Biulundo conflict

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Biulundo conflict
Part of Ethnic violence in Apatonia and the Apatonia Civil War
Apatonian Army in Dori.jpg
Apatonian forces prepare for a counterattack on LDF positions in Dori, November 5th, 2021
Date3 September 2017 – ongoing (7 years, 2 months, 3 weeks and 1 day)
Location
Apatonia
Spillovers in Thezu and Unified Sera
Participants
ApatoniaFlag.png Apatonia Federal Forces
Supported by
SeranFlag.jpeg Unified Sera
ApatoniaFlag.png Lukonde Loyalists CoalitionOfCrownAlbatrossUpdated.png CCAMSA Al-Fijar logo 2021.png Lundia Defense Forces
Al-Fijar logo 2021.png Al-Fijar
Strength
150,000 350,000 2,000 72,523
Casualties and losses
12,659 killed, 9,921 wounded 23,129 killed, 37,282 wounded 14 peacekeepers killed, 62 wounded Unknown
90,000 violent deaths
121,000 total deaths (January 2022)
200,000+ civilians have fled Apatonia and 1,100,000+ civilians internally displaced (as of 2021)

The Apatonia Civil War, also known as the Biulundo Conflict, is an ongoing multi-sided civil war in Apatonia between forces of the government, opposition forces, and other rebel factions. Beginning in 2017, the Lundia Defense Forces, an al-Fijar affiliated rebel group in the easternmost province of Lundia, began fighting the federal government under President Asyuer Odoyo. Intially the fighting began as a declaration of separatist intention from the LDF, but evolved into a desire to distance the country from ethnic federalism and ethnic nationalist politics, while some LDF factions wish to form an Islamic caliphate in Apatonia. Due to the onset of the war, a deep humanitarian crisis has developed.

Mlamuli Ngotsha was elected President in 2018, inheriting the conflict and making significant gains against the rebels. Insurgent activity largely declined by the end of 2018 and the conflict stayed restrained to Lundia province in sporadic clashes, until the September 2021 fall of Biulundo to the rebels, which resulted in the Coalition of Crown Albatross Mission in Southern Adula (CCAMSA) sending hundreds of additional peacekeepers to the region. Federal forces began to be pushed back by the end of 2021, and a political crisis between Ngotsha and Prime Minister Michel Lukonde unfolded as Ngotsha suspended Lukonde's powers, delayed elections, and reformed the constitution. Lukonde and his supporters in the National Army subsequently took control of several government offices in the capital of Sifondo. Ngotsha survived an assassination attempt on January 1st 2022. On January 2nd 2022, LDF insurgents attacked multiple international consulates and triggered diplomatic suspensions. On January 17th 2022, Lukonde led a coup that ousted Ngotsha, and on January 23rd the government of Unified Sera declared war on both Lukonde's government and the LDF.

About 120,000 people were estimated to have been killed in the war by January 2022, including notable atrocities such as the 2018 Intupo massacre and the 2021 Dori massacre. More than 200,000 civilians have fled Apatonia, largely to Unified Sera, Timeria, and Austrolis, and more than a million people have been internally displaced. Fighting in the agricultural heartland in the center of the country caused the number of people facing starvation to soar to 4 million, causing famine in 2018 in some areas. The country's economy has also been devastated.

Background

The Apatonia civil war is often characterized as a fight between the central government expanding and dominating peoples of the periphery, raising allegations of marginalization. Kingdoms and great powers based along the coast of the Albarine Sea have fought against the people of inland Apatonia for centuries. Since at least the 18th century, central governments have attempted to regulate and exploit the undeveloped southern and inland Apatonia. Some sources describe the conflict as an ethnoreligious one where the Christian central government's pursuits to impose law on Muslim easterners, with more fundamentalist extremist Muslim groups in the east responding with their own desire to impose sharia law, which led to violence and eventually to the civil war. President Foley Sakzi of Zamastan has pointed to an exploitative governance as the root cause.

When the Albarineans governed Apatonia as a colony they administered the west and east provinces separately. The west was held to be more similar to the other South Adulan colonies – Peoratia, Buckingla, and Vita – while eastern Apatonia was more similar to colonies in Muslim-dominated Zalluabed. Eastern Muslims were prevented from holding positions of power in the West with its South Adulan traditions, and trade was discouraged between the two areas. After decolonization most power was given to the western elites based in Sifondo and Misamba, causing unrest in the east. The Albarineans moved towards granting Apatonian independence, but they failed to give enough power to eastern leaders. Eastern Apatonian leaders weren't even invited to negotiations during the transitional period in the 1950s. In the post-colonial government of 1957, the Apatonian Committee only included 6 eastern leaders, though there were some 800 available senior administrative positions.

The war is partially about natural resources. Between the east and the west lie significant oil fields and thus significant foreign interests (the oil revenue is privatized to other international interests). The west wanted to control these resources because they are situated on the edge of the South Adulan desert, which is largely unsuitable for agricultural development. Oil revenues make up about 70% of Apatonia's export earnings, and contribute to the development of the country which, unlike the east, does not depend on international aid. Due to numerous tributaries of major rivers, access to the coast, and heavier precipitation in the west, they have superior water access and fertile land.

There has also been a significant amount of death from warring tribes in the east. Most of the conflict has been between Lundi and the Bui but other ethnic groups have also been involved. These tribal conflicts have remained after independence. For example, in January 2012 3,000 Bui people were massacred by the Lundi.

Course of the conflict

Early fighting (2017-2018)

Stalled Lundia insurgency (2018-2020)

Reuiaso Offensive (2020)

Fall of Lundia (2021)

Thanks to a stalled offensive by government forces, the Lundia Defense Forces were able to reorganize their forces and gather numbers to establish their campaign along the border of Thezu. On April 5th, 2021, government forces flown into the city of Guaiba held off a rebel advance that reached the outskirts of the city, while other units attacked northward from its borders and westward from the city of Kagame, against the besieging rebel forces. This intervention by various groups saved the provincial government and pushed the rebel front lines away from the capital of Biulundo. However, it was ultimately unable to defeat the rebel forces, and the advance threatened to escalate into direct conflict with the provisional defenders. From May until September, the rebels began making notable advancements throughout Lundia province, seizing towns in bloody campaigns that saw brutal massacres and widespread war crimes.

On September 20th, 2021, the eastern city of Biulundo fell to the LDF and the Apatonian government retreated[1]. Two Quetanan and an Arteganan peacekeeper working with the CCA were killed during the capture of the city, and President Ngotsha called on more international support. Over the following weeks in October 2021, more than 800 additional peacekeepers, most of them Quetanan, Zamastanian, and Seran, deployed to Apatonia. On October 24th, the town of Dori was overrun by the LDF, and hundreds of civilians were killed. The province of Lundia subsequently became a defacto LDF state.

As a result of increased violence, Ngotsha clamped down hard on the insurgency, but it came with increased regulation against the civilian government and members of the government. Refugees were aggressively barred from crossing into Unified Sera from Lundia by federal forces, and media was suppressed when internet was cut off nationwide for a week in early November 2021. On November 14th, Ngotsha ammended the constitution to delay already two-year delayed elections for an additional 4 months. Angered by this, Prime Minister Michel Lukonde opposed Ngotsha, but Ngotsha removed Lukonde from his political capability under the accusation of corruption. Thus, on December 28th, army forces loyal to Lukonde marched into Sifondo and created a standoff at the Presidential Residence, Parliament, and other government offices[2].

International involvement (2022)

Assassination attempt, embassy attacks, and coup

Ngotsha reinstated some of Lukonde's power after outcry from the public, but on January 1st 2022 a Lukonde loyalist attempted to assassinate Ngotsha, wounding the President with a knife outside the Residence. Ngotsha survived, and urged calm across the country as tensions continued to mount. On January 2-3, 2022, members of the Al-Fijar-affiliated LDF militia and their supporters assaulted the embassies of Zamastan, Caspiaa, and Unified Sera in Sifondo's Local Government Areas. As the attacks unfolded, contingents of the CCA Peacekeeping force, Zamastanian Army, and Seran Army deployed to protect their diplomats and embassy staff, making the trek from staging areas at Azikiwe International Airport. Multiple people, including a Zamastanian and 4 Seran marines, were killed in the attack. In reaction to the attacks, most international governments began withdrawing their diplomatic staff.

On January 16th, 2022, President Ngotsha was ousted in a coup led by supporters of Prime Minister Michel Lukonde. Lukonde's supporters stormed Parliament and detained more than 60 MPs who were Ngotsha loyalists. Many prominent government officials were killed, including Deputy President Guillaume Bona. Lukonde declared martial law, and ordered the Apatonian forces under his command to prepare for imminent clashes with the LDF. He also ordered the military to strengthen to border with Unified Sera, anticipating a military strike from the Serans for the events of January 3rd. Ngotsha, who had been overseas for the 2022 Leaders Summit in Shoassau, was granted asylum in Qolaysia by President Abiel Kennard. Forces loyal to Ngotsha scattered into factions to avoid being wiped out by Lukonde's supporters, and many massed in the city of Wabi, which remained a prominent Ngotsha-loyalist stronghold following the coup.

Seran invasion

On January 23rd the government of Unified Sera declared war against both Lukonde and the LDF.

War crimes

Numerous war crimes have been committed by the LDF rebel factions as well as Apatonian government forces during the civil war.

In April 2018, Lutharian observers claimed LDF forces summarily executed dozens of civilians in two towns (Guyab and Robo) they controlled in Lundia.

On October 24th 2021, the Lundia Defense Forces were accused by the CCA Human Rights Council and Lutharian observers of extrajudicially killing 400–500 villagers in the town of Dori. A visit by the Tofino Times found many unburied corpses, some in military clothing. Residents said that LDF forces had killed villagers who had resisted looting but also blamed Apatonian federal forces for abandoning the villagers to defend themselves unaided.

On November 4th, 2021, Caspiaan watchdogs issued an emergency alert stating that "both sides are committing genocide", referring to detentions of thousands of people based on Ista or Kjanta ethnic identity, and arguing that "Prime Minister Michel Lukonde's hate speech and calls for war" and that the "LDF is perpetrating conflict with no regard for hiding their atrocities."

Humanitarian crisis

Humanitarian aid

Internal displacement and forced displacement

Attacks on humanitarian workers

Reactions

Domestic

International

Peace process

  1. "Rebel Leaders Call For Recognition Following Capture of Biulundo" Le Document de Misamba. Retrieved September 20th, 2021
  2. "Apatonia's allies fear instability as political crisis deepens" Le Document de Misamba. Retrieved December 28th, 2021