated training center opened in Misteriya that year, processing 200-250 men per session. This absorption provided official badges, uniforms, and coordination with regular forces, transforming irregular elements into semi-official auxiliaries while preserving Hilal's command authority.

Evolving Relations with the Sudanese State

Advisory Roles Under Bashir

In January 2008, the Sudanese government under President Omar al-Bashir appointed Musa Hilal, the paramount chief of the Um Jalul clan of the Mahamid Arabs, as a special advisor to the Minister of Federal Affairs. This newly created position integrated Hilal into central government structures, ostensibly to address federal and tribal coordination amid ongoing counterinsurgency efforts in Darfur. The appointment followed the partial formalization of militias, including Hilal's forces, into state-aligned entities such as the Border Guards, reflecting Bashir's strategy to co-opt tribal leaders for security purposes while maintaining deniability for earlier militia excesses. condemned the move as entrenching impunity, citing Hilal's alleged orchestration of widespread attacks on non-Arab communities in between 2003 and 2005, including killings, rapes, and village destructions documented in UN and ICC investigations. Hilal's advisory influence extended to consultations on tribal and regional stability, leveraging his networks in to support government objectives against rebel groups. By aligning with Bashir's National Congress Party, he gained formal recognition, including participation in regime events, though his role remained informal in practice, focused on bridging state authority with nomadic constituencies. This period marked a peak in Hilal's state integration before tensions arose over resource control and autonomy in the mid-2010s.

Conflicts with Emerging RSF Forces

As the (RSF) emerged in 2013 from the restructuring of militias under Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo (), Musa Hilal rebuffed Sudanese government directives to integrate his autonomous forces—reorganized as the —into the new paramilitary structure, prioritizing tribal independence over centralization. This refusal, rooted in longstanding clan rivalries between Hilal's Mahamid and Hemedti's Mahariya subgroups within the broader Rizeigat Arab confederation, marked an early fracture in the alliances forged under President . Tensions escalated amid competition for economic dominance in North Darfur's , particularly after significant deposits were identified at Jebel Amer in 2012. Hilal's militias asserted control over the site by July 2015 through clashes framed as intertribal disputes, resulting in the deaths of over 800 Beni Hussein Arabs—workers and miners from a rival group—and enabling Hilal's network to extract an estimated $54 million annually from unregulated operations. The Sudanese authorities initially tolerated Hilal's gains, appointing him a presidential advisor in 2015 to leverage his influence, but Hemedti's RSF, favored by Bashir for its loyalty and operational discipline, increasingly viewed these holdings as a direct threat to its resource base. Sporadic armed engagements followed in the Jebel Amer vicinity from late 2015 through 2016, with RSF units probing Hilal's defenses to disrupt activities and assert territorial claims, though neither side achieved decisive control until early 2017. These skirmishes, often intertwined with broader tribal feuds and government maneuvering to balance factions, underscored Hilal's strategy of exploiting local grievances for leverage while resisting the RSF's bid to monopolize Darfur's illicit economy. Hilal's repeated mutinies against Khartoum's oversight, contrasted with Hemedti's alignment, fueled a decade-long antagonism that weakened the regime's apparatus in the region.

Arrest, Imprisonment, and Release

2017 Clashes and Detention

In 2017, tensions escalated between Musa Hilal's militia forces, primarily drawn from the Mahamid clan of the Rizeigat Arabs, and the (RSF) over demands for disarmament and integration into the paramilitary structure led by (). Hilal, commanding the (BGF), refused to surrender weapons or subordinate his fighters to the RSF, viewing it as a threat to his tribal autonomy and control over resource-rich areas in , including sites. These disputes stemmed from Presidential Decree No. 419/2017 issued by , which aimed to dissolve independent tribal militias and consolidate them under RSF command, prompting Hilal to denounce the order as an infringement on Arab tribal rights. Clashes erupted in late November 2017 near Hilal's hometown of Mistariha in North Darfur's Al Wihda locality, where RSF units confronted Hilal's BGF fighters after Hilal rejected ultimatums. Sudanese reports indicated that 23 individuals were killed in the fighting involving Hilal's supporters, with the state minister accusing Hilal of using Mistariha as a base for outlaws and rebels. The RSF, backed by government forces, overpowered Hilal's positions, seizing control of key operations previously dominated by his networks. On November 27, 2017, RSF forces arrested Hilal along with several aides and family members following the skirmishes, transporting him to for detention. He was held without trial for over three years in Kober prison, amid allegations of insubordination and threats to state security, though supporters claimed the move was a pretext by to monopolize Darfur's economic assets. The detention effectively neutralized Hilal's independent military capacity, allowing the RSF to expand influence in Darfur's resource sectors.

2021 Pardon and Aftermath

On March 11, 2021, Musa Hilal was pardoned and released from detention in by Sudan's Sovereign Council, the body overseeing the transitional government following the 2019 ouster of . He had been held since November 2017, following clashes between his forces and the (RSF) over disarmament efforts in . The decision came amid Sudan's fragile transition, with the council citing reconciliation efforts, though it drew immediate condemnation from organizations for prioritizing political expediency over accountability for alleged war crimes in . Following his release, Hilal resumed leadership of the Awakening Council (RAC), a tribal primarily comprising Mahamid that he had established prior to his arrest as a to RSF dominance in northern . The RAC issued statements welcoming and demanding the release of remaining detainees from the 2017 clashes, signaling continuity in its organizational structure and opposition to full disarmament under RSF command. Hilal relocated to , where his forces maintained control over key gold mining areas and pastoral routes, leveraging tribal networks to resist integration into state structures dominated by RSF leader Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo (). The pardon exacerbated tensions between Hilal's faction and the RSF, as Hilal publicly rejected subordination to Hemedti, framing it as a defense of Arab tribal autonomy against perceived favoritism toward Rizeigat clans. This period saw sporadic skirmishes in Darfur's mining regions, with Hilal's militias accused by local reports of extortion and resource disputes, though Hilal's supporters attributed such incidents to RSF encroachments. Internationally, the International Criminal Court maintained its 2006 arrest warrant against Hilal for suspected crimes against humanity, rendering the pardon ineffective for global legal purposes and highlighting Sudan's limited cooperation on Darfur accountability. By late 2021, Hilal's influence had stabilized through alliances with non-Arab rebel groups, positioning the RAC as a semi-autonomous actor amid Sudan's military coup in October, though without formal absorption into national forces.

Involvement in the 2023 Sudanese Civil War

Alignment with Sudanese Armed Forces

In April 2024, Musa Hilal, leader of the Mahamid Rizeigat Arab tribe and head of the Revolutionary Awakening Council, publicly declared his alignment with the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) amid the ongoing civil war against the Rapid Support Forces (RSF). This stance stemmed from his longstanding opposition to RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo (Hemedti), dating back to the Omar al-Bashir era when Hilal refused orders to integrate his militias into the RSF structure. Hilal framed his support as backing "state institutions" and mobilizing tribal forces under the "Awakening" banner to combat RSF advances, particularly in where tribal divisions could influence control over key areas. His declaration aimed to rally Arab tribal elements against the RSF, potentially shifting the balance of power in by leveraging his influence over Mahamid fighters who had historically operated independently of paramilitary chains. By November 2024, Hilal's loyalists had deployed to Al-Dabbah in northern to reinforce SAF defenses against RSF incursions, demonstrating operational integration with units. This alignment persisted into 2025, with Hilal asserting in February that the RSF was at its "weakest point," signaling confidence in SAF-aligned tribal contributions to erode strength. In September 2025, Hilal's council formalized a joint force with SAF elements, establishing a new military unit to coordinate tribal militias in countering RSF operations, further embedding his network within the army's strategic framework. This partnership highlighted Hilal's role in providing SAF with auxiliary Arab fighters, though it faced internal tribal pushback from Rizeigat factions aligned with the RSF.

Military Contributions and Strategic Shifts (2023-2025)

In April 2024, Musa Hilal, leader of the Revolutionary Awakening Council and chief of the Mahamid , publicly pledged his forces' support to the (SAF) in the ongoing against the (RSF), citing tribal rivalries with RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo () from the rival Awlad Mansur subclan. This alignment enabled Hilal's militias to contribute ground troops and tribal intelligence in , targeting RSF-perpetrated violence, looting, and displacement. By November 2024, Hilal's fighters had deployed to Al-Dabbah in Northern State, reinforcing SAF defenses against an RSF buildup originating from , thereby helping to secure a critical supply route and prevent further paramilitary incursions toward the Valley. In Darfur operations, his forces opposed RSF attempts to impose administrative control over tribal territories, aligning with SAF advances that recaptured key areas in and amid broader ethnic tensions. A strategic shift materialized in early 2025, with Hilal confirming the formal integration of his fighters under the SAF's , emphasizing defensive postures while asserting the RSF's operational nadir despite foreign backing from entities like the UAE. He predicted the war's imminent conclusion, crediting SAF gains to coordinated tribal mobilizations that disrupted RSF recruitment and logistics. By September 2025, Hilal's council reached an agreement with SAF representatives to establish a new joint military unit, marking a transition from tribal support to institutionalized collaboration aimed at unifying command structures and enhancing operational efficacy in and adjacent fronts. This development reflected Hilal's evolution from semi-autonomous to embedded SAF ally, leveraging his Arab tribal networks to counter RSF's fractured tribal base while securing potential political concessions post-conflict.

Regional and Cross-Border Influence

Activities in Eastern Chad

Musa Hilal's militias, originating from the forces mobilized during the , extended operations into eastern in the mid-2000s, conducting raids on non-Arab villages near the . These incursions targeted groups such as the Zaghawa, Tama, and Dadjo, involving killings, , and abductions that displaced thousands and contributed to ethnic tensions spilling across the frontier. In 2003, Hilal coordinated with Sudanese to support Chadian rebel groups opposed to President , providing training and logistical aid through camps near the , which facilitated joint operations against Chadian government forces. By 2006, Hilal negotiated a with the (JEM) in Adre, eastern , aiming to stabilize militia movements amid cross-border conflicts. Following partial integration into state structures, Hilal commanded along the Sudan- frontier from the late 2000s, overseeing patrols that regulated tribal grazing rights, livestock migrations, and trade corridors between and eastern regions like Goz Beida. These units, drawn from Mahamid Arab clans, enforced control over smuggling routes for arms, goods, and later , adapting paths to evade joint Sudanese-Chadian patrols. Hilal's cross-border influence persisted through networks within Rizeigat subtribes, though his Mahamid branch held less sway in Chadian ruling circles compared to Mahariya kin. In November 2022, he traveled to for unspecified engagements, prompting UN inquiries into potential militia coordination amid Sudan's internal fractures. During the 2023-2025 , these networks enabled recruitment and resupply for Hilal-aligned forces fighting RSF in , leveraging eastern as a rear base for tribal mobilization without direct territorial control.

Tribal Networks and Resource Control

Musa Hilal leads the Mahamid subtribe of the Um Jalul Arab confederation, a nomadic pastoralist group dominant in northern , where tribal authority is rooted in hierarchies and control over migratory routes for . His networks encompass alliances with other Arab tribes, including mediation between the Beni Halba and Salamat in disputes over grazing lands as recently as 2023, leveraging his status to broker truces and assert influence amid resource competition. These ties extend cross-border into eastern , where Mahamid kin facilitate trade and movements, enabling Hilal to project power beyond Sudanese territory through familial and clan-based loyalties rather than formal state structures. Hilal's tribal apparatus has historically intertwined with militia mobilization, as seen in the Janjaweed era, where Mahamid fighters under his command were deployed for government-backed operations, securing territorial dominance that preserved access to water points and pastures amid ethnic tensions with non-Arab groups like the Fur and Zaghawa. Post-2012 discoveries in Jebel Amer, his forces assumed de facto oversight of mining sites in , regulating artisanal operations through checkpoints and levies that generated an estimated $54 million annually by 2016, funding arms procurement and reinforcing patron-client dynamics within allied subtribes. This exploitation persisted until government intervention in 2017, though Hilal's release in 2021 revived his economic leverage, with networks channeling revenues to sustain militia loyalty amid rival claims by Rizeigat factions tied to the . Resource control under Hilal's networks prioritizes tribal primacy in Darfur's arid , where disputes over diminishing pastures and wealth often escalate into armed clashes; for instance, Mahamid forces clashed with Beni Hussein miners in 2013 over Jebel Amer access, resulting in hundreds of deaths and underscoring how economic stakes bolster his strategic positioning against both rebel movements and competing leaders like Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo. Such dynamics reflect causal linkages between tribal , militia enforcement, and illicit extraction, with Hilal's model sustaining by converting resource rents into security guarantees for allied clans.

Controversies, Accusations, and Defenses

Claims of Atrocities in Darfur

Musa Hilal, as a prominent leader of militias, has faced accusations from the of responsibility for atrocities in , including violations of international humanitarian and law, stemming from his command of Arab militias targeting non-Arab communities such as the Fur, Masalit, and Zaghawa tribes during the early conflict. A February 13, 2004, memo from a local government office directed security units to support "mujahideen and volunteers" under Hilal's command, facilitating militia operations accused of widespread civilian attacks, village burnings, looting, and killings as part of a against Sudan Liberation Army rebels. On September 28, 2005, approximately 400 Arab militias, linked to Hilal, attacked villages in including Aro Sharrow, Acho, and Gozmena, with Hilal reportedly present during the assault on the Aro Sharrow internally displaced persons camp; these raids involved killings and displacement driven partly by a personal blood feud following the death of Hilal's son in a Liberation Army attack on Shareia. has described Hilal as the "poster child for atrocities in ," attributing to his militias—such as the "Liwa al-Jammous" (Buffalo Brigade)—a central role in campaigns from 2002 to 2005, encompassing mass executions, rapes, and destruction of over 400 villages in . The U.S. State Department identified Hilal as one of six individuals most responsible for the Darfur genocide, citing his orchestration of violence that contributed to hundreds of thousands of deaths and millions displaced through systematic targeting of non-Arab farmers. These claims portray Hilal's forces as ground executors of government-backed operations, though no arrest warrant has been issued against him personally, unlike Sudanese President .

Counterarguments and Contextual Realities

Hilal has repeatedly denied personal command over atrocities attributed to militias, portraying himself instead as a tribal mobilizing Arab communities for against rebel incursions and attacks on pastoralists. In interviews, he rejected characterizations of , framing militia actions as protective responses to aggression from non-Arab groups aligned with insurgents like the Sudan Liberation Army, which initiated hostilities by targeting police stations and military outposts on February 26, 2003. Supporters and associated tribal leaders argue that Hilal's forces operated as ad hoc tribal police under government direction to restore order amid an , not as perpetrators of systematic , emphasizing that he lacked formal military command structures and that excesses stemmed from decentralized tribal feuds rather than centralized orders. Arab representatives, including Hilal, condemned the April 2005 UN Security Council Resolution 1593 referring cases to the ICC as politically biased, claiming it ignored rebel war crimes—such as executions and village burnings documented in and Zaghawa areas—and served Western agendas to delegitimize Sudan's sovereignty. Underlying the accusations are longstanding intertribal rivalries in , where competition for scarce pasture, water, and between nomadic herders (e.g., Mahamid and Rizeigat) and sedentary non- farmers (e.g., and Masalit) has fueled recurrent clashes since at least the , intensified by droughts in the and that displaced over 100,000 people and eroded traditional hakura land rights. These dynamics, rather than premeditated extermination, drove escalations, with both sides resorting to arms after state neglect left local disputes unresolved; for instance, pre-2003 and by Fur youth prompted counter-mobilization, creating cycles of retaliation independent of Khartoum's later involvement. While and UN reports attribute widespread village destructions (over 400 by mid-2004) primarily to joint government-militia operations, defenders contend such documentation relies heavily on displaced non-Arab testimonies, underrepresenting Arab casualties from rebel ambushes—estimated at thousands—and overlooks how insurgents exploited ethnic divides to recruit farmers against herders. Hilal's subsequent with the regime in 2008, including disarmament resistance and formation of the Revolutionary Awakening Council, further underscores his prioritization of tribal autonomy over blind loyalty, suggesting accusations served to consolidate central control rather than address mutual accountability. This context reveals a multifaceted civil strife, where resource scarcity and weak amplified localized vendettas into broader , complicating singular villain narratives. Musa Hilal was arrested by Sudanese authorities on November 26, 2017, in on charges including undermining the state and weapons possession, but he was released following a presidential issued on March 10, 2021, by 's interim Sovereign Council, which restored his freedom of movement and political activities within the country. This domestic did not affect his international legal standing, as has historically resisted external judicial interference in Darfur-related matters. Under 1672 (2006), Hilal has been subject to targeted sanctions since April 25, 2006, designating him for his role as of the Jalul Tribe and alleged support for militia activities in ; these measures include an asset freeze and a global travel ban, enforced by UN member states. The U.S. Department of the Treasury's (OFAC) has similarly listed him on its Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) list since 2006, prohibiting U.S. persons from transactions with him and freezing his assets under the Sudanese Sanctions Regulations, with the designation active as of October 2025. sanctions mirror the UN regime, maintaining asset freezes and travel restrictions without delisting. No arrest warrant has been issued against Hilal by the International Criminal Court (ICC), distinguishing him from other Darfur-era figures such as former Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir or Janjaweed leader Ali Kushayb; the ICC's focus on Darfur stems from the UN Security Council's 2005 referral, but Hilal has not been indicted despite investigations into related atrocities. These international measures persist amid Sudan's non-cooperation with the ICC and ongoing civil conflict, with no reported amendments or removals to Hilal's sanctions as of October 2025, reflecting sustained concerns over his tribal militia influence despite domestic rehabilitation.

Assessments of Impact and Legacy

Achievements in Tribal Mobilization and Security

Musa Hilal mobilized Arab tribes in , particularly the Mahamid subclan of the Rizeigat, to form the Sudanese Revolutionary Awakening Council (RAC) in January 2014, following his defection from the National Congress Party government. This organization unified disparate tribal militias under a structured framework, asserting control over key localities including Kutum, Kabkabiya, and Saraf Omra, where it established parallel and apparatuses amid ongoing rebel insurgencies and central government weaknesses. By leveraging tribal loyalties and resources such as gold mines, the RAC developed an estimated force of several thousand fighters, enabling sustained territorial defense against non-Arab rebel groups like the Sudan Liberation Movement factions. In providing security, Hilal's RAC maintained relative stability in controlled enclaves by patrolling border areas and countering incursions, including free movement across North and frontiers from strongholds like Mistiriyah. This tribal-based security model filled vacuums left by strained (SAF) deployments, deterring banditry and low-level insurgencies through localized enforcement rather than reliance on distant national troops. Supporters credit the RAC with reducing inter-tribal skirmishes in Arab-dominated zones by enforcing customary , though independent verification remains limited due to restricted access. During the SAF-RSF civil war starting April 2023, Hilal aligned the RAC explicitly with the SAF, refusing integration into the RSF and contributing fighters equipped via SAF airdrops of arms and funding. In November 2024, RAC forces reinforced SAF defenses in Al-Dabbah against RSF advances, while a September 2025 agreement with SAF-allied joint movements formed a new unified military unit, enhancing coordinated operations in . Hilal publicly asserted in February 2025 that RSF forces were at their "weakest point," attributing this to RAC and SAF pressures that disrupted RSF supply lines and territorial gains in northern sectors. Additionally, a September 2023 reconciliation initiative under Hilal's auspices aimed to integrate non-aligned tribal elements, bolstering SAF-aligned mobilization. These efforts have positioned the RAC as a key tribal bulwark, sustaining SAF influence in despite broader battlefield setbacks.

Criticisms and Broader Consequences

Musa Hilal's leadership of militias during the conflict from 2003 onward has drawn widespread condemnation for facilitating systematic atrocities, including mass killings, , and targeting non-Arab ethnic groups such as the Fur, Masalit, and Zaghawa. panels and investigations attribute these acts—resulting in approximately 300,000 deaths and over 2.7 million displacements—to coordinated operations between Hilal's Arab tribal forces and Sudanese government regulars, with evidence from survivor testimonies, of destroyed villages, and intercepted communications. Hilal has denied direct personal responsibility, claiming actions were defensive responses to rebel attacks and executed under state directives, though he acknowledged logistical support from in interviews. Critics, including international sanctions bodies, argue that Hilal's —exemplified by his 2021 pardon by Sudan's transitional authorities despite prior arrest on domestic charges—undermines efforts at and emboldens similar non-state actors, as evidenced by the lack of prosecutions for Darfur-era crimes despite International Criminal Court referrals for related figures. His Revolutionary Awakening Council (RAC), formed after breaking from the Bashir regime in 2014, has faced accusations of perpetuating ethnic tensions through tribal mobilizations that prioritize Arab supremacist narratives, clashing with rival groups like the (RSF) and non-Arab rebels. The broader ramifications of Hilal's influence extend to Sudan's ongoing civil war since April 2023, where his RAC's alignment with the (SAF) against the RSF introduces additional fragmentation, turning localized disputes into multi-factional battlegrounds that complicate ceasefires and aid delivery. Control of gold-rich sites like Jebel Amer mines—seized by RAC forces in 2015—has generated illicit revenues estimated at $50 million annually through networks, funding armament and recruitment while depriving the state of resources and incentivizing resource-based predation over . This warlord economy, rooted in Hilal's model of tribal militias as profit-driven entities, sustains cycles of violence, ethnic partitioning of territory, and economic distortion, with 's output representing up to 50% of Sudan's gold production amid the conflict. Hilal's activities have also eroded prospects for regional stability by exemplifying how unchecked militia autonomy spills into cross-border dynamics, including arms proliferation and flows into and , while deterring investment in reconstruction due to persistent insecurity. The entrenchment of such actors perpetuates a patronage system where tribal loyalty trumps national institutions, prolonging Sudan's fragmentation and hindering transitions to civilian rule, as seen in failed efforts post-2019.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.