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Rizeigat tribe
Rizeigat tribe
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Rizeigat
الرزيقات
Rizeigat warrior
EthnicityBaggara Arab
LocationDarfur (Sudan) or Republic of Chad
Population400,000
Branches
  • Mahamid
  • Mahariya
  • Nawaiba
  • Irayqat (Northern Rizeigat)
  • Atayfat (Northern Rizeigat)
LanguageSudanese Arabic or Chadian Arabic
ReligionSunni Islam

The Rizeigat (also spelled Rizigat, Rezeigat, and in standard Arabic, Rizayqat) are a Muslim and an Arab tribe of the nomadic Baggara people predominantly in Sudan's Darfur region and Chad. The Rizeigat belong to the greater Baggara Arabs fraternity of Darfur and Chad, and speak both Sudanese and Chadian Arabic. They are primarily nomadic herders and their journeys are dependent upon the seasons of the year. They are a branch of the Juhayna group. They are divided into the Abbala (camel-herding) Rizeigat, who live in northern Darfur and Chad, and the Baggara who inhabit south-east Darfur. In turn they are divided into several large clans, notably the Mahamid, Mahariya and Nawaiba. The ecological differences between the north and south of Sudan allowed for two different types of nomadism to evolve: camel herders in the north and cattle herders in the south. They are a substantial part of the Janjaweed turned Rapid Support Forces.

The Baggara Rizeigat backed the Sudanese government during the conflict with the SPLA. They formed the Murahileen, mounted raiders that attacked southern villages to loot valuables and slaves.[1] During the Second Sudanese Civil War thousands of Dinka women and children were abducted and subsequently enslaved by members of the Messiria and Rizeigat tribes. An unknown number of children from the Nuba tribe were similarly abducted and enslaved.[2]

In the Darfur conflict the Abbala Rizeigat were instrumental to the Sudanese government's counterinsurgency campaign and gained notoriety as part of the Janjaweed militia.[3] Musa Hilal of the Mahamid, and Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo aka Hemedti of the Mahariya are the two most prominent leaders.

Northern Rizeigat

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Baggara belt
Baggara belt.

The Northern Rizeigat are Arab nomads who herd camels. The northern Rizeigat have the Mahamid, Mahariya and Nuwaiba sections in common with the southern Rizeigat but there are two other sections that are solely Abbala - these are the Atayfat and the Irayqat.[4] The Northern Rizeigat are traditionally found in Northern Darfur and in Eastern Chad, around Arada[5] in the Wadi Fira region (formerly known as the Biltine prefecture), but have migrated throughout Darfur from Northern Darfur and Eastern Chad, in particular to West Darfur. They possess no Dar (tribal homeland) in Darfur unlike their Southern cousins,[6] only Damra - temporary settlements allocated to Arab nomads within land under the jurisdiction of other tribes.[7]

Camels

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Camels are at the center of status and identity. Ownership of camels is directly related to the power of the tribe and defines the nomads relationships to land, resources, and farmers. Owning camels has produced systems that allowed for a symbiotic relationship between the nomads and settled farmers. However, certain pressures have negatively affected this livelihood. These range from population growth and increases in farming (including associated economic and commercial agriculture) to climate change and restrictive legislation. This challenged their lifestyle and led to feeding competition between the nomads and farmers, which shepherds in inevitable conflict.[8]

Education

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Power is closely linked to education and it fuels how they understand themselves, their status, and attaining power. The nomads are aware of their lack of education and therefore influence. This leads to a desire for education which pressures them to convert to a sedentary lifestyle with the idea of making education more accessible.[8]

Southern Rizeigat

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They are cattle herders and live in East Darfur with their tribal capital at Ed Daein, under the authority of the Madibbo family.

The Baggara Rizeigat were a constant thorn for the Fur Sultans, residing in south-east Darfur. The sultans had never been able to bring the Baggara tribes under their control, the Rizeigat particularly were experts at guerrilla warfare suited to their homeland and used space and time to draw the Fur forces into a series of disasters.[9] German explorer Gustav Nachtigal who was in Darfur in the 19th century, documented in detail the failure of the 18 military campaigns sent against the Rizeigat in the mid 19th century by Fur Sultan Muhammad al-Husayn in his 35-year reign.[10]

The Baggara Rizeigat played a major role in the Mahdist revolt in Darfur. After a leadership dispute that led to the removal of Madibbo Ali as chief of the tribe, he went East and joined up with the Mahdi who then sent him back to Darfur to raise a rebellion in Southern Darfur against the Turco-Egyptian administration which he did successfully as he won several victories against government forces and gained support from the Berti, Habbaniya and Beni Halba tribes. In 1882, the governor of Darfur, Slatin Pasha assembled a force made up of 2,000 regular troops along with a support of 7,00 irregulars from among sections of the Birgid, Zaghawa, Messiria, Beigo, and others hostile to the local elites who aligned themselves to the Mahdist movement such as Madibbu Ali. This force was decisively defeated by Madibbo Ali's Rizeigat and allies.[11] In 1883, Slatin Pasha surrendered to Madibbo Ali.

See also

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Notes

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Rizeigat are a large tribe of the Baggara pastoralists, predominantly inhabiting the region of and eastern , where they maintain a nomadic or semi-nomadic lifestyle centered on herding camels and . As Muslims speaking , they represent the most populous and influential group in , with origins tracing to migrations from the into the starting in the , followed by southward expansion into and by the . The tribe divides into Northern Rizeigat (Abbala), who are herders migrating between and without a fixed tribal , and Southern Rizeigat (Baggara proper), herders with more sedentary tendencies and recognized under customary native administration. Northern subgroups include the Mahamid, Mahariya, and Nuwaiba clans, led by figures such as nazirs who govern through traditional structures amid marginalization from formal . Economically reliant on for livelihoods tied to arid ecology, the Rizeigat have faced pressures from , land competition, and shifts disrupting migration corridors, contributing to recurrent conflicts with non-Arab farmers and rival Arab tribes like the Missiriya. Subgroups, particularly the Mahariya under Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo () and Mahamid under , have played pivotal roles in armed militias, including the during the insurgency and the in ongoing Sudanese warfare, exacerbating inter-Arab clashes that have resulted in thousands of deaths and displacements independent of the broader north-south ethnic framing often emphasized in external analyses.

Origins and History

Early Origins and Migration

The Rizeigat, a subgroup of the Baggara nomadic pastoralists, originated from tribes that migrated into from the via and the Valley during the medieval era. Initial waves of these camel-nomadic reached northern by the , gradually intermingling with local African populations and shifting toward cattle herding as they encountered suitable environments. This transition formed the distinctive Baggara cultural complex, blending linguistic and Islamic traditions with indigenous African practices in . Further migrations between the 14th and 17th centuries propelled Rizeigat ancestors southward into the zones of and , driven by the pursuit of seasonal pastures, water sources, and opportunities amid expanding trade routes and political instabilities in the corridor. These movements were part of broader Arab dispersals, with Rizeigat clans forming loose confederations that emphasized mobility and kinship ties for survival in arid grasslands. Northern Rizeigat branches retained stronger camel-based nomadism from earlier phases, while southern groups intensified cattle reliance, reflecting adaptive responses to ecological gradients. By the late medieval period, Rizeigat migrations east and south positioned them as influential actors in western Sudan's pastoral economy, predating formal integration into the Sultanate established in the . Genetic and oral histories indicate a hybrid ancestry, with self-ascribed patrilineages coexisting alongside maternal African lineages from intermarriage during these expansions.

Settlement in Darfur and Integration

The Rizeigat, a of Arab pastoralist clans belonging to the broader Baggara grouping, began migrating into the Sultanate from the west—primarily regions encompassing modern-day and adjacent Sahelian areas—during the mid-18th century. This influx formed part of a larger wave of Arab tribal movements into the region, driven by pastoral expansion and opportunities in the fertile southern peripheries of the Fur-dominated sultanate. The Keira sultans, seeking to bolster alliances and control over nomadic groups, granted the Baggara Rizeigat—cattle-herding southern subgroups—jurisdiction over extensive southeastern territories, establishing defined dars (tribal lands) that formalized their presence and resource access. Southern Rizeigat integrated through this administrative recognition, appointing nazirs (paramount chiefs) who mediated tribute payments to the sultanate and regulated seasonal routes (marahil) alongside sedentary farmers. Northern Rizeigat subgroups, primarily Abbala nomads, remained more mobile without equivalent fixed dars, relying on fluid alliances and north-south migrations for , which positioned them as peripheral actors in early sultanate politics. Integration involved pragmatic accommodations, such as negotiated rights and occasional intermarriages with local African groups like the , fostering hybrid cultural elements while preserving and Islamic practices. However, underlying resource competition persisted, with pastoral incursions occasionally straining relations with agriculturalists. By the , under Anglo-Egyptian rule (post-1898 ), colonial native administration reinforced Rizeigat by confirming nazirships—e.g., for southern leader Said Madibo—and allocating hawakir (sub-tribal reserves) totaling over 20,000 square kilometers in southern for Southern Rizeigat. This era saw partial sedentarization attempts, including limited cultivation and trade in , integrating them into regional economies via markets in towns like . Post-independence (1956), state policies oscillated between co-optation and marginalization, with Rizeigat nazirs influencing land tenure amid population pressures; yet, nomadic traditions endured, complicating full assimilation amid recurrent droughts that prompted southward shifts of northern clans starting in the 1970s. Overall, integration hinged on tribal governance balancing mobility with territorial claims, though it sowed seeds for later inter-ethnic frictions over shrinking pastures.

Demographics and Geography

Population Estimates and Distribution


The Rizeigat tribe, a nomadic Baggara Arab group, is estimated to number approximately 429,000 people in Sudan, with all members residing within the country according to available profiles. Other assessments suggest a higher figure of 562,000 individuals. These estimates account for the challenges of enumerating nomadic populations, which rely on ethnographic surveys rather than comprehensive censuses, and may not fully capture recent displacements from conflicts in the region.
The tribe's primary distribution centers in Sudan's region, where they form the largest and most dominant Arab tribal . Northern Rizeigat, known as Abbala and specializing in , predominantly occupy northern , with seasonal migrations extending into adjacent areas of . In contrast, Southern Rizeigat, who focus on herding as Baggara, are concentrated in southeastern , including parts of what is now East state. This division reflects ecological adaptations, with northern groups suited to arid economies and southern ones to wetter zones along migration corridors. Ongoing violence, including inter-tribal clashes and broader Sudanese conflicts, has led to significant internal displacement among Rizeigat communities, particularly in , altering traditional distributions and concentrating populations in urban peripheries or camps. Precise post-conflict figures remain elusive due to limited access and fluid mobility patterns.

Territorial Divisions: Northern and Southern Rizeigat

The Rizeigat tribe divides into Northern (Abbala) and Southern (Baggara) subgroups, differentiated by specialization, mobility patterns, and historical . Northern Rizeigat primarily herd camels in arid northern zones, maintaining high nomadism, while Southern Rizeigat focus on in more humid southeastern areas, with semi-nomadic practices supplemented by limited cultivation. These divisions stem from 18th-century migrations, where southern branches settled under Sultanate jurisdiction, whereas northern remnants persisted as desert-edge nomads subject to provincial oversight without autonomous territorial grants. Northern Rizeigat occupy State, with seasonal migrations extending into , , and eastern , lacking a designated tribal homeland (dar) under . Their camel-based relies on dry-season routes (marahil) southward for and , but 1970s–1980s droughts prompted permanent southward shifts, intensifying resource pressures without formal land rights. Politically marginalized, they hold no nazirate (paramount chieftaincy) recognition from the British colonial era (1916–1956), contributing to disputes over grazing access. In contrast, Southern Rizeigat control a recognized homeland in southeastern , centered in State around Ed Daein, formalized as Dar Baggara through Fur Sultanate awards and British nazirates. Cattle herding dominates their economy, with historical stability disrupted by northern influxes and land enclosures since the 1970s, yet they retain stronger customary authority under leaders like Nazir Saeed Mahmoud Ibrahim Musa Madibu. This territorial security has afforded greater political inclusion compared to their northern counterparts. Inter-group tensions arise from overlapping migrations, as northern routes traverse southern zones, sparking clashes over points and pastures—exemplified by conflicts in the 1976–1982 period and a 2010 with allied Misseriya groups that killed approximately 700 in four months. Southern Rizeigat's established claims have positioned them as less receptive to northern encroachments, exacerbating intra-Arab rivalries amid broader land scarcity.

Social Structure and Culture

Tribal Organization and Leadership

The Rizeigat tribe operates under a hierarchical native administration system inherited from the Anglo-Egyptian colonial period, featuring a called the nazir at the apex, who oversees tribal , resource distribution, migration coordination, and conflict mediation. This structure extends downward through omdas responsible for sub-tribal divisions and sheikhs managing local camps, villages, or clans, enforcing and socio-economic norms. The nazir wields significant authority, often hereditary, but decisions may involve consultation with subordinate leaders or, in cases like deputy elections, broader assemblies of sheikhs. Divided into Northern (Abbala camel pastoralists) and Southern (Baggara cattle herders) confederations, each maintains semi-autonomous leadership with its own nazir and clan-based hierarchies, reflecting ecological and migratory differences across Darfur. Among the Northern Rizeigat's Mahamid clan, Musa Hilal serves as nazir, exemplifying how such roles intersect with broader security dynamics in North Darfur. Southern Baggara subgroups, including the Mahariya, similarly feature clan nazirs and sheikhs who adjudicate inter-pastoral disputes over water and grazing lands. This organization functions as a decentralized "mini-state," binding members through obligations and customary , though colonial impositions and post-independence centralization have eroded some traditional powers in favor of state-aligned appointees. In practice, nazirs and sheikhs mobilize followers for defense or alliances, as seen in historical leadership transitions like the 19th-century ousting of Madibbo Ali amid Mahdist influences.

Cultural Practices, Religion, and Daily Life

The Rizeigat, as a subgroup of the , adhere to , having embraced the faith since at least the thirteenth century, with practices including the Five Pillars: , ritual prayer, almsgiving, , and pilgrimage to when feasible. Their religious observance integrates with tribal governance, where customary law draws from principles but incorporates local pastoralist norms, such as over grazing rights and water access. Burials orient toward , and attire conforms to Islamic prescriptions, reflecting a fusion of Arab-Islamic identity with Sahelian adaptations. Cultural practices emphasize as a core tradition, with cattle herding dictating , wealth accumulation, and seasonal rituals tied to migration cycles for and . Social dances and gatherings occur, though elders often maintain reticence in participation, underscoring values of modesty and tribal decorum common among Baggara groups. and customs align with broader Baggara patterns, prioritizing alliances between lineages to secure herds and territories, though specific Rizeigat rituals remain undocumented in detail beyond general Arab Sudanese norms of and family consent. Oral histories and genealogies reinforce Juhayna Arab descent, perpetuating a moral framework where to guests and to kin supersede individual pursuits. Daily life revolves around semi-nomadic routines, particularly among Northern Rizeigat, who traverse Darfur's arid zones in search of seasonal , as the primary economic and cultural anchor while engaging in minimal opportunistic cultivation during riverine phases. Journeys follow annual patterns dictated by rainfall and availability, with families relocating camps multiple times yearly, managing health, milking, and in hides or at local markets. A minority have transitioned to semi-settled existence in towns or farming hamlets, prompted by conflict disruptions and gaps that limit modern opportunities, yet core identities persist through herd and tribal consultations under leaders like omdas. Women typically handle dairy processing and household mobility, while men oversee and defense against resource competitors.

Economy and Livelihood

Pastoralism and Livestock Management

The Rizeigat tribe, classified among the Baggara Arabs, relies predominantly on nomadic and transhumant pastoralism for livelihood, with the Southern Rizeigat emphasizing cattle herding of the large-humped zebu Baggara breed, alongside sheep (often cross-breeds like banat serariy), goats, camels, and donkeys. Northern Rizeigat subgroups, by contrast, prioritize camel herding, reflecting adaptations to drier northern terrains in Darfur. Herd compositions are mixed but species-specific, with cattle herds typically comprising mostly females for milk production and market sales; reported sizes range from 50 to over 1,000 cattle per herder, 20 to 600 sheep, 40 to 50 goats, and smaller numbers of camels (up to 100) and donkeys (4 to 30). Dogs serve as guards, while shepherds manage daily security and herding. Livestock mobility follows a seasonal north-south pattern driven by rainfall, availability, and water access, spanning low-rainfall savannahs in and adjacent regions. During the rainy season (kharif, May to October), herds migrate northward up to 400 kilometers or more to zones like Qoz, Atmur, and Dahara for fresh pastures, achieving daily averages of 10 to 20 kilometers. In the (seif and damara, December to April), southward returns target floodplains and riverine areas such as Bahr el-Arab and Boroya, where herds spend 39% to 60% of the year; total annual traversals can exceed 1,373 kilometers in under three months along delineated routes like Hawer-Dar Taaisha (420 kilometers) or Totah (220 kilometers). These patterns, historically pure nomadism for camels but for and sheep, enable risk mitigation against and but face disruptions from conflicts and mechanized farming. Management strategies emphasize flexibility and collective oversight under tribal hierarchies (sheikhs, omdas, nazirs), enforcing customary dar or hakura tenure for open group access to pastures while restricting outsiders. Herds are split by species—camels and sheep separated in summer for differing needs—and supplemented with groundnut cakes or during forage scarcity. Scouts assess routes for , , and security, often deviating from official corridors (e.g., Almurhal Alwastani) to evade tribal clashes, supported by joint committees (lagna’ mushtarika) for negotiations. Government interventions since 2005, including route demarcations totaling 1,443 kilometers in , aim to formalize paths and compensate farmers, though enforcement varies and cross-border movements into persist for dry-season grazing.

Supplementary Economic Activities and Modern Adaptations

In addition to their primary reliance on , members of the Rizeigat tribe engage in limited rain-fed , cultivating crops such as and millet during the , particularly when migratory routes bring herds near wadis or riverine areas in southern . This supplementary farming is opportunistic and minimal, often yielding scanty harvests due to the tribe's nomadic priorities and arid conditions, serving mainly to buffer against losses from or . trade also supplements income, with Rizeigat herders exchanging , camels, and products at seasonal markets in towns like and Ed Daein, facilitating connections to broader Sudanese and cross-border networks. Modern adaptations have been shaped by , population pressures, and protracted conflicts, prompting diversification beyond traditional . Labor migration to urban centers like or abroad provides remittances, which many households use to purchase feed or invest in smaller herds, though this exposes families to risks of urban and skill mismatches. Collection and sale of natural resources, including firewood, charcoal, and wild gums, has become more prevalent, especially among displaced groups in internally displaced persons (IDP) camps around , generating but contributing to . Artisanal represents a significant contemporary shift, particularly in northern Darfur's Jebel Amer region, where Rizeigat individuals participate in informal extraction using rudimentary tools, drawn by high returns amid disruptions. This activity boomed post-2012 with industrial discoveries, but it has fueled inter-tribal violence, as seen in clashes between Rizeigat and Bani over mine control, resulting in hundreds of deaths and displacement. The (RSF), led by Rizeigat figure Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo (), have consolidated economic gains from , establishing processing networks and routes that benefit affiliated tribal members, though revenues are often channeled through structures rather than broad . These adaptations reflect causal pressures from resource scarcity and insecurity, yet they perpetuate cycles of , with mining's environmental hazards and conflict linkages undermining long-term .

Involvement in Conflicts

Pre-Modern Inter-Tribal and Resource Disputes

The Baggara Rizeigat, migrating eastward into during the mid-18th century as part of broader Arab pastoralist movements from the west, settled primarily in southeastern without full subjugation by the Fur Sultanate. The Fur sultans granted them territorial recognition in areas of their choosing but failed to impose central control, fostering ongoing resistance and that positioned the Rizeigat as a persistent challenge to sultanate authority over land and tribute collection. This dynamic reflected deeper inter-tribal power imbalances, where nomadic herders evaded the administrative and fiscal demands of the sedentary Fur state, leading to sporadic skirmishes over enforcement of migration routes and access. Resource disputes centered on the Rizeigat's cattle-based , which necessitated seasonal southward movements for dry-season and along riverine corridors like the Bahr al-Arab (Kiir River), often encroaching on farmlands and causing crop damage. Such incursions triggered retaliatory raids and negotiations under oversight, as the sultans mediated to prevent escalation while protecting essential to their economy. Northern Abbala Rizeigat clans, remaining more nomadic under loose provincial , similarly clashed with subjects over well and in drier northern zones, exacerbating tensions without formalized territorial concessions. Inter-Arab tribal frictions among Baggara groups, including the Rizeigat, arose from competition for prime grazing amid environmental variability, with early nazir () lineages like the Madibbo of the Mahariya emerging by the early to adjudicate internal disputes over herd territories. These pre-colonial patterns, rooted in ecological pressures and incomplete state integration, set precedents for later escalations, though traditional conferences—backed by sultanate or tribal —often contained through diya (blood money) payments and migratory pacts. The unsubjugated status of the Baggara Rizeigat, in particular, perpetuated a cycle of low-level raiding and defiance, undermining efforts to monopolize oversight in peripheral zones.

North-South Sudanese Civil Wars and Murahileen

The , as a prominent Baggara Arab group, formed a core component of the Murahileen militias mobilized by the Sudanese government during the (1983–2005) to counter the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA). These nomadic horsemen, drawn from western Sudanese tribes including the Rizeigat and Misseriya, received arms such as AK-47s and G3 rifles directly from authorities starting in the mid-1980s, enabling low-cost proxy warfare against southern insurgents and civilians. Their operations focused on Bahr el Ghazal and southern , where resource competition over grazing lands and water exacerbated ethnic tensions between pastoralist and sedentary Dinka farmers. Murahileen raids systematically targeted Dinka villages, involving cattle looting, village burnings, and abductions of women and children for enslavement, which contributed to the famines of 1988 and 1998 by disrupting agricultural production and displacing populations. In 1987 alone, such militias were responsible for displacing over 1 million people in southern Sudan through these depredations, with estimates of thousands killed in ambushes and reprisal attacks. The Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) integrated Murahileen units into broader offensives, combining them with regular troops and later Popular Defence Forces volunteers, particularly in joint operations that cleared SPLA-held areas but prioritized civilian targets over military ones. Rizeigat participation stemmed from economic incentives, including loot distribution and land grants promised by the government, amid longstanding Baggara-Dinka rivalries intensified by drought and SPLA expansion into traditional migration corridors. By the early 1990s, these militias had evolved into semi-formal auxiliaries, with Rizeigat leaders coordinating with SAF intelligence for intelligence and logistics, though their autonomy led to uncoordinated atrocities that strained government control. The Comprehensive Peace Agreement of 2005 curtailed formal Murahileen operations, but residual tribal militias persisted in border areas, influencing post-war dynamics in Abyei and South Kordofan. Reports from human rights organizations document over 10,000 slave abductions linked to these groups between 1986 and 2002, underscoring the scale of civilian victimization.

Darfur Conflict and Janjaweed Militias

The Darfur conflict commenced in February 2003 when the Sudan Liberation Movement and launched attacks on government installations, citing ethnic marginalization and economic neglect by the regime. In retaliation, President Omar al-Bashir's administration armed nomadic Arab militias, including the , to suppress the . The core of these forces comprised camel-herding Abbala from the Mahamid and Mahariya sub-clans of the Northern , based in northern and extending into . Sudanese recruited, trained, and supplied these militias with weapons, vehicles, and monthly stipends—such as 300,000 Sudanese pounds for mounted fighters—while granting operational . Operating in structured brigades alongside regular army units, Rizeigat-led conducted coordinated assaults on non-Arab , Masalit, and Zaghawa villages, burning homes, slaughtering civilians, looting livestock, and committing rapes. investigations recorded over 770 civilian deaths in 14 attacks in the Dar Masalit region alone from September 2003 to February 2004, with systematic village destruction aimed at preventing rebel support and enabling Arab settlement. Prominent Northern Rizeigat figures, including Mahamid leader and Mahariya's Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo (later known as ), directed these operations, drawing on prior militia experience from southern Sudan's civil wars. The Shattiya sub-clan of the Rizeigat also participated in raids, such as the October 2004 assault on , armed by the government to secure grazing lands amid rebel interference. These actions, rooted in longstanding resource competition between nomadic herders and sedentary farmers—intensified by —escalated into ethnic targeting, displacing over 2 million people and killing tens of thousands by mid-2004. International observers, including the , documented the joint government-militia campaign as constituting and , though debates persist on the intent behind the violence. The U.S. government labeled the atrocities in 2004, leading to the International Criminal Court's 2009 of al-Bashir for war crimes, , and . Despite a 2004 and pledges to disband the , attacks continued, with militias integrated into formal structures like Border Guards, preserving Rizeigat influence in counterinsurgency efforts.

Role in Contemporary Sudanese Politics

Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and Hemedti's Leadership

Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, known as , born around 1974, hails from the Mahariya subclan of the Rizeigat tribe in , near the border, where his family engaged in herding. He rose to prominence during the Darfur conflict as a Janjaweed militia leader, leveraging tribal networks to recruit fighters primarily from Rizeigat Arab pastoralist communities. In 2013, Sudanese President formalized the (RSF) as a unit by integrating elements, appointing Hemedti as its commander to bolster government control amid renewed rebellions in and beyond. The RSF's core composition draws heavily from Rizeigat tribesmen, particularly the Mahariya branch, with Hemedti's holding key command positions, enabling tight-knit tribal loyalty and rapid mobilization. This structure transformed the RSF from irregular militias into a disciplined force of tens of thousands by the late 2010s, funded through gold mining operations in and deployments as mercenaries in starting in 2015. Under Hemedti's leadership, the RSF participated in the overthrow of Bashir, securing him a vice-presidential role in the transitional Sovereign Council, which elevated Rizeigat influence in Khartoum's power dynamics. Hemedti's command emphasizes economic incentives and tribal patronage, distributing RSF revenues from resource extraction to subclan leaders, reinforcing Rizeigat cohesion while expanding recruitment beyond Darfur. By 2023, tensions over RSF integration into the Sudanese Armed Forces escalated into civil war, with Hemedti positioning the group as a counterweight to army dominance, drawing on Rizeigat pastoralist grievances over land and marginalization. In August 2025, Hemedti was sworn in as head of a parallel government in RSF-controlled areas, formalizing its political ambitions amid ongoing conflict. This leadership has centralized authority within Rizeigat networks but sparked intra-Arab rivalries, such as with the Mahamid subclan led by Musa Hilal.

Recent Developments in the 2023 Civil War

The (RSF), predominantly composed of Rizeigat tribesmen under the leadership of Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo (), a Rizeigat from the Mahariya subclan, have played a central role in the escalation of the 2023 , particularly in where they have consolidated control over key territories including much of by mid-2023. Following the outbreak of hostilities on April 15, 2023, between the RSF and (), Rizeigat recruits have been instrumental in RSF offensives, with reports of intensified training and mobilization of Arab youth from the tribe in Darfur camps during 2023. This has enabled the RSF to capture urban centers like El Fasher's outskirts by early 2024, amid ongoing clashes that displaced hundreds of thousands. In , RSF forces, drawing heavily from Rizeigat militias, have been implicated in systematic ethnic violence against non-Arab groups such as the Masalit, including mass killings and documented from April 2023 onward, with events in El Geneina resulting in thousands of civilian deaths and described by as and . These atrocities, peaking in mid-2023, involved RSF-allied Arab fighters targeting Masalit neighborhoods, , and , exacerbating inter-tribal resource rivalries rooted in pastoral competition. By 2024, similar patterns emerged in , with RSF advances toward el-Fasher raising fears of renewed massacres, as the group encircled the city and restricted humanitarian access. Internal fractures within the RSF have surfaced by mid-2024, highlighting tensions between the dominant Mahariya Rizeigat leadership and allied tribes like the Misseriya, Sudan's second-largest group, over command structures and spoils of war, leading to localized defections and skirmishes that weakened RSF cohesion in . Trans-border recruitment from Rizeigat clans in and bolstered RSF ranks through 2024, incorporating Sahelian nomads into operations against SAF positions. Politically, Hemedti's RSF announced a parallel government in August 2025, with him sworn in as its head, aiming to administer RSF-held areas including strongholds, amid stalled peace talks and SAF counteroffensives. In January 2025, the imposed sanctions on , citing RSF orchestration of genocidal acts in , including against the Masalit, though both sides have faced accusations of war crimes. By late 2025, RSF control in persisted despite SAF alliances with local non-Arab militias, but ethnic killings and famine risks in besieged areas like el-Fasher underscored the war's attritional nature.

Controversies and Criticisms

Accusations of Atrocities and Ethnic Violence

The Rizeigat tribe, particularly its northern Abbala subgroups such as the Mahamid and Mahariya, formed a core component of the militias mobilized by the Sudanese government during the conflict starting in 2003. These militias, drawn from landless Arab pastoralists including Rizeigat subclans like Irayqat and Ouled Zed, were accused by of systematic attacks on non-Arab communities, including the Fur and Masalit tribes in . Specific incidents involved raids on villages near El Geneina and Habila from October 2003 to January 2004, where fighters burned homes, executed civilians, raped women, and abducted children, contributing to the destruction of hundreds of villages and the displacement of over 750,000 people internally by early 2004. Leaders such as of the Mahamid Rizeigat coordinated these operations, often with government air support, targeting rebel-supporting ethnic groups and resulting in thousands of deaths, including 120 civilians killed in Darok in 2003. In the 2023 Sudanese civil war, (RSF) commanders from the Rizeigat tribe, including of a Rizeigat sub-clan, faced accusations of orchestrating ethnic violence against the Masalit in , particularly in El Geneina from April to November 2023. documented a campaign of involving RSF and allied Rizeigat militias, who used heavy machine guns, mortars, and bulldozers to shell neighborhoods, execute residents, rape civilians, and raze structures, with ethnic slurs like "No Massalit will live here" indicating targeted intent. The estimated 10,000 to 15,000 deaths in El Geneina alone, including over 2,600 confirmed by accounts, with mass graves and of hundreds of thousands toward . Key Rizeigat figures implicated include Amir Massar Abdelrahman Assil, who mobilized fighters and oversaw burials after attacks, and Al-Tijani Karshoum of the Mahamid, who led assaults on Masalit areas in June and July 2023. investigations identified RSF commander Abdul Rahman Juma and brigadier Idriss Hassan, both tied to Rizeigat networks, as directing shelling of Masalit camps like Al Madaris and killings along escape routes, culminating in the June 14 execution of Masalit Khamis Abdallah Abakar. Over 1,000 Masalit were reportedly massacred in Ardamata in November 2023, exacerbating inter-ethnic tensions rooted in land disputes but executed through coordinated militia operations. These actions, described by observers as , echoed earlier patterns but leveraged RSF's formalized structure for greater scale.

Inter-Arab Conflicts and Resource Competition

Inter-Arab conflicts involving the Rizeigat tribe in have frequently arisen from competition over resources, including lands, points, and cattle routes, intensified by , population pressures, and the disruption of traditional tribal systems known as dars. These disputes, occurring among nomadic and semi-nomadic groups such as the Rizeigat's Abbala (camel-herding) and Baggara (cattle-herding) subgroups, have been fueled by the influx of modern weaponry since the , often supplied through government channels or cross-border trade, leading to escalations from localized raids to large-scale battles. Unlike the more publicized -non-Arab , these inter-Arab clashes reflect intra-pastoralist rivalries over access to increasingly scarce rangelands vacated by displaced farmers during broader conflicts. Early notable violence occurred in 1974, when the Mahariya branch of the Rizeigat clashed with the Beni Halba tribe in the Dar Beni Halba area of southern Darfur over grazing rights; the fighting, marked by the use of AK-47 rifles by the Mahariya, resulted in over 200 deaths and highlighted emerging tensions between camel and cattle herders competing for dry-season pastures. In the mid-2000s, following the onset of the Darfur insurgency, resource disputes proliferated: between October 2005 and March 2006, the Nuwaiba subgroup of the Rizeigat fought the Hotiya Arabs near Zalingei in western Darfur over land access, triggered by a rape incident and failed mediation, killing approximately 250 Hotiya and displacing thousands. This was followed by clashes from February to July 2007 in Wadi Bulbul, where Rizeigat fighters led by Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo (Hemedti) battled the Terjem Arabs over cattle raiding and land control, causing around 500 deaths and displacing 50,000 people amid heavy armament from government sources. The most intense period of inter-Arab fighting emerged in 2010, as pastoralist rivalries evolved into sustained battles between Abbala and Baggara groups; in South Darfur's Kass area from February to June, the Missiriya Arabs clashed with the Rizeigat over resource control following initial , resulting in approximately 700 deaths—423 Missiriya and 272 Rizeigat—before a UN-brokered in Zalingei. These events underscored the breakdown of customary , with armed militias exploiting power vacuums left by the war. Reconciliation efforts, such as the 2010 Missiriya-Rizeigat pact, have proven fragile, as underlying competition for pastures persists amid climate-induced scarcity. More recent clashes demonstrate the ongoing nature of these resource-driven rivalries; in South Darfur's al-Gereida locality, sporadic fighting between the Rizeigat and Fallata (Fulani-origin nomads integrated into Darfur's Arab pastoral networks) has recurred, including incidents in December 2020 killing or wounding at least 10, January 2021 resulting in 55 deaths and 37 injuries over disputes, and April 2022 claiming 45 lives. Such violence, often involving herder incursions into contested areas, continues to destabilize the region despite intermittent ceasefires, with no comprehensive resolution to the erosion of traditional resource-sharing mechanisms.

Contributions and Mediations

Tribal Diplomacy and Conflict Resolution

The Rizeigat tribe, as one of the dominant pastoralist groups in , employs traditional mechanisms rooted in for internal , typically involving hierarchical native administration structures comprising sheikhs, omdas (sub-chiefs), and nazirs (paramount chiefs). These processes prioritize reconciliation through councils, compensation via diya (blood money), and communal oaths to restore social harmony, often addressing resource-based conflicts over grazing lands and . Such practices draw from broader Darfuri indigenous models like the Judiyya , which emphasizes tribal and elder-led to prevent escalation into . In inter-tribal , Rizeigat leaders frequently act as mediators for conflicts among neighboring groups, leveraging their demographic and political influence. For instance, in July 2014, Rizeigat tribal representatives facilitated a truce between warring Misseriya clans in , supported by national authorities including then-Vice President Hassabo Mohammed Abdel Rahman, to avert broader instability over land disputes. This effort underscored the tribe's role in cross-clan negotiations, where neutral facilitation by larger tribes like the Rizeigat helps enforce agreements through social pressure and shared kinship ties. Prominent Rizeigat figures have continued such initiatives amid ongoing tensions. In September 2023, , nazir of the Mahameed subclan of the Northern Rizeigat and a key tribal authority, announced a reconciliation conference to resolve hostilities between the Beni Halba and Salamat tribes in , aiming to halt cycles of revenge killings tied to pastoral rivalries. Similarly, in October 2023, Hilal led mediation efforts between additional warring factions, highlighting the tribe's strategic use of paramount leadership to broker ceasefires, though outcomes remain fragile due to underlying resource scarcity and armament proliferation. These interventions reflect causal dynamics where tribal diplomacy serves as a pragmatic response to environmental pressures, yet their sustainability is challenged by modern factors like and state marginalization of customary institutions.

Economic and Social Impacts on Darfur

The Rizeigat tribe's pastoralist economy, centered on cattle herding, has fueled resource competition in Darfur's semi-arid environment, where overlapping migration routes with sedentary farmers have triggered clashes over grazing lands and water points, disrupting traditional symbiotic exchanges and contributing to broader economic stagnation. Government policies allocating land unevenly, such as excluding Northern Rizeigat from certain dars in the 1970s, exacerbated these tensions, leading to cycles of banditry and livestock rustling that eroded herders' wealth and local market stability. In inter-Arab conflicts, such as those between Rizeigat Abbala and Missiriya Baggara following the 2006 Darfur Peace Agreement, over 1,000 violent deaths occurred in the first nine months of 2010, with reconciliation agreements imposing diya payments equivalent to USD 3-3.9 million per tribe, straining communal resources and diverting funds from productive investments. Rizeigat involvement in Janjaweed militias during the early 2000s conflict amplified economic devastation through systematic village burnings and cattle looting, destroying food stocks and agricultural infrastructure in areas like Dar Masalit since August 2003, which confined survivors to camps and halted crop cultivation. This industrial-scale plunder, including exports of looted from hubs like , undermined Darfur's livestock sector—a primary source—while displacing over 1 million internally by early 2004, fostering dependency on and collapsing local trade networks. Later, Rizeigat seizures of mines, such as the January 2011 attack on Jebel Amer that killed civilians and ousted Bani Hussein operators, shifted economic power toward but entrenched smuggling losses estimated at USD 700 million annually and fueled further inter-tribal violence over resource rents. By 2013, such militia-led land grabs in Central and targeted fertile wadis for and agriculture, displacing 300,000 non-Arab and rival Arab groups via village destruction verified by , redirecting export revenues but entrenching extortion-based economies. Socially, Rizeigat-linked militias' attacks from mid-2003 onward, including massacres in villages like Mororo (40 killed, August 30, 2003) and Murnei (82 killed, October 9, 2003), precipitated ethnic fragmentation by targeting non-Arab and Masalit communities, eroding trust in traditional inter-ethnic mediation and displacing over 110,000 to by 2004. Inter-tribal Rizeigat clashes, such as the 2005-2006 Nuwaiba-Hotiya fighting and 2007 assaults displacing 50,000 Terjem from 52 villages, fragmented Arab alliances and created new IDP camps like Taiba (housing over 5,000 Hotiya by 2006), weakening kinship structures and amplifying vulnerability to famine. These dynamics persisted into the , with gold mine takeovers like Jebel Amer causing over 800 deaths and 150,000 displacements since January 2011, deepening societal divisions through cycles of revenge and hindering reconciliation efforts reliant on . Overall, the violence has entrenched a legacy of trauma, with confined camp populations facing restricted mobility and persistent insecurity, as evidenced by ongoing RSF recruitment from Rizeigat clans perpetuating dominance over civilian life.

References

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