Archive for July 21, 2011


Khartoum bans South Sudan newspapers

Sunday, 17 July 2011

Written by Robert Odongo

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bashirkiir
Presidents Salva Kiir of South Sudan and Omar Bashir of Sudan on the day of South Sudan’s Independence where they pledged to be good neighbours, but now Bashir’s government has banned newspapers owned by South Sudanese in Khartoum.

The authorities in Khartoum have stopped newspapers printed in the Sudanese capital from being taken to South Sudan, Minister of Information Dr. Barnaba Marial Benjamin told journalists over the weekend.

Marial however said that that the country will continue receiving newspapers from other countries such as Egypt and East African countries.

Five newspapers; Khartoum Monitor, Sudan Tribune, Juba Post, The Democrat and Ajrurus al Huria were banned last week by a presidential decree.

By this decree, the National Press Council in Khartoum shut down all English newspapers owned by South Sudanese. Letters were circulated by security personnel to all the chief editors of these newspapers.

The secretary to the press council in Khartoum al-Obeid Ahmed defended the move, saying the Publication Act of Sudan prohibits foreigners from publishing newspapers in Sudan.

The Sudanese government officials siad they acted according to Article 28 of the Sudanese Press Law which requires publishers to be Sudanese nationals.

However, the editors of Khartoum Monitor and the Sudan Tribune, described the directive as racist, and aimed at muzzling English newspapers owned by southerners.

Alfred Taban is the chairman board of directors and chief editor of Khartoum Monitor, while William Ezekiel is the Chief Editor of Sudan Tribune and Osman Shinger is the acting chief editor of The Democrat.

The Democrat is a party newspaper belonging to the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement for Democratic Change (SPLM-DC).

The former editor in chief of The Democrat, John Lemi, said the security personnel did not give any explanation as to why Khartoum has taken the move.

According to Lemi the authorities said whoever wants the details on the closure of the papers should have to go to the National Press Council.

“I think it is just an expression of anger and frustration by the Khartoum basing on the fact that South Sudan has become an independent state,” said Lemi, who is also member of Sudan journalists union.

He added that they will contact the National Press Council to find out who will be responsible for paying the pensions and benefits of the employees of the banned newspapers.

According to Simon Boboya, a member of South Sudan Union of Journalists, Khartoum Monitor, Sudan Tribune and Juba Post newspapers have been banned because authorities in Khartoum are bitter that South Sudan broke away from them.

Boboya said even the South Sudanese journalists in Khartoum have been banned from practicing journalism there.

“The irony of it is that they send their Arabic newspapers here for selling, and yet they have banned those belonging to South Sudanese. This is unfair of Khartoum,” Boboya complained.

He added that Khartoum should give some time for these newspapers to continue operating there until South Sudanese get their own printing presses.

“Now it is only the Citizen newspaper (printed in Juba) which has printing press, and now it is down for three days, it is a terrible situation, Khartoum is denying South Sudanese the right to information,” he lamented.

Some employees of the banned newspapers said the closure was unfair to them because they have lost a source of income.

“Look I am not working, where will I get another job? How can I support our family?” wondered Raja Hassan Komi, designer of the Democrat newspaper.

“This is unbelievable,” she added.

A designer at the Khartoum Monitor, Phillip Swaka Ladu, said some government sources say that Sudan government wants management positions of newspapers owned by South Sudanese given to North Sudanese.

This according to the sources, say Ladu, includes management which the sources say needs to be given to north Sudanese.

In the streets of Juba, newspaper vendors complained of loss of income.

A newspaper reader in Juba, Franco Okullu complained; “We don’t have English newspapers coming to the south. What is going on?”

“Only Arabic newspapers are coming here, it is about one week now,” he added.

Out of six English newspapers operating in Khartoum only Sudan Vision and The Citizen are now operating.

The Citizen was initiated by some northerners when the mother Citizen newspaper closed its operations in Khartoum, while Sudan Vision is state owned.

All the state media in Khartoum contacted said they have no ideas as to why these news papers have been banned.


SPEECH BY DR JOHN GARANG DE MABIOR
ON OCCASION OF SIGNING OF THE NAIROBI DECLARATION
ON LAUNCHING THE FINAL PHASE OF PEACE IN THE SUDAN
(JUNE 5TH 2004)

The Genius of Dr. John Garang: The Essential Writings and Speeches of the Late SPLM/A's Leader, Dr. John Garang De Mabioor (Volume 1)

The Genius of Dr. John Garang: The Essential Writings and Speeches of the Late SPLM/A’s Leader, Dr. John Garang De Mabioor (Volume 1) ON AMAZON.COM

H.E. Excellency, President Mwai Kibaki, President of the Republic of Kenya and
First Lady Lucy Kibaki;
H.E. Hilde Johnson, Minister for International Cooperation of the Kingdom of
Norway and IPF Co-Chair;
H.E. The Ambassador of the United States and Representing Senator Danforth;
H.E. Ahmed Mahar, Foreign Minister of the Republic of Egypt;
H.E. Dr. Amra Musa, Secretary General of the Arab League;
H.E. Ambassador M. Sahnoun, Representative of the U.N. Secretary General, Kofi
Anan;
H.E. Ambassador Baba Gana Kingibe, A.U. Representative;
H.E. The Ambassador of Italy and IPF Co-Chair;
H.E. The Ambassador Alan Goulti, Special Envoy of Prime Minister Tony Blair;
Your Excellencies, Honorable Ministers of the Republic of Kenya and those from
the IGAD and East African Region,
Your Excellencies, Ambassadors and High Commissioners,

Distinguished guests and Members of the Press,
My Fellow countrymen and women who have come to witness this occasion,
Your Excellency President Kibaki, Ladies and Gentlemen,
Allow me to make few remarks on this memorable day and in presence of such
an august gathering. The document we have just signed with Ustaz Ali Osman
Taha, the First Vice President of Sudan, represents a solemn declaration on our
part that war in Sudan is truly coming to an end. And I would say with
confidence that the six protocols enumerated in this declaration shall, if carried
out honestly, diligently and with unfailing political will, regenerate the Sudan and
settle its fate as a country voluntarily united in justice, honour and dignity for all
its citizens and for the first time since independence. The agreement will change
Sudan forever! Sudan cannot and will never be the same again as this peace
agreement will engulf the country in democratic and fundamental transformation
instead of being engulfed in war as it has always been up to the present.
Sudan’s fratricidal wars, you all know, have been going on for 38 years of our
forty eight years of independence since 01/01/1956. At certain points of time it
appeared as if the whole country – not only North and South, but also East and
West – was about to be engulfed in a bottomless pit of conflictual hatred. I must
at this point tell you, that nobody abhors war more than those who lived through
its horrors, ordeals, pains and tribulations. The civil war in Sudan not only
ravaged the resources of the country and sapped national strength they, if
continued wantonly, would have ended up impoverishing the nation’s soul and
causing a total national moral collapse and final disintegration of the country. All
these wars will now be behind us as a new era of peace is about to dawn in a
New Sudanese political dispensation.
Indeed, what makes this peace welcome is that it came as a result of a hurting
stalemate which made both sides realize that a win-win peace is attainable and
that the cost of the alternative of peace is far less than that of continuation of
the war. Peace became possible because both parties realized that the country
was dissipating, that the state seemed to be withering away without undergoing
the famous Marxian transformation and that the “Old Sudan” we have known
was heading blindly into an abyss of irreversible fragmentation.
Mr. President, Ladies and Gentlemen:
The six protocols, for those who had the opportunity to read them, reflect an
intricate web of governmental institutions and mind-boggling calculus of power
sharing, wealth sharing and security arrangements during the Interim Period.
This intricacy is a function of the intricate and complex Sudanese situation. But
behind the architecture of power and the calculus of wealth peace has an inner
meaning. So what does peace mean to us in the SPLM? What does it mean to

me personally not as a leader but as a brother, an uncle, a father and a child of
God? There are many – here and elsewhere – who think that peace is about job
allocation, is about apportionment of positions of authority, is about lining
pockets through misuse or abuse of public assets, or is about lording it over
others. Those who thus think must be reading from a different script than mine.
We have more supreme goals and loftier ideals and alternatives. My script reads
that peace is what people think and believe peace should hold for them. Peace
to my mind and in the depth of my soul is a promise of better living to the
young, the middle aged and the aged, to each individual, to the unemployed and
the destitute, to the sick and the unlettered, all over Sudan. It is also a promise
to the men and women of Southern Sudan, the Nuba Mountains, Southern Blue
Nile, Abyei, Eastern Sudan and other marginalized areas of Sudan who suffered
in dignified silence the loss of their dear ones in the war of liberation or who felt
and still do feel a sense of helplessness and hopelessness, a promise that we
shall never betray the cause for which those martyrs have made the ultimate
sacrifice. And theirs is a cause for better and more honourable living. It is also a
promise to martyrs and to those who lost their dear ones on the other side, a
promise that just and honorable peace shall heal all the wounds that we have
inflicted on ourselves on both sides.
Ladies and Gentlemen:
I cannot up to now erase the image indelibly marked in my mind: the spectacle
of the young boys and girls from Kakuma Refugee Camp who sang praises to
peace before me as part of the celebrations by our Kenya-based community of
that occasion when I briefed the Sudanese community in Kenya at the Kenyatta
International Conference Centre here in Nairobi last Saturday on May 31st 2004.
Peace to me is what peace meant to those youngsters as it was reflected on
their glittering eyes and expressed in their words that pierced the hearts. This is
the peace for the achievement of which I shall employ all my wit, will and energy
and for which we have all sacrificed for the last 21 years.
Mr. President, Ladies and Gentlemen:
Please give me leave to briefly illustrate to you the contours of this promise and
the vision that guides it. At the national level we shall articulate a development
strategy that shall:-
1. Address the root causes that foster recurrent civil wars, so that these wars
end in peaceful and just resolutions of conflicts all over our country
including Darfur and Eastern Sudan.
2. It is a strategy and vision that recognizes the diversity of Sudan as a
resource for social and political transformation and development and thus

a source of strength rather than of division, conflict and bloody
generational wars.
3. It is a strategy and vision that builds confidence and trust among all
people of Sudan and at all levels of governance, and combat poverty and
the sense of marginalization and exclusion in all regions of Sudan.
4. It is a strategy and vision that shall meet the Millennium Development
Goals through development plans articulated and owned by us, and
enhance economic growth through rural development and transformation
of traditional agriculture that is integrated with agro-industries.
5. It is a strategy and vision that shall effectively deliver social services
through devolution and decentralization of power and empowerment of
people.
6. And finally, it is a strategy and vision that shall give the unity of Sudan a
chance during the Interim Period by making it attractive, while at the end
of that period giving the people of Southern Sudan and Abyei the option
and choice between session (i.e., an independent Southern Sudan) or a
new Sudanese unity in which we are equal stakeholders and which New
Sudan we shall put in place during the Interim Period; a strategy and
vision which also affords the people of the Nuba Mountains and Southern
Blue Nile viable options for determining their destiny through the exercise
of the democratic right of “popular consultation” through their
democratically elected parliaments.
Within the South and the war-affected regions, the real test in the post-conflict
phase is how to devote our efforts to address the centrifugal forces that have
fostered conflict. This is one of the primary commitments that we have set for
ourselves during the liberation struggle and which we shall relentlessly pursue
during the Interim Period and beyond.
However, on the threshold of peace, the people of the Sudan, particularly the
war-affected communities, face formidable social and economic problems and
also tremendous opportunities. The major problems that require extensive
attention fall in the areas of physical infrastructure, health, education and water.
For example in the area of physical infrastructure, there has never been any
tarmac road in Southern Sudan since creation, an area the size of Kenya,
Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi put together, while in the area of education, the
net enrolment rate in primary schools is only 20% with about 80% of those
having no benches to sit on and only 7% of the teachers are trained. Besides, at
least three out of every four adults are illiterate and one of every ten female
adults is literate. In the field of health, the level of access to an improved water
source is only 27% and there is only one medical doctor for every 100,000

persons. Moreover, the prevalence of HIV among male adults is 2.6% and 3.1%
among female adults, while it is more than 5% among Sudanese refugees in the
neighbouring countries, and as refugees return home one of the imports shall be
HIV. Those are frightening statistics that must inform our priorities.
Those, ladies and gentlemen, are the challenges that shall be met by both the
Government of Southern Sudan (GOSS) and the National Government. As
regards the GOSS, it is our intention to devolve power to the maximum so that
decisions shall be taken at the lowest possible level of governance. We have not
wrested power from a hegemonizing national centre to allocate it to another
centre that is based on the political elites of the South. Power shall be exercised
by the states and indeed by local governments within the states. Armed with the
necessary powers and equipped with the needed resources, this style of
governance shall ensure a more efficient delivery system of development and
services. The principle of decentralization of power is a time-honored principle
since it responds to local social and economic situations, not least amongst which
is the neutralization of the centrifugal forces to which I have just alluded and
which are generally the consequence of failure by Central Authority to address
local problems and concerns. Such local problems and concerns cannot be
effectively addressed from the Centre since such Authorities are far away from
the people; they can only be effectively addressed by empowered local
authorities that have both the necessary power of decision making and the
necessary resources to implement such decisions. In the words of Alexander
Hamilton: “There are certain social principles in human nature from which we
may draw the most solid conclusions with respect to the conduct of individuals
and communities. “We love our families more than our neighbours; we love our
neighbours more than our countrymen in general.” “The human affections”,
Hamilton says “like the solar heat, lose their intensity as they depart from the
centre and become languid in proportion to the expansion of the circle on which
they act.” This is the vision that, has guided one of the foremost proponents of
government decentralization. As you can see the principle of decentralization is
common sense, but unfortunately common sense is not common.
As regards our role at the national level, the only way for us to move forward is
through full inclusiveness. While the SPLM and the National Congress Party
(NCP) shall be the major partners in the initial interim government of national
unity, our understanding of partnership is well-rooted in inclusiveness which
means bringing on board all political forces in the Sudan, chief among them the
political parties under the umbrella of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA).
To that end we have proposed a social contract, based on national consensus,
that shall be faithful to the peace agreement and that shall clearly define
parameters of good governance and bench marks and targets for social and
economic development during the interim period. It shall also delineate ethical
codes of conduct for all political players. We, together, shall call upon all parties
to discuss this social contract and national consensus with a view to adhering to

it. Neither we in the SPLM, nor the National Congress Party own the Sudan or
have a monopoly over its governance. So, without losing sight of the objective
realities that place us at the helm of governance today, we shall always be
conscious of the existence of others. At the same time, we wish to challenge the
others to face the realities of good governance, development, nation-building
and national regeneration. We should also be reminded that politics is not only
about power, but first and foremost about people, their concerns and livelihoods.
We believe also that we can not talk about peace and development in the Sudan
while some regions in Sudan are bleeding with civil strife. Darfur is a case in
point and the situation in that region is a classical case of marginalization and
exclusion. The parties must denounce and avoid the use of military force in
Darfur or any other part of our country for no amount of military force shall be
enough to address such problems, as we have seen in the case of the South.
Only through political dialogue can the problem in Darfur be resolved. Indeed
this is the meaning of the preamble to the declaration which we have signed
today that the Parties: “reiterate their determination to continue resolving the
root causes of conflict and violence in Sudan which inflict hardship and suffering
on the people and seriously hamper the prospects for economic development
and the attainment of social justice in Sudan”.
The protocols and agreements we concluded, if they are faithfully implemented,
have the possibility to provide a basis for the resolution of conflict in other
regions of Sudan, particularly Darfur and Eastern Sudan. Indeed they provide a
model of resolving problems emanating from marginalization and exclusion in all
of rural Sudan. In this connection, I want parenthetically to say something
important about implementation of these protocols. I must forewarn of the
difficulties we shall face in the implementation of the peace agreement. As I
alluded to before, we are reaching this peace agreement because both parties to
the conflict are convinced that the alternative of peaceful resolution of the
conflict is far better than continuation of the war. Similarly, for the parties to
faithfully implement the peace agreement, the price of non-implementation must
be made much higher than the price of implementation – So there must be
found ways of making the price of not implementing the peace agreement
prohibitively much higher than the price of implementing it, and that way both
sides will implement the peace agreement faithfully.
Finally, let me pay tribute and congratulate Ustaz Ali Osman Taha, and perhaps
myself, and certainly the two delegations of the SPLM and GOS, and of course
General Sumbeiywo and the IGAD envoys and facilitators for leading the Sudan
peace process to this final lap. In our tortuous journey toward peace for the last
nine months there were ups and downs. Like the weather the atmosphere of
negotiations sometimes changed suddenly and drastically, sometimes becoming
very cloudy and dark, and sometimes clearing up and becoming very bright;
there were moments of despair and spells of hope and there were occasions of

complete lapse of faith in any peace prospect. But always at the end wisdom
prevailed. If that was not to happen, we would have become a monument of
derision before the world, and even worse before the Sudanese people in both
North and South. Nine months is the period it takes to make and deliver a baby
and we have now delivered a healthy robust baby, but this baby needs proper
nurturing to grow.
But let us also give due where due is deserved. At this juncture, I would like to
point out that the IGAD countries and their Heads of State, Ministers, Peace
Envoys, and indeed their populace, who have been with us through thick and
thin, guiding, advising, cajoling and sometimes threatening to abandon the
process, deserve praise! To them let us give a warm applause. Our thanks also
go to those brotherly countries in Africa, the Arab world and the wider
international community who, in numerous occasions either volunteered to bring
peace to Sudan or did encourage in manifold manners the on-going peace
process. In this connection, I wish to single out the Nigerian efforts (Abuja I &
II), the Joint Egyptian-Libyan Initiative (JELI), the African Union and the Arab
League efforts for post-conflict reconstruction or rather construction of Southern
Sudan. I must also mention a few of the very many names to thank for their
contribution to the Sudan peace process; among them are imminent people like
Obasanjo and Babangida of Nigeria, Kaunda, Magabe, Masire, Njoma, Chisano
and Mandela of Southern Africa; Mubarak, Gadafi and Boutafilika of Northern
Africa; Jimmy Carter, the late James Grant and OLS that has save millions of
lives since 1989, President Bush, his Secretary of State Collin Powel and his
Special envoy Senator Danforth; both Houses of the United States Congress;
Prime Minister Tony Blair and his Special Envoy Ambassador Alan Goulti; The
United Nations Secretary General and his Special Envoy Ambassador Sahnoun;
and a special friend of the Sudan peace process, the Norwegian Minister Hilde
Johnson, who is here representing the Troika or Quadroika, and finally, last but
not least, the leaders of this Region led then by Daniel Arap Moi, Museveni,
Zenawi and Aferwoki, my sincere thanks to all these peace-makers.
Finally, a word of tribute to my fellow neighboring countries of Eastern Africa, to
their leaders and people, you have done a lot to accommodate our people … We
envisage continued cooperation in many fields … My special thanks to President
Mwai Kibaki who is hosting this occasion and to all the IGAD leaders for leading
this victory of peace and sanity in a turbulent. Finally, I pay tribute and
congratulate the Sudanese people to whom this peace belongs. Thank you very
much and God bless the Sudan and Africa.
Dr. John Garang de Mabior
Chairman and C-in-C, SPLM/A.

Abyei Important Documents

Posted: July 21, 2011 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Abyei, History
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The Road Map for Return of IDPs and Implementation of Abyei Protocol

Khartoum, 8th June 2008

1. Security Arrangements:

1.1 The JDB shall deploy a new JIU battalion within a maximum of ten days from the date of adoption of these resolutions by the Presidency; the new JIUs battalion shall be constituted from new elements other than those elements of the former Abyei JIUs battalion as per the resolution of the CPC issued on 27/5/2008. The Parties urge the JDB to learn the lessons from the experience with the former Abyei JIUs battalion and expedite training and integration process to make this new battalion a model unit and more effective.

1.2. Police shall be deployed in the area after consultation between the National Minister of Interior and Minister of Internal affairs of Government of Southern Sudan within two weeks from the date of adoption of these resolutions.

1.3. UNMIS force in abyei area shall have free movement and access to the north and south of Abyei area to carry out its mandate as specified in the CPA.

1.4. With the deployment of the new JIU battalion and police force in the area and resumption of their duties, SAF and SPLA troops shall be redeployed beyond the Abyei administrative area as per the attached map.

1.5. The Parties condemn the incidents that took place recently in Abyei and confirm the CPC resolution to immediately investigate the incidents by CJMC plus additional members as shall be agreed upon by the Parties.

2. Return of IDPs:

2. 1. The civil population shall return to their former homesteads on completion of the above mentioned security arrangements, which are expected to finish before the end of June 2008.

2. 2. The GoNU shall take all arrangements for availing the resources for the return programme for the civil population and with the involvement of the relevant international agencies and organizations, which shall be implemented through the Abyei Area Administration.

3. Interim Arrangements for Abyei Administration:

Without prejudice to the outcome of arbitration as per the provisions of section 4 below, the Parties agree on the following:

3.1. The Presidency shall set up Abyei Area Administration as per the provisions of the CPA within two weeks from the date of the adoption of these resolutions.

3.2. The interim boundaries of the administration of Abyei Area shall be as per the attached map.

3.3 The administration of Abyei Area shall be accorded special administrative status and perform its functions as per the provisions of the Abyei Protocol.

3.4 The Presidency shall appoint Chief Administrator as nominee of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) and Deputy Chief Administrator as nominee of the National Congress Party (NCP) from among the residents of Abyei area as per provisions of the CPA. The Parties shall observe in their nominations considerations of amity, reconciliation and accord.

3.5. The Chief Administrator, in consultation with Deputy Chief Administrator, shall make recommendations to the Presidency for the appointment of the heads of departments and members of Abyei Area Council from among the residents of Abyei area as per the provisions of the CPA.

3.6. The Presidency to avail the necessary funds to the Abyei Area Administration for delivery of basic services and running of administration in accordance with the provisions of the CPA.

3.7. The Presidency shall initiate the peace and reconciliation in the area in collaboration with the administration of the area and the surrounding communities.

3.8. The Presidency shall work at making Abyei area a model of national reconciliation and peace building.

3.9. Without prejudice to the wealth sharing formula agreed upon in the CPA and pending the final demarcation of the Abyei area in accordance with the arbitration award and subject to its outcome, the oil revenue from the oilfields in the areas under arbitration shall be allocated in accordance with the wealth sharing arrangements in Abyei Protocol.

3.10. The Government of National Unity and Government of Southern Sudan shall contribute fifty percent (50%) and twenty-five percent (25%) respectively from their oil revenue share from oilfields in the areas under arbitration to a fund to be established by the Presidency for the development of the areas along the North-South border and financing the joint projects presented to the Third Sudan Consortium in Oslo, Norway, May 2008.

4. Arrangements for Final Settlement:

Without prejudice to the position of either party on the findings of the Abyei Boundaries Commission (ABC) Report, the Parties agree on the following:

4.1. The two parties shall resort to a professional and specialized arbitration tribunal to be agreed upon by the Parties to settle their dispute over the finding of the Abyei Boundaries Commission (ABC).

4.2. The two parties shall work out the terms of reference (compromis) for the arbitration which shall include nomination of professional arbitration tribunal, selection process of the arbitration, referred issues for decision by the arbitration, procedure of arbitration, decision making process and the enforcement of the award of the arbitration tribunal.

4.3. The parties commit themselves to abide by and implement the award of the arbitration tribunal.

4.4. The entire arbitration process including the issuance of the final award shall be done within a period not exceeding six months from the date of the formation of the arbitration tribunal, and subject to an extension for a period not exceeding three months.

4.5. In case the two Parties failed within one month to reach agreement on the arbitration tribunal or compromis or other terms of reference and rules of procedure for the arbitral process, the Secretary General of the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA), the Hague, shall, within fifteen days, designate an institution and finalize the rules of procedures and terms of reference in accordance with the PCA Rules and applicable international practices.

Signed by:

Mr. Dirdeiry Mohamed Ahmed Mr. Deng Alor Kuol

National Congress Party Sudan People’s Liberation Movement

Khartoum, 8th June 2008

Endorsed by the Presidency:

Vice President of the Republic First Vice President of the Republic

President of the Republic of the Sudan

Abyei Important Documents

Click to access Abyei_Signed_Agreement_20062011.pdf

Click to access Abyei_Arbitration_EN.pdf

Click to access 00011594:22032ec15bf037d19820684ccc8b58df.pdf

Click to access policy_practice7.pdf

Click to access Abyei_Paper.pdf


1. Sudan’s Comprehensive Peace Agreement: Beyond the Crisis

Click to access b50_sudan_cpa_beyond_the_crisis.pdf

2. Abyei: Sudan Next Test

Click to access Abyei_Paper.pdf

3. Interim constitution of the Republic of South Sudan, 2011

http://www.gurtong.net/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=lOqRv9hqgv8%3D&tabid=345

Click to access IC_SS.pdf

4. Interim constitution of the Republic of  Sudan during CPA Era, 2005

Click to access c_Sudan.pdf

5. Interim constitution of  South Sudan during CPA Era, 2005

Click to access c_SouthernSudan.pdf

http://www.gurtong.net/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=lOqRv9hqgv8%3D&tabid=345

The Machakos Protocol

Posted: July 21, 2011 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in History
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The Machakos Protocol
The Agreement Between the Government of Sudan and the Sudanese People’s Liberation Movement/Army
Recognising South Sudan’s Right to Self Determination
[20 July 2002]

Text of the Agreement

WHEREAS the Government of the Republic of the Sudan and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Sudan People’s Liberation Army (the Parties) having met in Machakos Kenya, from 18 June 2002 through 20 July 2002 under the auspices of the IGAD Peace Process; and

WHEREAS the Parties have reiterated their commitment to a negotiated, peaceful, comprehensive resolution to the Sudan Conflict within the Unity of Sudan; and

WHEREAS the Parties discussed at length and agreed on a broad framework which sets forth the principles of governance, the general procedures to be followed during the transitional process and the structures of government to be created under legal and constitutional arrangements to be established; and

NOW RECORD THAT the Parties have agreed to negotiate and elaborate in greater detail the specific terms of the Framework, including aspects not covered in this phase of the negotiations, as part of the overall Peace Agreement; and

FURTHER RECORD THAT within the above context, the Parties have reached specific agreement on the Right to Self-Determination for the people of South Sudan, State and Religion, as well as the Preamble, Principles, and the Transition Process from the Draft Framework, the initialed texts of which are annexed hereto, and all of which will be subsequently incorporated into the Final Agreement; and

IT IS AGREED AND CONFIRMED THAT the Parties shall resume negotiations in August, 2002 with the aim of resolving outstanding issues and realizing comprehensive peace in the Sudan.

Dr. Ghazi Salahuddin Atabani
(For the Government of Sudan)

Cdr. Salva Kiir Mayardit
(For the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army)

Witnessed by:

Lt. Gen. Lazaro K. Sumbeiywo
Special Envoy
IGAD Sudan Peace Process and
On behalf of the IGAD Envoys

AGREED TEXT ON THE PREAMBLE, PRINCIPLES, AND THE TRANSITION PROCESS
BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF THE SUDAN
AND THE SUDAN PEOPLE’S LIBERATION MOVEMENT/SUDAN PEOPLE’S LIBERATION ARMY

WHEREAS the Government of the Republic of the Sudan and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Sudan People’s Liberation Army (hereafter referred to as the Parties) having met in Machakos, Kenya, from 18 June 2002 through 20 July 2002; and

WHEREAS the Parties are desirous of resolving the Sudan Conflict in a just and sustainable manner by addressing the root causes of the conflict and by establishing a framework for governance through which power and wealth shall be equitably shared and human rights guaranteed; and

MINDFUL that the conflict in the Sudan is the longest running conflict in Africa, that it has caused horrendous loss of life and destroyed the infrastructure of the country, wasted economic resources, and has caused untold suffering, particularly with regard to the people of South Sudan; and

SENSITIVE to historical injustices and inequalities in development between the different regions of the Sudan that need to be redressed; and

RECOGNIZING that the present moment offers a window of opportunity to reach a just peace agreement to end the war; and

CONVINCED that the rejuvenated IGAD peace process under the chairmanship of the Kenyan President, H.E. Daniel T. arap Moi, provides the means to resolve the conflict and reach a just and sustainable peace; and

COMMITTED to a negotiated, peaceful, comprehensive resolution to the conflict based on the Declaration of Principles (DOP) for the benefit of all the people of the Sudan;

NOW THEREFORE, the Parties hereto hereby agree as follows:

PART A – AGREED PRINCIPLES

1.1 That the unity of the Sudan, based on the free will of its people democratic governance, accountability, equality, respect, and justice for all citizens of the Sudan is and shall be the priority of the parties and that it is possible to redress the grievances of the people of South Sudan and to meet their aspirations within such a framework.

1.2 That the people of South Sudan have the right to control and govern affairs in their region and participate equitably in the National Government.

1.3 That the people of South Sudan have the right to self-determination, inter alia, through a referendum to determine their future status.

1.4 That religion, customs, and traditions are a source of moral strength and inspiration for the Sudanese people.

1.5 That the people of the Sudan share a common heritage and aspirations and accordingly agree to work together to:

1.6 Establish a democratic system of governance taking account of the cultural, ethnic, racial, religious and linguistic diversity and gender equality of the people of the Sudan.

1.7 Find a comprehensive solution that addresses the economic and social deterioration of the Sudan and replaces war not just with peace, but also with social, political and economic justice which respects the fundamental human and political rights of all the Sudanese people.

1.8 Negotiate and implement a comprehensive cease-fire to end the suffering and killing of the Sudanese people.

1.9 Formulate a repatriation, resettlement, rehabilitation, reconstruction and development plan to address the needs of those areas affected by the war and redress the historical imbalances of development and resource allocation.

1.10 Design and implement the Peace Agreement so as to make the unity of the Sudan an attractive option especially to the people of South Sudan.

1.11 Undertake the challenge by finding a framework by which these common objectives can be best realized and expressed for the benefit of all the Sudanese.

PART B – THE TRANSITION PROCESS

In order to end the conflict and to secure a peaceful and prosperous future for all the people of the Sudan and in order to collaborate in the task of governing the country, the Parties hereby agree to the implementation of the Peace Agreement in accordance with the sequence, time periods and process set out below.

2. There shall be a Pre-Interim Period, the duration of which shall be six (6) months.

2.1 During the Pre-Interim Period:

a) The institutions and mechanisms provided for in the Peace Agreement shall be established;
b) If not already in force, there shall be a cessation of hostilities with appropriate monitoring mechanisms established;
c) Mechanisms to implement and monitor the Peace Agreement shall be created;
d) Preparations shall be made for the implementation of a comprehensive cease-fire as soon as possible;
e) International assistance shall be sought; and
f) A Constitutional Framework for the Peace Agreement and the institutions referred to in 2.1 (a) shall be established.

2.2 The Interim Period will commence at the end of the Pre-Interim Period and shall last for six years.

2.3 Throughout the Interim Period:

a) The institutions and mechanisms established during the Pre-Interim Period shall be operating in accordance with thearrangements and principles set out in the Peace Agreement.
b) If not already accomplished, the negotiated comprehensive cease-fire will be implemented and international monitoring mechanisms shall be established and operationalized.

2.4 An independent Assessment and Evaluation Commission shall be established during the Pre-Interim Period to monitor the implementation of the Peace Agreement and conduct a mid-term evaluation of the unity arrangements established under the Peace Agreement.

2.4.1 The composition of the Assessment and Evaluation Commission shall consist of equal representation from the GOS and the SPLM/A, and not more than two (2) representatives, respectively, from each of the following categories:

  • Member states of the IGAD Sub-Committee on Sudan (Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, and Uganda);
  • Observer States (Italy, Norway, UK, and US); and
  • Any other countries or regional or international bodies to be agreed upon by the parties.

2.4.2 The Parties shall work with the Commission during the Interim Period with a view to improving the institutions and arrangements created under the Agreement and making the unity of Sudan attractive to the people of South Sudan.

2.5 At the end of the six (6) year Interim Period there shall be an internationally monitored referendum, organized jointly by the GOS and the SPLM/A, for the people of South Sudan to: confirm the unity of the Sudan by voting to adopt the system of government established under the Peace Agreement; or to vote for secession.

2.6 The parties shall refrain from any form of unilateral revocation or abrogation of the Peace Agreement.

PART C – STRUCTURES OF GOVERNMENT

To give effect to the agreements set out in Part A, the Parties, within a framework of a unified Sudan which recognizes the right to self-determination for the people of Southern Sudan, hereby agree that with respect to the division of powers and the structures and functions of the different organs of government, the political framework of governance in the Sudan shall be structured as follows:

3.1 Supreme Law

3.1.1 The National Constitution of the Sudan shall be the Supreme Law of the land. All laws must comply with the National Constitution. This constitution shall regulate the relations and allocate the powers and functions between the different levels of government as well as prescribe the wealth sharing arrangements between the same. The National Constitution shall guarantee freedom of belief, worship and religious practice in full to all Sudanese citizens.

3.1.2 A representative National Constitutional Review Commission shall be established during the Pre-Transition Period which shall have as its first task the drafting of a Legal and Constitutional Framework to govern the Interim Period and which incorporates the Peace Agreement.

3.1.3 The Framework mentioned above shall be adopted as shall be agreed upon by the Parties.

3.1.4 During the Interim Period an inclusive Constitutional Review Process shall be undertaken.

3.1.5 The Constitution shall not be amended or repealed except by way of special procedures and qualified majorities in order that the provisions of the Peace Agreement are protected.

3.2 National Government

3.2.1 There shall be a National Government which shall exercise such functions and pass such laws as must necessarily be exercised by a sovereign state at national level. The National Government in all its laws shall take into account the religious and cultural diversity of the Sudanese people.

3.2.2 Nationally enacted legislation having effect only in respect of the states outside Southern Sudan shall have as its source of legislation Sharia and the consensus of the people.

3.2.3 Nationally enacted legislation applicable to the southern States and/or the Southern Region shall have as its source of legislation popular consensus, the values and the customs of the people of Sudan including their traditions and religious beliefs, having regard to Sudan’s diversity).

3.2.4 Where national legislation is currently in operation or is enacted and its source is religious or customary law, then a state or region, the majority of whose residents do not practice such religion or customs may:

(i) Either introduce legislation so as to allow or provide for institutions or practices in that region consistent with their religion or customs, or
(ii) Refer the law to the Council of States for it to approve by a two-thirds majority or initiate national legislation which will provide for such necessary alternative institutions as is appropriate.

[sections 4 and 5 are not yet available; indications are that the subjects of these sections are still under negotiation]

AGREED TEXT ON STATE AND RELIGION

Recognizing that Sudan is a multi-cultural, multi-racial, multi-ethnic, multi-religious, and multi-lingual country and confirming that religion shall not be used as a divisive factor, the Parties hereby agree as follows:

6.1 Religions, customs and beliefs are a source of moral strength and inspiration for the Sudanese people.

6.2 There shall be freedom of belief, worship and conscience for followers of all religions or beliefs or customs and no one shall be discriminated against on such grounds.

6.3 Eligibility for public office, including the presidency, public service and the enjoyment of all rights and duties shall be based on citizenship and not on religion, beliefs, or customs.

6.4 All personal and family matters including marriage, divorce, inheritance, succession, and affiliation may be governed by the personal laws (including Sharia or other religious laws, customs, or traditions) of those concerned.

6.5 The Parties agree to respect the following Rights:

  • To worship or assemble in connection with a religion or belief and to establish and maintain places for these purposes;
  • To establish and maintain appropriate charitable or humanitarian institutions;
  • To make, acquire and use to an adequate extent the necessary articles and materials related to the rites or customs of a religion or belief;
  • To write, issue and disseminate relevant publications in these areas;
  • To teach religion or belief in places suitable for these purposes;
  • To solicit and receive voluntary financial and other contributions from individuals and institutions;
  • To train, appoint, elect or designate by succession appropriate leaders called for by the requirements and standards of any religion or belief;
  • To observe days of rest and to celebrate holidays and ceremonies in accordance with the precepts of one’s religious beliefs;
  • To establish and maintain communications with individuals and communities in matters of religion and belief and at the national and international levels;
  • For avoidance of doubt, no one shall be subject to discrimination by the National Government, state, institutions, group of persons or person on grounds of religion or other beliefs.

6.6 The Principles enumerated in Section 6.1 through 6.5 shall be reflected in the Constitution.

AGREED TEXT ON THE RIGHT TO SELF-DETERMINATION FOR THE PEOPLE OF SOUTH SUDAN

1.3 That the people of South Sudan have the right to self-determination, inter alia, through a referendum to determine their future status.

2.4 An independent Assessment and Evaluation Commission shall be established during the Pre-Transition period to monitor the implementation of the Peace Agreement during the Interim Period. This Commission shall conduct a mid-term evaluation of the unity arrangements established under the Peace Agreement.

2.4.1 The composition of the Assessment and Evaluation Commission shall consist of equal representation from the GOS and the SPLM/A, and not more than two (2) representatives, respectively, from each of the following categories:

  • Member states of the IGAD Sub-Committee on Sudan (Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, and Uganda);
  • Observer States (Italy, Norway, UK, and US); and
  • other countries or regional or international bodies to be agreed upon by the parties.

2.4.2 The Parties shall work with the Commission during the Interim Period with a view to improving the institutions and arrangements created under the Agreement and making the unity of Sudan attractive to the people of South Sudan.

2.5 At the end of the six (6) year interim period there shall be an internationally monitored referendum, organized jointly by the GOS and the SPLM/A, for the people of South Sudan to: confirm the unity of the Sudan by voting to adopt the system of government established under the Peace Agreement; or to vote for secession.

2.6 The Parties shall refrain from any form of unilateral revocation or abrogation of the Peace Agreement.

—————–

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pi The CPA – detail


TO MY FELLOW SUDANESE
WHICH WAY FORWARD?
By Lt. Gen. Mkungu Joseph Lagu (Retd.), Hon. D. Letts.
An Independent Interlocutor

Chairman, Peace Action for Sudan & Africa (PAFSA)
Date: 22 July 2002

Prelude

My fellow Sudanese,

Fraternal greetings from me Joseph Lagu, son of Yakobo Yanga, your compatriot from Moli, section of the Madi tribe. I was born in Momokwe, a hamlet in Moli area and bread in Nimule, southern Sudan. I attended schools at Akot in Dinka Agar area, Bahr el Ghazal Province, Loka in the Pajulu tribe territory, Yei River District, Equatoria Province, and then Rumbek for the secondary school, again in Agarland. Subsequently, I went to military academy at Omdurman in northern Sudan. I speak three of the southern languages: my mother tongue Madi, Dinka and Acholi, besides Arabic and English. I lived, worked and travelled extensively in the Sudan: from Nimule to Wadi Halfa and from Kassala to El Geneina. In this respect I know my country, the Sudan. By conviction, I took up arms to fight for the justifiable cause of South Sudan in an attempt to repel what looked like northern cultural aggression that I detested. When the north indicated acquiescence to halt that type of pressure, again by conviction, I made peace with the then leadership in the north, March 1972. I strove to consolidate that peace by remaining to serve as an officer in the armed forces for six years, quite unprecedented a move in revolutionary struggles. I was thereafter elected President of Southern Region of Sudan. Following that I was appointed Vice-President of the Republic. After the demise of that government, I sought leave to remain in the UK. I was recalled to the Sudan by Prime Minister Sadiq el Mahdi of an elected government in 1988 and subsequently appointed a roving ambassador. I was confirmed in that assignment by the government that followed. I dropped out of the system voluntarily in August 1998 in order to be able to express my views on the outstanding political issues in the country impartially.

I have served my country in three distinct but interrelated capacities namely: as a soldier, a politician and a diplomat. I have been an officer in the regular army and a guerrilla commander. I experienced both war and peace. Because of my eagerness to share with you my experiences, reflections and vision, I am writing to you this letter — which is my second exposition. I wrote to you the first letter in April 1991, when I was serving as our country’s ambassador to the United Nations. The purpose of this letter is:

a) to explore the way forward by reflecting upon past and current situation in our country,
b) to provoke and promote serious discussion, with a pragmatic view to attain peace and normality in our country,
c) to draw a proposal for an interim political arrangement pending a referendum, currently a popular call amongst southerners, the result of which shall decide the future of the country and status of the south.

Background to the Conflict

Fellow countrymen, time has come to reflect upon the impact of the atrocious civil war which has ravaged our country since 1983. It is time to seek solutions towards the attainment of peace — for it is peace that our people yearn for and desire today — it is what they must have! The people of our country especially southern Sudanese, have known little peace, since the dawn of independence 46 years ago. The principal cause of the civil war in the Sudan has been political disparity between north and south. This imbalance was partly a legacy of the colonial era. As we know, similar struggles have arisen elsewhere in the third world and in the African continent.

When I took up arms to fight against injustice being inflicted upon the people of southern Sudan, it was my conviction then as it is now that all men are equal and should have the freedom and opportunity to fully participate in the political processes and development of their country. The people of southern Sudan have been politically oppressed and marginalised for a long time. Some northern Sudanese political ideologues then and now seek to destroy the African culture and identity of southern Sudanese. They try to do so by imposing the Islamic faith and Arabism on the principally African and Christian people of southern Sudan. Though a political agreement was signed in Addis Ababa, March 1972, giving southern Sudan an autonomous status within a unitary Sudan, it did not take another leader to abrogate it. It was President Gaafar Mohamed Nimeiri himself who signed the peace agreement with the south that watered the agreement down and eventually abrogated it, June 1983. The apparent steps towards the abrogation of the agreement precipitated the second armed conflict that erupted in May 1983.

I follow with great concern that since then about three million people have lost their lives either in battle, or as a consequence of the war, due to diseases, malnutrition or starvation. Many more live in Diaspora either in neighbouring countries or far afield in Europe, Canada, Australia and America. Thousands who have fled to northern Sudan in search of peace and hospitality found very little of those. Instead they are subjected to continuous harassment, forceful relocation and have no easy access to food or shelter. This is dehumanising. School-age children too, find difficulty to secure education, and if they do, are instructed in Arabic and taught the Islamic faith against their will and the will of their parents, if they are still alive. None of the successive governments stand free of blame from this abuse of power since the eruption of the ongoing conflict in May 1983. It is to be noted that any infrastructure which was established during the relative peace, 1972-1982, has been reduced to rubbles. It is against this background that I ask the question, “My fellow Sudanese, which way forward?”

A challenge to Sudanese

Since the reconciliation between France and Germany, western Europe has become a dynamic power for the world dialogue of peace. It was western Europe that kept the dynamics of hope which finally broke the Marxist stronghold of eastern Europe. There are still problems and social excesses in Europe, but there is also a dynamic quest for an enlightened world where religious and cultural values of Africa and Asia are gaining acceptance and respect.

It is incumbent upon the Sudan government to demonstrate a positive attitude towards peace and reconciliation. This will give the impression of a realistic and forward looking politics. Since independence, our country has experienced many political dynamics. Political parties and military juntas of different political shades and colours have all had the chance to rule or mis-rule the country, without resolving the standing national political problems. It is high time that a system is designed to accommodate all the different political aspirations and expectations expressed by all the different sectors of the Sudanese population. I wish to emphasize that this would be the prerequisite for attainment of sustainable peace and stability in our beloved country.

Positive moves

I noticed some moves, aimed towards softening the situation taken by the government since August 1995 that I considered relevant moves. These were the ministerial changes, the reorganisation of the security organs, the release of political detainees; and the rather relaxed security situation that followed. Subsequently, the relaxation embraced political tolerance that allowed other political view points to be expressed freely inside the country. After the events of the 11th of September the Government of Sudan became more cooperative with the US and the international community. This made potential friends of the country hopeful that the government was preparing the grounds for political dispensation that will advance the cause of internal peace and open the door to national reconciliation. It is my perception that the moves, if advanced, will improve government relationship with the wider world community.

Practical steps

The need for attaining peace with justice cannot be over emphasized. If someone were to ask me a down-to-earth question, what would you Joseph Lagu do in these circumstances, my reply would be:

1. To advise a cease-fire and immediate halt to the fighting. The opposing forces to freeze where they are at the time of announcement of such a cease-fire and peace talks continue as is the case now in Sri-Lanka. The oil companies to suspend operations in the south until peace agreement is concluded.

2. To urge the incumbent administration to renew overtures for peace with the south which offers a link with the north through a single southern authority within the structure of a national government similar to the Addis Ababa Agreement, 1972. That is to be adopted as an interim arrangement.

3. To encourage and broaden open national debate without pre-conditions as this could provide the basis for achievement of comprehensive and sustainable peace.

4. To solicit for declaration of multi-party politics, general amnesty, lifting harzadous measures obstructing other political parties, and registration of the SPLM and political wings of the other remaining opposition groups as legitimate parties.

In my opinion these moves will indicate positive steps towards national reconciliation. It may lead to the evolution of a new political system involving the various shades of political opinions in the country. And, could enable members of the present administration to participate in any future government of national reconciliation, without being victimised. I perceive that the process may result in a new revolution for genuine peace and reconciliation in the pattern of South Africa.

I had always felt welcomed during visits to the Sudan. I wish to register the warmth and attention I received both from the government and the public especially in May and September 1996 and later in May-June 2001. I realised that our people still had confidence in what I have to say, and expect my contribution towards the achievement of peace in our country. I felt most obliged and would therefore wish to do something to meet that trust. In May and September 1996, I had the chance to meet principal political figures. I met the President of the Republic and his then deputies, as well as the then Speaker of the Assembly and deputies. I also met the then Minister for Foreign Affairs and few other Ministers. In addition, I met two of my former colleagues: Sayed Sadiq el Mahdi and Sayed Abel Alier. With the latter two, my main contention was that, it was the duty of the three of us to moderate political temperature. This was by the virtue of our being considered elders at national level. It was clear that they concurred with me. After all, they too would not wish the political situation to deteriorate any further than it already had. Mr. El Mahdi said that his decision to remain in the country, despite constant harassment by the security forces indicated his commitment to non-violent methods as means to resolving political problems. “That is my practical demonstration of goodwill.” He said.

In the May-June 2002 visit I also met the President, the second Vice-President, and the Chairman of the Southern Coordination Council. I was offered the courtecy to be taken to Juba to talk to the people there and also hear from them. In Khartoum I also met the Secretary General of the ruling party, the National Congress. I expressed my views and also heard from him. I met other officials involved in the peace process. During that visit I also met my two colleagues and comrades, Sayed Sadiq el Mahdi and Mr. Abel Alier. We exchanged views and shared experiences as before. The purpose of the visit was to advise a halt to the war while peace talks continue, and strive for a national understanding: south-south dialogue parrallel to north-north dialogue then panSudan dialogue. I believe that is the way to peace in the Sudan.

My visit to New York, January 1996

The significance of the Moral Re-armament’s international work has attracted the attention of intellectuals, as a result of a book entitled, Religion the missing Dimension of Statecraft. The organisation is renamed Initiative for Change (IC). Its Office in New York provides liaison between Initiative for Change, the diplomatic missions as well as the United Nations Secretariat. This book which impressed the Archbishop of Canterbury, who made a specific reference to it in his address in Khartoum and at Al-Azhar University, is the product of a study sponsored by the Center for Strategic and International Studies. It took the US State Department to task, for its failure to understand the sensitivity and importance of religious culture, which guide nations in the making of national policies. The secularisation of international diplomacy leads to failure, the book argues. It is therefore opportune and quintessential to appreciate the value and the contribution made to human condition by the great religions.

My visit to New York coincided with the Security Council’s decision to support the Ethiopian request for the extradition from Sudan of those allegedly involved in the attempted assassination of President Mubarak. At the same time the Secretary General’s office announced that the amount of humanitarian assistance needed to compensate for the effect of the war in the Sudan was over $100 million for 1996. “Does this not make the need for peace urgent?” I reasoned. Among those I talked to was ambassador Legwaila of Botswana, a member of the Security Council, who was to assume presidency of the Security Council in March 1996. He was of the impression that any peace initiative by government of the Sudan would be welcomed by the UN Security Council. I then inferred from this that a serious peace proposal from the Sudan Government would have a positive impact on how the Security Council would view the extradition question. This prompted me to propose to the government that I be invited to open a dialogue between the government and leadership of the SPLM/A. I indicated that this effort for arbitration could be extended to include northern opposition groups.

In a letter to the President of the Republic, I had this to say: “The decision to impose the Sharia Law in the Sudan was not of your government but that of former President Gaafar Mohamed Nimeiri, in addition, your government did not initiate but inherited the current conflict from preceding regimes. If you share my views, I would suggest that you initiate concrete proposals for peace. My position as a former anya-nya (the guerrilla army preceding SPLA) leader, President of the HEC for the Southern Region, and Vice-President of the Republic, gives me a unique position for the task of mediation at national level. It was a sad day when the Addis Ababa agreement was breached, Mr. President; since then you will agree that our country has known little else, but war and poverty. Is it not time to revisit the principles of the Addis Ababa Agreement? It might be that concessions have to be made by your government to elicit response from the people of southern Sudan to resume a solution modelled on Addis Ababa. I believe this is the only way forward and I strongly commend it to you. I also hold the view that the Sudan should be a federation of two states, equal in status: north and south.

Each state with its institutions empowered to impart educational, religious and cultural development to sustain their respective identities. At this juncture, it is imperative for northern Sudanese to recognise, accept and leave southern Sudanese to practice and develop their own culture. For I believe this is the cardinal point of the continuous unrest between south and north and for the ongoing civil strife, and it must be addressed in any new political or constitutional arrangement”. Sadiq el Mahdi had to go into exile On 10 December 1996 in a surprise move the Ansar leader, Sayed Sadiq el Mahdi escaped from the Sudan. There were reports that he was waited for at a spot specified by a group of friends where he was air-lifted by a helicopter. On 12 December, two days after, the exit was in the world news headlines, the BBC radio world programme and television channels were reporting on the dramatic escape. I watched over the Middle-East Broadcasting Corporation (MBC) Arabic service, Mr. El Mahdi being received in an Eritrean country-side by the Secretary-General of the Umma party, Dr. Omar Nur el Daim. No helicopter apparently appeared at the scene of the reception. The departure of Mr. El Mahdi from the Sudan appeared to contrast sharply with the principle which he said he stood for during my visits in May and in September 1996. Whatever its merits or demerits, the defection of Mr. El Mahdi indicated the beginning of a new development that was soon to be. It seemed the opposition NDA alliance waited for Mr. El Mahdi to join them in exile, because the opposition forces hitherto silent, resumed military actions shortly after Mr. El Mahdi joined them. In January 1997, the Sudan Allied Forces (SAF) started some military operations against government positions bordering Eritrea.

On 12 January 1997, Northern Sudan Brigade (NSB), an SPLA regiment in the north, overran the towns of Kurmuk and Geisan along Ethiopia-Sudan border threatening the strategic town of Damazin and nearby Roseires hydro-electric dam. The opposition groups called for a popular uprising. Whilst the government was urging the same population for a popular support to repel what they believed was a foreign backed invasion of the Sudan from north-east. Khartoum announced that the country had been invaded by a force of combined Tigrean armies of Ethiopia and Eritrea. After about a month’s interlude, the SPLA forces were on the offensive again. They launched a series of lightening attacks as from 6 March, this time from the south along the borders with Uganda’s West Nile Province. Similarly Khartoum reported the invasion of the country by neighbouring Uganda. The invading forces overran army posts of Kaya, Morobo, Iwatoka and Limbe (Juba – Yei Kajo Keji road junction). On 13 March, the Arabic Middle East Broadcasting Corporation (MBC), interrupted its programme and announced the fall of Yei to the SPLA while Loka and Lainya were under siege.

Those out posts of Yei subsequently fell to the SPLA as well, bringing the SPLA closer to Juba, the capital of South Sudan. The strategy seemed to be to encircle the government forces, exhaust and force them to rebel to join the opposition in toppling the system. Amazing! Unprecedented strange political scenarios were taking place in the Sudan at the time. The opposition forces comprising of SPLA, SAF, NDA have grouped into an alliance on one side: Whilst Riak Machar’s SSIM/A, SPLM/A Bahr el Ghazal group and the incumbents of Khartoum administration on the other. Incredible! It seems strangely in politics, interests or basic need for survival supersedes logic.

Laughable situations

What is more ludicrous is the behaviour of some of the northern leaders when out of power! They don’t seem to indicate any sign of patriotism in such situations.

1. Fieldmarshal President Leader, El Imam Gaafar Mohamed Nimeiri, who precipitated the eruption of the ongoing conflict tried to suppress the new movement ruthlessly. He used all means he could grab to do so. In his attempts to isolate the south, he sought friendship and cooperation of leaders of the immediate neighbouring states. Subsequently, he commissioned the training at the Sudan Military Academy large numbers of military officers more specifically, for two neighbouring states: Uganda and Tanzania. Certainly, the then Ugandan leader, Dr. Milton Obote, was aware that the services rendered to his country could only amount to a political bribe. He must have been equally aware, that he was expected in return, not to allow southern Sudanese to use Uganda as a sanctuary. Rather, he was expected to turn such fugitives to the Sudanese authorities across the borders, should another conflict erupt in the Sudan. What one could not read at the time were the thoughts in the mind of the Tanzanian leader, Mwalimu Julius Nyerere.

In furthering such cynical moves, the Fieldmarshal was jammed in series of clandestine contacts with other leaders, including those of the State of Israel supposedly at war with the Sudan. Consequently, the Imam President, flew to Nairobi, Kenya, and met reportedly, none other than Ariel Sharon. One Israeli leader, the Arabs regard as the most radical and belligerent towards them, of all Israeli leaders. The meeting accounted for took place somewhere outside Nairobi. There, the transportation of the Fallasha Jews from Ethiopia through the Sudan was presumably concluded or advanced. Apart from the financial reward he was alleged to have received from the friendship of the Israelis. A vital guarantee that southern leaders would be turned away by the Israelis should they go to them again to seek military support. Confident of the results of his diplomatic manoeuvres, the former President irritated the political atmosphere, to precipitate the ongoing conflict. On losing power, the Fieldmarshal made advances for an alliance with the SPLA in order to regain power. This is ludicrous. He shamelessly sought the alliance of those he drove into rebellion and wanted to use them to overthrow the government of the day in Khartoum.

What a man? When the country was no longer under his leadership, the government there is bad and must be dislodged, even with the help of mutineers, the Imam perceived. He was alleged to have promised to resolve the southern problem on his return to power. Would he? That alliance nonetheless, failed to materialise! I learnt from the SPLA that the Fieldmarshal declined to meet their modest request, to help with provision of clothes (uniforms) for the guerrillas to prove his seriousness. Thereafter, SPLM/A leadership lost interest and could not trust the Fieldmarshal any longer. Plainly, that has become the case with most southern compatriots. The former President, outwardly behaving as a chameleon; one day a communist, another day an Arab nationalist, or a Pan-African, over displayed the change of colours. He exhibited that by exercising Machiavellian type of politics too much, during the 16 years of his rule. Consequently he lost ground in the country — sad for him, in the south that was for good. One wonders what may be in the mind of the Fieldmarshal/Imam as a new peace agreement seems immenent following the Machakos protocol of 20 July 2002.

2. The Khatmiyya sect leader, the patron of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), Sayed Mohammed Osman El Mirghani, rushed to the front line in Damazin when the SPLA launched their first penetration into northern Sudan in November 1987. He subsequently championed a call to the Arab world to support the Muslims in the Sudan under the Umma/DUP coalition government, 1986-89. He appealed for support to repel an invasion by ‘alien infidels’ as he termed them, from the south. The same man later became the leader of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) which included those he called ‘alien infidels.’ Is not that ludicrous?

Ironically he thereafter resolutely pleaded with the same Arab world to support the alliance, spearheaded by the SPLA, those he once referred to as alien infidels. He did this in his drive to shatter the ongoing administration in Khartoum.

The Khatmiya leader was outraged as his Egyptian supporters following the progress of the IGAD sponsored peace talks into something realistics ? the Machakos protocol. He didn’t like it. It forced him to come out in his true colours.

3. The Ansar sect leader and President of the Umma Party, Sayed Sadiq el Mahdi, Prime Minister of the Umma/DUP coalition government at the time, declared a state of emergency when the SPLA made the incursion into the north. He tried to push through the assembly a bill that would have legitimised the then existing militias, that included the dreaded murahileen, allegedly raised by him and therefore loyal to him. Those, reportedly, wrecked such havoc on the Dinka of Bahr el Ghazal. The same man escaped from Khartoum and found himself safe and sound in the headquarters of the NDA in Asmara. He was received with fervour there on defection from the Sudan. Subsequently he became the chief spokesman of the new opposition front, comprising of former rivals and enemies: the northern political parties grouped as NDA, and their southern counterpart, the SPLM. An unprecedented situation!

However, the Ansar leader didn’t seem to fit comfortably well in the NDA, an organisation chaired by his life long rival. After four years in a relative discomfort he took another serious decision and announced his plan to return to the Sudan to do politics from within. Apparently, he was assured by the government that it was possible for him to lead his opposition party from within. He believed them. The system had announced general amnesty, allowed other political parties to operate within the Sudan and relaxed restrictions of free expressions to attract the opposition groups. The Ansar leader duely returned to Khartoum in May 2000 and had a populous reception by his ansar followers and other curious onlookers, a contrast to the dramatic escape four year earlier. He is the only northern leader that seems to keep pace with the changing world. He welcomed the Machakos protocol as a move to the right direction? Meaningful peace.

4. The National Islamic Front (NIF) leader and founder, mentor and champion of the Islamic system in the Sudan, Dr. Hassan Abdallah Turabi, followed the same trend of action as the above mentioned three leaders, following a split in the NIF due to power struggle between him and the President. He had indicated plans to unseat the President through an act of the assembly.

President Beshir moved decisively and swiftly. He dissolved the National Assembly to render Dr. Turabi toothless. The quarrel led to the split of NIF with the President’s group emerging stronger. The weaker group was progressively isolated and its members were placed under security surveilance. Subsequently, the militant among them including their leader were apprehended and placed behind the bars. The NIF founder, one that strove to bring to power the ongoing administration, turned nowhere else other than to the SPLM/A for alliance. He intucted those still loyal to him to go to meet SPLM/A representatives at an appropriate venue to scheme together to unseat the Beshir government. That is what prompted President Beshir to order his apprehension with some of his friends as mensioned above. Yet this chamelion was quick to denounce the Machakos protocol as a development against the Arabs and Islam, singing the same chorus as the Egyptian President, Hosni Mubarak.

It isn’t a surprise any more. It has become the culture of the northern leaders as seen from the behaviour of those preceding the last actor, Dr. Hassan Abdallah Turabi. Coincidently, the NIF squabble for power and the split occurred around the same period with the return and populous reception accorded to the Ansar leader. Things did not remain that good in the Umma Party, the political organ of the Ansar movement however. Following his seemingly triumphant return, it has been rumoured that the Ansar leader began to experience acts of insubordination from his cousin, Mubarak el Fadil el Mahdi. The actions of this other Mahdi as it is now clear seems to have caused a schism in Sudan’s largest political party. Whichever way one look at it, it is another set back. Any splits in any of the political groups or parties at this stage is a set back in contrast to mergers, which I consider as positive steps.

In summary however, one doubts if any of the four mentioned characters will ever behave differently should they come to power again in Khartoum. Yet, one’s assumption may be wrong. It remains to be seen. Nevertheless, I doubt if any one of the four personalities will ever exercise political power again in the Sudan. If by miracle that happens, I hope the lucky survivor will benefit from the past mistakes and behave differently, having passed through the hard school of life.

Doubtful endeavours

These political scenarios were not only strange but time proved that they could not be feasible. The position of SSIM/A and SPLM/A Bahr el Ghazal group was that of independence for South Sudan — which must be said was and still is the popular aspiration of the people of South Sudan. It was unlikely that the NIF administration in Khartoum would accede to that, which however they did but tactically. As it turned out, it was only a move to pass time and survive. They prepared to dishonour it. At the time the position of the SPLA leader (Col. John Garang) was not clear. He also maintained a tactical position. The rank and file in the SPLA concurred with that of the other southern political groups, the right of self-determination for the people of South Sudan. It is the stand of SPLM at the IGAD sponsored peace talks in Nairobi, Kenya, that started on 17th of June 2002. During the visit of the UN Secretary Genenral to the Sudan this month, the Sudanese Minister of external relations, Sayed Mustafa Osman Ismail declared, “We have all come out of our tactical positions and are now in our true colours, Government and SPLM”. That ends the doubtful endeavours.

Compatriots, the situation in the country requires us citizens to turn to our senses: consult one another, ponder unselfishly, and seek guidance for peace and reconciliation in our country. Also we should appreciate the positions of the two combatant groups who now seem to understand what they are fighting for. Let us aim to construct a political arrangement that will accommodate all sides where victory will be to the Sudanese people as a whole and not to individuals, groups, or communities. I did agree with Mr. Abel Alier in his open letter addressed to the President of the Republic and the then Speaker of the National Assembly. In the letter he maintained that there was then sufficient basis for comprehensive peace talks, which according to him should include all the parties involved in the conflict. He added that concerned citizens who have not taken up arms, must also be involved in the peace process. He pointed out that the material for contention was provided by the following:

1) IGAD Declaration of Principles 1994,
2) Asmara Resolutions 1995 and 1996,
3) The letter of the Concerned Southerners 1995,
4) The Peace Charter, April 1996, signed between the GOS on one side, and SSIM and Associates on the other.

Fellow compatriots, let us stand together to see that an agreement is reached with justice for all. First and foremost, it is the Sudanese to secure that. Other nations and people can only act as catalysts to enable us Sudanese to reach an agreement and attain peace.

Focus on Northerners

I wish to refer at this point to you our northern compatriots. I believe there is still room to find a solution to the north-south conflict within one geographical Sudan. This can possibly be a form of union between south and north as two equal partners. I have consistently pointed out as early as the 1980s that a decentralised southern Sudan should be linked to the north through a single southern authority. This should be integrated into any emerging peace formula.

Perhaps you will want to know that most southern Sudanese resent the paternalistic attitude you demonstrate towards them, more-or-less as Egyptians display towards you. Again, this is a legacy of the colonial era: the grades of human beings was determined by the colour of skin they wore. Those with the white skin (colour of the imperial race) top and down wards as the colour of skin darkens to black (slave race colour) that we in the south wore. Our country was jointly ruled by Britain and Egypt with the latter being a junior partner in the condominium in accordance to the grade of human evaluation at the time. During the time, the Egyptians bowed to the British, and lorded over the Sudanese. And in turn, you bowed to the Egyptians and wanted to lord over us. This is the cause of our conflict with you. Why do you behave towards southerners as the imperialists do towards subject people, if truly you regard southerners as compatriots? You may have to convince them (southerners) that you do accept them as your equals just as they are, and not primitive people under your rule to be civilized. You may have to be content to retain your culture to yourselves. In addition, I advise that you keep your hands off southern matters. I observe that these are the main causes of resentment and hostilities. The south will reciprocate and reconsider its position with the north more favourably, if you take note of these and adjust your conduct accordingly. The outcome could be voluntary assent by the south to remain linked with the north in a form of a union, federation or confederation. I hope you will take my advice and reconsider your attitude towards the south and southerners.

The Interim arrangement

For the interim period, I suggest that we explore political arrangement based on the Addis Ababa Agreement. In which case there should be established two self-governing regions in the Sudan. The northern region comprising of the six provinces of the north, as at the time of independence. It may have Khartoum as its capital. The component part in the union will be the southern region comprising of the three provinces of southern Sudan. This is to have as its capital the town of Juba as was the case following the conclusion of the Addis Ababa Agreement. In my opinion, Kosti is an appropriate location for the new capital of the federation or confederation, in view of its central position.

Sovereignty and the supreme command of the armed forces should be vested in a five-man head of state commission with rotating chair. It should be recalled that this was the system the country adopted at independence in January 1956. This, in my opinion, will be acceptable to the various segments of the Sudanese community as a compromise solution. Whereas, at independence, the commission composed of one southerner and four northerners, this time it has to be fair and proportional. In other words, it should consist of two southerners. This will take into account the in-homogeneity of the south, a region that is inhabited by two distinct categories of peoples: the sedentary peoples of the equatorial crescent and the semi-nomadic pastoral peoples of the riverain plains. These are to be reflected in the commission.

The three seats of the north should be allocated geographically: to the east, north, and west, but not to be apportioned to the political parties as was the case before. That system of allocation did not take into account even distribution of seats to the regions. The federal government or the common authority of the confederation is to be similarly selected and composed. Each of the nine provinces, designated at independence, must be represented at least by one cabinet minister. This is essential, if the federal government is to have a truly national character. It is my vision for a stable and prosperous Sudan, a vision that could bring the warring, ethnic and religious groups in the country together. It will reduce discontentment, fear, marginalisation, or domination. As the regions will be self governing, and political power shared over what remains to be catered for at the centre, no region will be dominating, or marginalised.

Structure and Function of the Regular Forces

Experience has shown elsewhere, and in the Sudan, that the command of an armed force once dominated by a section of the community, can be hazardous to democracy. Such a force will strive to alienate segments of other communities from the centre of political power. This is true because the armed forces have proved to be a massive power base in our part of the world. It is therefore essential that the composition of the armed forces is re-structured and balanced.

The infantry: the basic element of the force should be restructured on the basis of the former Sudan Defence Force (SDF) with its units locally recruited. The system will have administrative advantages. For instance, familiarity with and use of local means of transport will be cheaper for the government. It will reduce the distance to be covered by the soldiers and their families on their way home or back from holidays. It will also reduce the spread of the killer virous (AIDS) as soldiers will remain with their families most of the time within their military districts.

The cadres of the air force, the navy and the other support arms, are to be recruited from all the provinces on a quota basis.

The staff and the rank and file of the external and internal security agencies should be similarly mustered as the above.

The police, the prison wardens and other auxiliary forces should be mobilized and deployed locally. In addition, there should be a federal police force, with limited duties to discharge local as well as national tasks. The federal police should have the task to observe and discharge professional standards within the police force nationwide.

The Forces must be apolitical

It is imperative for the armed forces and the auxiliary forces to adopt an apolitical stance on national issues. The government of the day should desist from using the forces to their advantage vis-à-vis their political opponents.

It appears extraordinary to expect the police and the armed forces to uphold the national constitution and preserve the unity of the country if the population at large does not feel any bond of common citizenship. A constitution that is not drawn up and ratified by a common consensus is likely to be seen as being imposed by a privileged segment of the population on the others hitherto marginalised by the system. Such a constitution does not carry any justice or validity in the eyes of those who feel so marginalised. It is an established fact that anything imposed is looked at with contempt, and therefore subject to rejection. Let us learn from the history of other nations. Great empires have crumbled, albeit attempts to impose their culture and values on others. The use of the armed forces to preserve a standing system can be oppressive. This situation usually arises when political power in a country is not balanced and the composition of the armed forces conforms with the imbalance.

The people of southern Sudan have been for a long time edged off from fair representation in the armed forces. Consequently they have been subjected to political oppression, cultural bondage and military occupation. It resulted in the suppression of their political expressions and aspirations. It is to be recalled that since independence, southerners have consistently and systematically advocated a federal system of government as the most appropriate system that can accommodate the expressions and development of the various cultures of the Sudanese people. Sadly, this has been misconstrued by some northern political ideologues to mean secession.

That category of northerners who have patronising attitudes, like our former colonial masters, regard the south to be their dominion and the people there their subjects. To them, the call for federation amounts to denying them the motive to ascend as masters over southerners. Those political ideologues forget that southerners contributed in the struggle for the independence of the country. Therefore, like any free people elsewhere in the world, they are entitled to their human and political rights. Instead of waging an atrocious war against the people of southern Sudan, the north should realise the irrelevance of the situation and must accept the realities and welcome to resolve national political problems through dialogue. This is the acknowledged norm in the current world situation.

The riverain people of the north, obviously those who stepped into the shoes of the former colonial powers, must accept the other peoples of theSudan as their equals, to participate fully with them in the affairs of the country as equal citizens. Thus aiming to create a situation that is conducive for the development of the nation and for keeping the country united. To act otherwise will result in the alienation of the other peoples, consequently, diminishing the chances of uniting the country.

Challenging the Armed Forces

In the 46 years of Sudan’s national history, the armed forces have been repeatedly challenged in the south, because of their seemingly alien composition. They are seen in their present form as an instrument for advancement of northern culture and domination. It is to be noted that northern culture has been, and is still regarded as alien in the south. These sentiments have become progressively shared by people from other parts of the Sudan, outside the riverain region of the north.

Since the dissolution of the Equatoria Corps (Units of the SDF in southern Sudan before independence), the rank and file units of the armed forces brought from the north, mainly blacks from the marginalised areas and officered by the brown riverain northerners, are viewed by southerners with contempt. They are regarded as mentioned earlier, instruments of oppression. To the southerners, these are occupation forces designed to maintain northern hegemony or colonial rule. Southern youths anticipate the days when they will expel those aliens and liberate their country. This is a factor in the continued civil strife. Contrast this with the relative peace during the regional government, when the anya-nya soldiers were integrated into the national army and deployed predominantly in the south. The situation gave southerners a sense of security and confidence, in which case, they had a measure of control over their lives within their region. Troubles came when an attempt to upset the preponderance of southerners in the southern garrisons was uncovered!

Misuse of the regular forces

Compatriots, take caution! Let us learn from experiences of the past. The armed forces do not always necessarily remain in the barracks to discharge their designated duties. Experience has shown that from time to time they violated the very constitution they were supposed to uphold, preserve and honour. They crossed over into politics, whenever they could, where they clashed with politicians — in short they became an alternate political band rivaling that of the civilians! Typically, they seize power in military coups d’ etate by capturing important military and civil installations in the capital. They depose civilian governments and assume power through the barrel of the gun. It is to be recalled that since independence, the army has seized power three times. Although initially the coups have been bloodless, they became bloody following subsequent counter coup d’etate attempts.

It is to be comprehended that the armed forces are staffed by fellow human beings who have human feelings, fears and ambitions. Some of them join the army to make their living as other people do in other professions. Drawn from a wide cross-section of the population, it may be unrealistic to expect them to have unwavering single dimensional political loyalty. They are not obliged to uphold indefinitely a military ruler. The armed forces dropped General Abboud to whom power was handed supposedly by the then Prime Minister, Abdullah Khalil, after they supported and applauded the General for six years. Following that, the armed forces sided with the mob in an uprising and ended the rule of Fieldmarshal Gaafar Mohamed Nimeiri, after sustaining and keeping him in power for 16 years. In later years of his rule, they even paid him baya allegiance in accordance to Islamic rites, when he declared himself Imam (Islamic religious and temporal leader) as well. It is to be recalled that the Fieldmarshal seized power, at the rank of Colonel, from an elected civilian Prime Minister, Sayed Mohamed Ahmed Mahgoub. Obviously, the armed forces can be relied upon for political support for sometime, but not always. As authenticated by the examples above, the armed forces can be a double-edge sword.

Unprecedented political and military alliances

In the mid-1990s, strange and unprecedented political and military developments occurred in the Sudan. Of course they were not genuine, time remained to prove that, not long thereafter. The northern politicians who rigorously advocated military defeat of Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA), whilst in power, had in opposition become allies of the southern based politico-military movement. Similarly, the yielding to self-determination for the south by the ongoing system which has a programme to islamise and arabise the south and keep it within a united Islamic Sudan was a deceptive move. Amazing! There was ostensibly a surprise move. Unexpectedly, the Islamists were those evidently moving towards an understanding with the supposed extremists’ elements of southern liberation factions! These were: South Sudan Independence Movement, SPLM/A Bahr el Ghazal group, SPLM/A Bor, and the Equatoria Defence Force. The declared aim of those groups is the independence of the south. It was to that effect that the incumbent administration signed a Peace Charter with leadership of those allied factions. Now the same administration wants to jump off from that commitment. Incredible! At the time, the warring factions in the Sudan were grouped into two hostile camps: across racial and cultural divides.

Few would understand this sort of camping or grouping, because the political and cultural differences that divided the people behind them which precipitated the civil war had not been resolved. One presumed that the purpose of government understanding with those allied factions, as opposed to NDA-SPLA alliance was consequence of politics of survival, leave alone the so called tactical consideration. This is affirmed by the saying: In politics, there is no permanent enmity and no permanent friendship, what is permanent is interest.

Certainly, those alliances could only be construed as politics of convenience. Logic and patriotism do not seem to have place in this type of political scenario! The dynamics of politics in the Sudan necessitate the grouping of politicians into two categories: patriots and opportunists. The latter predominate the political culture in the country. More often than not, these opportunists, either in the government or in the opposition movements, change allegiance when power changes from hand to another in the country or movement. These political opportunists lack consistent political direction and often, as indicated above, desert their leaders once they are out of power. Besides, there are disgruntled politicians who resort to, or, instigate military rebellion so as to overthrow the government of the day. Those go underground or filter out of the country to connive against an incumbent administration. Subsequently, they seek alliance with any opposition to an existing system. One example is that the NDA has allied with the SPLA, the very movement, whilst in power, they had contemptuously, with the northern masses behind them, termed mutineers. Conspicuously northerners use the term derogatorily to mean southern freedom fighters or separatists. They have not used the term in reference to the northern opposition elements, not even against those who took arms to fight the government in Khartoum.

It would be unfair, however, to term all Sudanese politicians and soldiers, as opportunists. There are patriots and statesmen among them, those put national interest first. I appeal to that category of Sudanese to objectively address the causes of the atrocious civil war and heed to the aspirations of the southern people. This will promote the cause of peace and political stability in the country. It is time to resolve this conflict congenially in order that the country may attain prosperity, long denied to it. Contemporary Southern Sudanese should be clear in their objectives in the endeavour to change northern hearts and minds. It may be wise that they stick to the political objectives they inherited from their predecessors, which in the first place motivated them to take up arms. On the other side, the present northern leaders should refrain from exploiting ethnic differences and divisions in the south, because southerners are capable of playing the same game these days. Together we should embark on re-constructing a political system that will accommodate the aspirations and needs of all Sudanese.

Inter-regional and intra-regional conflicts

Since independence, the Sudan has not fought wars with other countries. For most of the past four decades, the country has been waging an atrocious war against itself, destroying its people, and material resources. The north-south conflict started at the eve of independence, August 1955. The present civil war erupted on 16 May 1983. Through experience and tenacious efforts, southerners have now acquired military skills which formerly have been northern exclusive possession. When it became clear that the anya-nya officers in Sudan army were gradually being phased out, some of the remaining officers of the former guerrilla army found themselves pressed hard against the wall. That pressure forced them into rebellion to form the SPLA; since then, the subsequent northern regimes failed to exercise restraint, wisdom and statesmanship, to handle the issue. In stead, they responded by greater militarisation of the north and the use of force to subdue the south. This they thought is the most appropriate method to resolve the conflict. Inevitably, the policy plunged the country into a civil war of a greater magnitude never experienced before.

It needs to be mentioned here that further destruction of lives occurred within the south, when the movement split in 1991 into Torit and Nasir factions as they were referred to after the schism. These factions were later renamed, SPLA mainstream and SPLA-United. No sooner were these groups established than there were further inter-factional defections and counter defections. This was followed by fierce, bloody battles between the factions. The divisions were prompted and inspired principally by tribal loyalty. It is noticeable that when southern leaders quarrel, the northerner, their supposed opponent, becomes a distant enemy. They tend to turn their guns on each other more vigorously than when fighting an external aggressor. The enemy who is near becomes a greater threat to survival than the distant one! The result is always disastrous on the common people. As the saying goes, it is the grass that suffers when the big game fight. The inter-factional combat among the various factions of the SPLA has no doubt tarnished the legitimate cause of the southern people, opening a dark, unprecedented chapter in the history of South Sudan. With the capture of Kurmuk and Geisan and raids on Kassala Town, the war had been taken to the north. Notwithstanding, in the north too, the military has been drawn into internal conflicts since the late 1950s by squabbling politicians. The army is made to defend or unseat regimes. During the first series of squabbles, 1959, several brilliant officers, mostly infantry school instructors, were condemned and executed after an abortive attempt to dislodge General Abboud’s regime. Later, at the time of a subsequent military regime, the bloody incident at Wad Nubawi, Omdurman occurred. This was followed by the murder of a prominent spiritual-political leader, Imam el Hadi Abdelrahman el Mahdi, leader of the Ansar Sect. Inconceivable, at the time, those disastrous events could occur among northern Sudanese. The above events were but few examples of disastrous intra-regional, and inter-regional, complex and senseless, political and military squabbles in our country.

Power Struggle

Fellow Sudanese, let us also remember the series of bloody and abortive coup attempts designated to depose the May Regime. Let us reflect on those who fell in defence of the system and those who were killed while fighting to eliminate it! This baseless destruction of human lives is orchestrated by the so-called educated class who form the bulk of the political and military elite. Their endless struggle for control of power, political and national institutions, without prerogative to humanity is irrelevant. It cannot be justified. There is a need, I believe, to review the situation. Is it not timely that we acknowledge that things have not gone well as they should have been and seek guidance about the future? We may all have no peace in our greater days if things continue in this sequence. It is better to act now and put things right before it is too late. Presently, the situation in our country can be rightly summed up as ‘power struggle’ among the intellectual population, which unfortunately has adversely affected the welfare of the common people.

In reviewing the circumstances that have befallen our nation, it is befitting and timely thereunder to reflect upon the verses of a mindful caring British poet, Janet Mace:

The Grass Is Crushed When Two Elephants Fight
After the battle the giants part,
one licking his wounds alone in sullen peace,
one trumpeting triumph to the jungle trees,
but the grass remains, stamped on, tramped on,
will it wave again in the wind and the rain?
The people watch helpless when leaders struggle for power,
national needs forgotten.
One, prevailing, holds brief precarious sway,
some plan and plot to triumph another day,
but the people remain, afraid, bewildered.
Who will ease their pain and give them hope again?

The Significance of Peace

For at least 30 years out of 46 years of independence, the Sudan has engaged in a war of self-destruction. For that long, our people have had no experience of real peace or prosperity. Our lives and histories have been littered with monstrous destruction. In this context, therefore, the achievement of peace should have a profound impact on the life of the common person. Inevitably, it will also have impact upon the lives of political and military elite, who have themselves been born or bread into the culture of war. The attainment of peace will also be a tribute to the many mothers and wives left aggrieved by the loss of their sons or husbands, due to the war. For the Sudanese, peace will have two dimensions:

1. Intra-ethnic conciliation among warring tribes,
2. Inter-regional political conflict resolution between north and south.

It is to be hoped that national political processes will develop thereafter. Along side that will be the realisation that in a democracy, differences of political opinion, parties, or otherwise, are tolerable and legitimate. A realisation that will then not provoke the desire to physically terminate the existence of opponents. New dimension will then be nurtured by personal acquaintances and appreciation of one another’s views, on which to build so that true democracy may become the accepted norm. As the third millennium progresses, the global political climate will be that of tolerance and co-existence. The trend will be to share political power and national wealth or material resources. To secure such a comprehensive peace, concerted commitment by all Sudanese is obligatory.. This will require the restructuring of the entire political system based on multi-party democracy and federalism as well as restructuring of the armed and auxiliary forces to be compatible with the system. Most important is the right of the regions to develop their educational and cultural institutions to meet the aspirations of their respective peoples. In my mind, this will provide the check and balances, the different nationalities and religions need to feel secure within the national political structures and processes. It is only then that the Sudan will be at peace with itself.

It is never too late to avert the country from total anarchy and disintegration. It is never too late either to avoid the magnitude of savagery and disoderly dismemberment of the country as had occurred to former Yugoslavia, or dissection with parts coming under the rules of antagonistic war lords as for the case of Somalia. Let us save our country from falling into that situation. This is my wish and dream, to that end, I direct my prayers, my peace anthem:

Lord send blessings to Sudan,
Renew goodness in our land,
Lord, hurry our salvation: draw our peoples towards You,
Let them worship You.
And, in peace inhabit the Sudan;
God bless our Nation.

RECOMMENDATION

Therefore I recommend:

1. The halting of the war, cessation of all hostilities by all combat groups and freezing of all combatants where they are at the time of such announcement while peace talks continue as is the case now in Sri-Lanka..
2. Halting of oil exploitation pending restoration of normalcy in the region.
3. The recognition and registration of SPLM and other political wings of the liberation movement as legitimate political parties as adopted in post-apartheid South Africa.
4. The holding of general elections in the south and in the north separately and simultaneously.
5. The institution as an interim arrangement of two regional assemblies: to be based in Omdurman and Juba for the north and south respectively.
6. The institution of an interim national assembly by joint sittings of the interim regional assemblies.
7. The election by the interim national assembly of a supreme commission that will exercise the powers of the head of state and commander-in-chief of the armed forces.
8. The institution by the respective regional assemblies their respective executive councils to be based in Khartoum and Juba respectively.
9. The interim national assembly to elect a federal prime minister who will appoint federal ministers on directives set by the interim national assembly.
10. The supreme commission and federal government may temporarily function from Khartoum and Juba alternatively until their premises are constructed in the new capital to be Kosti.


Signed

Joseph Lagu
Lt. Gen. (Rtd.)
Former 2nd Vice-President of Sudan


The Comprehensive Peace Agreement
Between The Government of The Republic of The Sudan and
The Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Sudan People’s Liberation Army

Source: Government of the Republic of Sudan and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army
Date: 09 Jan 2005

The CPA CHAPEAU OF THE COMPREHENSIVE PEACE AGREEMENT

WHEREAS the Government of the Republic of the Sudan (GOS) and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLM/A) (hereinafter referred to as the “Parties”), having met in continuous negotiations between May 2002 and December 2004, in Karen, Machakos, Nairobi, Nakuru, Nanyuki and Naivasha, Kenya, under the auspices of the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD) Peace Process, and, in respect of the issues related to the Conflict Areas of Southern Kordofan and Blue Nile States and Abyei Area, under the auspices of the Government of the Republic of Kenya;

CONSCIOUS that the conflict in the Sudan is the longest running conflict in Africa; that it has caused tragic loss of life, destroyed the infrastructure of the country, eroded its economic resources and caused suffering to the people of the Sudan;

MINDFUL of the urgent need to bring peace and security to the people of the Sudan who have endured this conflict for far too long;

AWARE of the fact that peace, stability and development are aspirations shared by all people of the Sudan;

IN PURSUANCE OF the commitment of the Parties to a negotiated settlement on the basis of a democratic system of governance which, on the one hand, recognizes the right of the people of Southern Sudan to self-determination and seeks to make unity attractive during the Interim Period, while at the same time is founded on the values of justice, democracy, good governance, respect for fundamental rights and freedoms of the individual, mutual understanding and tolerance of diversity within the realities of the Sudan;

RECORDING AND RECONFIRMING that in pursuance of this commitment the Parties duly reached agreement on the following texts: the Machakos Protocol, dated 20th July, 2002 which is set out in Chapter I of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA); the Agreement on Security Arrangements, dated 25th September, 2003 which is set out in Chapter VI of the CPA; the Agreement on Wealth Sharing, dated 7th January, 2004 which is set out in Chapter III of the CPA; the Protocol on Power Sharing, dated 26th May, 2004 which is set out in Chapter II of the CPA; the Protocol on the Resolution of the Conflict In Southern Kordofan and Blue Nile States, dated 26th May, 2004 which is set out in Chapter V of the CPA; and the Protocol on the Resolution of the Conflict in Abyei Area, dated 26th May, 2004 which is set out in Chapter IV of the CPA; and that the Security Council of the United Nations in its Resolution 1574 of 19th November, 2004, took note of these aforementioned Protocols and Agreements;

RECOGNIZING that the Parties have concluded an Agreement on a Permanent Ceasefire and Security, Arrangements Implementation Modalities During the Pre-Interim and Interim Periods dated 31st December, 2004 which is set out in Annexure I of the CPA, within the Framework of the Agreement on Security Arrangements of 25th September, 2003; FURTHER RECOGNIZING that the Parties have also concluded the Agreement on the Implementation Modalities of the Protocols and Agreements dated 31st December, 2004 which is set out in Annexure Il of the CPA;

NOW HEREIN THE PARTIES JOINTLY ACKNOWLEDGE that the CPA offers not only hope but also a concrete model for solving problems and other conflicts in the country;

THE PARTIES FURTHER ACKNOWLEDGE that the successful implementation of the CPA shall provide a model for good governance in the Sudan that will help create a solid basis to preserve peace and make unity attractive and therefore undertake to fully adhere to the letter and spirit of the CPA so as to guarantee lasting peace, security for all, justice and equality in the Sudan;

NOW THEREFORE, THE PARTIES AGREE, upon signing this Agreement, on the following:

(1) The Pre-Interim Period shall commence, and all the obligations and commitments specified in the CPA shall be binding in accordance with the provisions thereof;

(2) The CPA shall be comprised of the texts of the Protocols and Agreements already signed, together with this Chapeau, the Agreement on Permanent Ceasefire and Security Arrangements Implementation Modalities and Appendices as Annexure I and the Agreement on the Implementation Modalities and the Global Implementation Matrix and Appendices as Annexure II;

(3) The agreed Arabic and English texts of the CPA shall both be official and authentic. However, in the event of a dispute regarding the meaning of any provision of the text, and only if there is a difference in meaning between the Arabic and English texts; the English text shall be authoritative as English was the language of the peace negotiations.

(4) Upon compilation of the official and authentic Arabic and English texts of the CPA, the initialled copies of both texts shall be given to both Parties, and copies shall also be lodged with the United Nations, the African Union, IGAD Secretariat in Djibouti, the League of Arab States and the Republic of Kenya.

(5) All persons performing governmental functions shall continue to do so at the place at which they render such services or perform such functions unless or until redeployed or alternative instructions are received in accordance with the arrangements agreed to by the Parties.

(6) To establish such priority joint task teams, particularly the Joint National Transitional Team (JNTT), the Abyei Boundaries Commission (ABC), the Constitutional Task Team and the Joint Technical Team on “New National Currency” as required to facilitate and prepare for the operationalization of the Agreement once it is put into force;

(7) To take the necessary steps to ensure the effective implementation of the Permanent Ceasefire;

(8) To take such steps as are necessary to ensure that resources and funds are available for the establishment of the structures, bodies and institutions contemplated by the CPA especially the establishment of the Government of Southern Sudan;

THE PARTIES EXPRESS THEIR GRATITUDE for the persistent efforts of the Facilitators, the IGAD Member States, and the International Community in assisting the people of the Sudan to return to peace and stability, and in particular, to the African Union, IGAD Partners Forum, the United Nations, and the Governments of Italy, Norway, United Kingdom and the United States of America for their support for the IGAD Peace Initiative and their unwavering interest and consistent endeavours in support of the Peace Process;

THE PARTIES JOINTLY APPEAL to the Regional and International Community and call on Organizations and States which have been requested to witness the signing of this Agreement to provide and affirm their unwavering support to the implementation of the CPA, and further appeal to them to avail resources for the necessary and urgent programmes and activities of the transition to peace as contemplated and agreed herein;

THE PARTIES RECOGNIZE the enormity of the tasks that lie ahead in successfully implementing the Comprehensive Peace Agreement and in signing below and before the witnesses here present, they reconfirm their commitment to implement the Comprehensive Peace Agreement fully and jointly.

H.E. Ali Osman Mohamed Taha
First Vice President of the Republic of the Sudan
On behalf of the Government Of the Republic of the Sudan

Dr. John Garang de Mabior
Chairman of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Sudan People’s Liberation Army
on behalf of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Sudan People’s Liberation Army


pi The CPA – detail


Need for Truth and Reconciliation Commission for SPLM/A War Atrocities in South Sudan
By Bona Malual, April 04, 2008

Bonna Malual If being asked to stand up to address an occasion as memorable as commemorating the death of a leader is an occasion of honor and respect for those who are asked to do so, then being asked to stand before you today, you the young and the not so young of Southern Sudan is a very special privilege and honor for me.  Thank you so much my dear sons and daughters, brothers and sisters from the Latuka community of Southern Sudan, for inviting me.

For a country like Southern Sudan, where matters are not as normal as they should be, it is not only tempting to want to talk straight; it is indeed an obligation and duty to talk straight.  This is exactly what I am going to do.  And I ask for your individual indulgence in advance.

I stand before you with very mixed feelings on this very momentous occasion, because seeing the turn of events in our Southern Sudan Community today; it is very difficult for me to say with clear heart, that my teacher and political mentor, Joseph Oduho, has not died in vain.  He spent his entire life struggling and in the end, he died in the hands of Southern Sudanese.  We must believe and pray that his blessed soul is now in heaven.

After struggling for the cause of Southern Sudan for so long; escaping death in the hands of the true enemies of the cause of Southern Sudan; escaping the Kangaroo death sentence passed on him by the kangaroo courts of Northern Sudan after the Torit uprising of August 1955, Ustaz Joseph Oduho was gunned down in cold blood on 28th  March 1993 by the hand of his own Southern Sudanese children, using the guns Joseph Oduho himself may have helped provide to these children for the liberation of our people from the tyranny imposed on the South by Northern Sudan.

It is impossible, as I stand before you, participating in this glorious occasion, marking the death of Joseph Oduho, to escape the thought that this great hero of the cause of Southern Sudan may just have died in vain. As we remember Joseph Oduho, we must not forget that with out freedom for all who are still alive in Southern Sudan; without total freedom from fear of any kind; especially fear from the rampant lynch-manship in Southern Sudan, in the hands of some of our own; with out pride in the way the government of Southern Sudan conducts the affairs of Southern Sudan today, it will be difficult to avoid the bitter conclusion that Joseph Oduho and all the fallen heroes of Southern Sudan have died in vain.

As we remember Joseph Oduho, we must not forget that with out freedom for all who are still alive in Southern Sudan; without total freedom from fear of any kind; especially fear from the rampant lynch-manship in Southern Sudan, in the hands of some of our own; with out pride in the way the government of Southern Sudan conducts the affairs of Southern Sudan today, it will be difficult to avoid the bitter conclusion that Joseph Oduho and all the fallen heroes of Southern Sudan have died in vain.

It would be dishonorable for those of us, who witnessed the political life of Southern Sudanese heroes like Joseph Oduho, to see so much that is going wrong in our community today; to see the squandering of the well earned political power of the people of Southern Sudan and the resources of the ever heroic people of Southern Sudan being used for causes that are not of the people of Southern Sudan and not say that things are not well in our society today.

We all need to work together, to correct those who believe that the power of Southern Sudan is their power and authority for them alone, over the people of Southern Sudan.  The would be authorities of Southern Sudan today, seem to think that they have the right to use that power unjustly and unfairly against any member of the community of Southern Sudanese.  All of us need to stand up straight and firm to be counted against internal hegemony, political bigotry and internal tyranny.

It is not enough any more, for us to be fed with the falsehood that it is Northern Sudan that is preventing rehabilitation and progress in Southern Sudan.  It is not true that Northern Sudan is any more responsible for the mal administration of Southern Sudan since July 2005, since when the present government of Southern Sudan was formed.  The current government of Southern Sudan is totally autonomous from the North, almost independent from the North, in its decisions and in its processes.

The North may not be giving the South its total fifty per cent share of the oil revenues from the oil wells of the South.  I do not know about that, because if the North is not transparent with the government of Southern Sudan about the transfer of oil revenue to the South, then how transparent is the government of Southern Sudan with its people about how it spends what ever percentage of the fifty percent oil revenue it receives from the North?  Are we only entitled, as Southern Sudanese, to know what Northern Sudan is not doing for us and we are not entitled to know what the government of Southern Sudan is doing with our resources for us?

I say these things on this occasion, because I know that Joseph Oduho would not have expected from me anything less.  He was always an outspoken frank man.  As my teacher in the formative years of my life, I hope I have learned something about frankness from Joseph Oduho.  I am proud of that.

Joseph Oduho died struggling for the cause of Southern Sudan.  It is ironic that he eventually died in the hands of his own community; a community he so struggled for.  It is a great shame on us as Southern Sudanese, that Joseph Oduho did not die in the hands of the enemy of Southern Sudan, who wished him dead on so many occasions in his life.

Joseph Oduho was sentenced to death in absentia in 1955, following the Torit Uprising of August of that year.  This is in spite of the fact that Joseph Oduho was a civilian, a teacher and was not even in Torit at the time of the uprising to have been an accomplice.

Joseph Oduho was elected to the 1957 Parliament from Torit as one of the members of Parliament from Southern Sudan.  He sought from the floor of the National Parliament in Khartoum, to hold Northern Sudan accountable to the promise of federation, on the basis of which, members of parliament from Southern Sudan voted for an independent Sudan on 19 December 1955.

When Northern Sudan handed power to General Abboud in November 1958, to avoid answering the Southern Sudan demand for federation and in order to let the military repress the South, rather than concede Federation to the South, Joseph Oduho was one of the team of Southern Sudanese parliamentarians who joined the Anya-Nya Liberation Movement, to continue the struggle for the cause of the South.  He and other Southern Sudanese did so, rather than to submit to the Northern Sudanese military machinations.

Together with other similar heroes who fell for the cause, like Reverend Father Saturino Lohore, the Anya-Nya cause delivered autonomy for Southern Sudan under the 1972 Addis Abba Agreement.  Joseph Oduho took part in the political and the government leadership of the South under the Addis Ababa Agreement.  In the end, the North abrogated the Addis Ababa Agreement in 1983.

It is important for many of you young Southern Sudanese here gathered today, to know that as much as Ustaz Joseph Oduho was a Southern Sudanese separatist par excellence, he was also an unswerving Southern Sudanese Unionist.  During the great KOKORA debate in Equatoria, in the early1980s, Joseph Oduho led the crusade for unity of Southern Sudan amongst Equatorians.  He and a small, but brave number of leaders from Equatoria, who stood so steadfastly for the unity of the people of Southern Sudan, were treated almost as traitors to Equatoria.  Joseph Oduho was undaunted by such classifications.

In 1984, only one year into the SPLA led war against the North, because this was only one year after KOKORA succeeded to split Southern Sudan, most Equatorians saw the SPLM/SPLA as a reaction to KOKORA and stayed away from it.  In an open letter to Equatoria, Joseph Oduho implored Equatoria to join the SPLA, not because there was shortage in the personnel fighting the war, but because he saw that history was being made for Southern Sudan.  He thought it was important for Equatoria to be part of that history.  Equatoria heeded Joseph Oduho’s advice and joined the SPLA in droves.

The yesterday’s leaders of KOKORA are today the leaders of the SPLM/SPLA.  It is ironic that the leaders of KOKORA of yesterday are not just the leaders of a united Southern Sudan today; some of them are currently the advocates of the idea of “A New Sudan.”

As a perpetual struggler for the cause of Southern Sudan, even though he was already in an advancing age, Joseph Oduho saw no choice for himself but to join the SPLM/SPLA in 1983, at its foundation, to continue the struggle.  It is ironic that he remained a prisoner in the hands of his own people, until he met his death at Panyagor, in Jonglei, in 1993, in the hands of his own children.  He was killed at the age of 67, while on a peace mission, trying to reconcile the warring factions of the SPLA.

It is impossible to speculate how providence judges atrocities like the death of Joseph Oduho.  But I am tempted by my human failing to believe that the always fair Almighty God has put the soul of Joseph Oduho into heaven.

If Joseph Oduho died a tragic death the way he did, it is almost inescapable to believe that Joseph Oduho would love the Machakos Protocol of 2o July 2002, which is the first Protocol of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), which gives the people of Southern Sudan a referendum on Self-determination, in the year 2011, to be successfully carried out.  Southern Sudan must not allow that noble right of Self-determination, to be subverted by those we currently see usurping the rights of the people of the Southern Sudan for their own anti- Southern Sudan causes.

As a pupil of Joseph Oduho, I am privileged and proud to stand before you here gathered today, to hold those who are responsible for the implementation of the CPA, to carry out Self-determination referendum as the final act of the CPA with out deviation.

Joseph Oduho was my teacher and protector at a very young age for me.  After completing Rumbek Secondary School, Joseph Oduho became an intermediate school teacher at St Anthony’s Bussere Intermediate School in 1951.  He joined and taught me in my second year intermediate school.  He was a great footballer and became our sports teacher.  He played in our school team, many times matching us youngsters against his old team of Rumbek Secondary School.  He always protected us against older football opponents from elsewhere.  He once put us into a football pitch battle in Wau town, because one of our young team mates was kicked in the stomach by an older player.  He physically knocked down the offender player and kicked him in the stomach.  We became engulfed in a football pitch warfare with the Wau town crowd, with Joseph Oduho as our protector.

THE NEED FOR TRUTH AND RECONCILIATION: It is a well known fact of life that in any war situation, there occurs excesses and war atrocities.  Southern Sudan was no exception to this.  What is important, is how a traumatized society, like the Southern Sudan society, deals with these issues at the end of the war.  It is important to tell the truth about who did what against whom, during the war and to reconcile the society before it forgives the excesses of the war and then move on.  South Africa and Mozambique have led us in this.  Rwanda is going on with the same process at the moment in a very impressive way.  With so much internal atrocity against each other during the war, Southern Sudan can not avoid telling its truth to each other and then to reconcile.  It is impossible to assume that leaders like Joseph Oduho have died the way they did and that no body responsible in Southern Sudan cares to make public how they died.

It is necessary for the Government of Southern Sudan, therefore, led by the SPLM/SPLA that was largely responsible for the war atrocities within Southern Sudan, to now establish a truth and reconciliation commission, to lay to rest the ghosts of war and to enable the society to reconcile and to move on.

Southern Sudan can not afford to have lost heroes like Joseph Oduho in vain and as we falter from the paths and principles for which Joseph Oduho and others lived and died, let us remember that Southern Sudan can not afford to fail.  May Almighty God rest the soul of Joseph Oduho in eternal peace.


NATION BUILDING DOCUMENT NUMBER TW0 OF 2008

THE BIG SUDANESE PROBLEM OF ALL TIMES: ARAB COLONISTS

AN OPEN LETTER TO THE PEOPLE OF SOUTH SUDAN

Paper Presented by Prof. Taban Lo Liyong (01 May 2008 – 06 May 2008)

Taban LoliyongA lawyer, Dinka by tribe, in 2005 told a gathering in Khartoum where we were having a seminar on the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), that every group of human beings wants to have a land to call their own, a land they own. That is, the desire to exercise territoriality is imbedded in all creatures, human beings included. That piece of land they would have inherited from their ancestors, patri-archs, both immediate and legendary. So that when they say patri-mony, they mean fathers’ endowment, a bequest to be treasured and hopefully safely handed over to the next generation. That would be their bequest, the piece of land to which they give their total allegiance, their patri-otism. In their defiance of it they would be called patriots.

Now, any member of Sudan’s autochthonous people, that is those who have been here from time immemorial, be they Didinga, people of Kachepo, Moru, Nubians, Nuba, Kuku, etc. incontestably have their ancestral lands used by the individual families but held in custody by generations to come by the clans on behalf of the big tribe. And their most definite identifying features are the possessions of a language, a territory, and other aspects of material and spiritual culture.

Now, as we all know, during the time of European expansion, they came and carved up all African lands and made us their colonies. They even subjugated other colonizing pretenders here and there. This state of affairs went on till it was folded back by our forces of decolonization. In the case of the Sudan, Ismail el Azhari got the reins of power from the combined English and Egyptian imperialists in 1956. At independence, all of us in Southern Sudan became the masters of our various territorial inheritances. Or should have become so. At independence too a new compact should have been entered into by all the tribes of the Sudan so that we would have worked out just terms for the independence dispensation.

As far as Southern Sudanese were concerned, our badge of identification was the ‘Closed Districts Ordinance‘ which had kept us penned into enclaves of non-development till independence. However undeveloped we were we were still left as masters of our ancestral lands. Another badge of solidarity amongst us was the memory of Arab slavery in Southern Sudan. A chapter that still rankles in the mind and makes us suspicious of the deeds and plans of the Northerners. Fears of being preyed on, of being duped at every twist and turn, exist in the mind. But most times we see them perpetrated. These common experiences we have suffered from the same sources. These fears were brought by our chiefs and leaders to the attention of the departing English and Egyptian colonizers in the 1948 Juba Conference but with little attention from the British administrators who had a definite programme of their own to ram through our throats. At times of uncertainty or suspicion we have reacted adversely. One year before independence, in 1955 that is, the so-called Torit Mutiny broke out underlining the suspicions and fears Southerners held. But there was never a compact concerning our living together in the same country with Northerners at any time of our English, Egyptian or Mahdist colonial and later ‘independence’ life. The eminent Southern Sudanese veteran politician, Uncle Ezboni Mondiri had, it is true, tabled the motion concerning federalism before independence. And that motion, which sought to establish federalism as the most appropriate new modus vivendi concerning the arrangements for Southerners and Northerners to live amicably in the future independent Sudan, as we all know, was postponed before independence but finally rejected by the Northerners after independence.

Now, claims by the Shilluk nation, as well as the Dinkas and Nuers to former existence in Khartoum and other parts of the present Northern Sudan are so distant in the past that they may safely be kept legendary. In history there has to be a cut off point. Otherwise we continue contesting territories up to the days when we occupied the same areas and had incurred the wrath of prophet Isaiah so much so that he hurled anathemas against us. For expediency’s sake, the decisions European imperialist powers reached in their Berlin Conference of 1884-5 concerning colonial boundaries, seem to be the binding ones that the independent African leaders have settled for, unsatisfactory though they are. They are good to work from, for a start.

Now, in 1954 there was the last national census in the whole Sudan, carried out meticulously by the departing colonizers. The census was very detailed with regard to the origins of the people of the Sudan. As well as migrants from the adjoining countries who had come and resided in the Sudan. That is, ‘tribe’ and ‘tribal origin’ were on the form. And they were answered faithfully. Perhaps too faithfully, some tribes later realized as the twists and turns of the history of the Sudan was to demonstrate. This state of affairs extends up to now.

In the 1954 census, 23% of the counted Sudanese had declared that they were Arabs. Or belonged to Arabian tribal origins. We know that along the Nile, around Shendi, there are two major Arab tribes: the Shaggiya and the Jahalliyin.These are the Riverain Arabs. They later fanned out into other urban areas of the Sudan. There are also sprinklings of other Arab tribes here and there in Northern Sudan. We also know that all these Arabs are very proud of their Arab origins, their Arab culture, their Arab language, and their ties to Arabia and what is called the ‘Arab nation’.

Now, over the years, the dominant groups of people who have been holding political power in independent Sudan, and exercising it over us all have been these Arabs. That is, from l956 up to now, a group that had before independence declared itself to be proudly of having a foreign origin (and as it has been demonstrating over the years, having also a foreign based or foreign leaning ideology) has been wielding power in their own interest and over the autochthonous peoples (that is those of us who are natives here and speak, or used to speak a Sudanese rutana) of the Sudan without even minding that it was an anomaly. ‘With impunity’, as others would say, was and is the way they wielded power..

At one time, a Dongolawi (an autochthonous tribesman), Jaafer al Nimeiri, who had grown up in one of the houses of these Arab rulers and who was also in the army with powerful riverain tribesmen as his allies, took over power through the barrel of the gun. He held power and used it more differently from the real Arabs. But when the purist among the ‘Arab domination of the autochthonous Sudanese’ ideologues wanted ‘their’ power back, they pushed him aside. His eleventh hour attempt to put into operation his version of their extreme policies against Southerners could not even save him.

Now, that item: ‘tribal origin’ or ‘tribal identification’, was it introduced into Sudanese colonial census for the first time in 1954? Or had it been there in all past censuses? Was it an item dreamt up by the colonizers: Egypt and Britain? Or was it put there by the request of the Arabs, proud of their distinctive heritage, because they had felt that they belonged to a ‘higher’ culture (in comparison with the others), or had they a superiority complex? In other words, did these Arabs shun the real Sudanese and did not want to be mixed up or confused with the rest of us? So they wanted to stand out and be counted as non-Sudanese but Arabs?

Whether by foreign design or by the decision of the ‘Arab’ oligarchs of the Sudan, all the problems the autochthonous Sudanese have been facing, even before colonization by the British, stem from the distinct position the ‘Arabs’ have given themselves, have upheld, have exercised and are still exercising up to now. Southern Sudanese have been rebelling against this attempt of theirs at colonizing us. At putting us under their feet. Whenever we rebel or repulse their attempted superimposition of themselves over us, our attempts have been characterized derogatively or diminutively as muskila junub, ‘Southern problem’. This attempted overturning of facts Southerners have never bought. For what had happened is that an ideology of dominance has been orchestrated and taught to all their children. With every political party safeguarding it regardless of party affiliations or differences. Even though it has sometimes succeeded in getting these Northerners the financial help they hunted for in the real Arab world.

How can the horses you have decided to appropriate and are busy enjoying riding, but that you poorly look after, be characterized the aggressor when they feel uncomfortable under your massive weight? Especially too, when they are deprived of sustenance and have little or no energy for going forward? Or when they cannot use their milk for feeding their own children? Furthermore, when you characterise yourselves as thoroughbred horses and do not want any relationship with the donkeys, the beasts of burden, beasts of the lowest class? Especially again, when you consider any family relationships between your children and theirs as abominations that would lead to the births of the despised mulatto?

Two Northern ideologues of the permanent Arab dominance of Sudanese political affairs would know exactly what I am talking about. Professor Yusuf Fadl Hassan, a long time professor in Khartoum University, and Dr.Hassan al Turabi. (A third diasporan Arab, the  Kenyan academic Professor Ali el Amin Mazrui, whose ancestral home is in Oman, keeps on flitting in and out of here advising Republican Palace against us. The imposition of Arabic all over autochthonous Sudanese is mainly his work.) Since Professor Yusuf, being an historian, knows the power of ideas in shaping the fate of a nation, for better or worse, I am sure he knows that the deaths of some of the most idealistic northern compatriots and civil servants, teachers and soldiers who had come to the South at independence can be attributed to historical circumstances which should have been settled through ‘peace and reconciliation’ ceremonies prior to the coming of independence. If a nation-to-be that was divided in many ways had needed a ceremony of remembrance, forgiveness and reconciliation at independence it was the Sudan. If a nation that had come into being had needed a ceremony of cleansing and forgiveness after Addis Ababa Agreement, what the Acholi call mato oput, it was the Sudan after independence. It is now the Sudan after CPA. Rwanda and Burundi also had needed this sort of cleansing. Instead the Mwamis slept through it all. And the young Tutsis thought military power would shield them from it. It never worked. (Lately we have seen the killings by the Kalenjins in the Kenyan Rift Valley of the Kikuyu settlers.) Which goes to adumbrate the lesson that you should deal fairly with a person in his hour of weakness. Then when he becomes strong he will say proudly: ‘I owe my life to you‘. Otherwise you are urging him to store up grudges against you which may one day explode with the least provocation when the hay that broke the camel’s back is at last added to the burden.

In what does this ideology rest?  Our side of the Red Sea is better than the other side. It has been envied, even before the birth of Islam, Arabs have been eying us our side of the desert, and have been crossing and settling here and interacting with our Bedouins. So the desire to settle here has always been the dream of some Arabs. Then when Islam was young and expanding by sword, ruse, and conversion more Arabs came here as agents of the new religion that offered a better life and hope to its believers. The stories of Moslem missionaries and soldiers marrying daughters of chiefs and then having their children ascend the thrones of their native parents are too many to be recounted. Some are true, others are apocryphal. But, however the relationship was established, the identification with one or the other of the Arab personages and their families or clans (especially those of, or are close, to the prophet of Islam) was and is a treasured badge. Here again, truth and fiction vie with one another. Since it is not easy to establish exactly these bona fides, they had better be taken at face value, perhaps some with a pinch of salt.

No doubt, and this is not to be belittled, Islamised Arabs in those days lived a better life than their other compatriots. Sudanese Moslems too, in those days of Moslem intrusion attained a higher standard, and belonged to a larger community of believers than their compatriots who were not Islamised. I am saying, for their time, there were definite higher levels of life they enjoyed. So for a time, it was possible legitimately for the Arabs and their descendants to hold their noses up, and look down on everybody else. That is, though the Arabs loved our side of the desert, they did not, (and perhaps up to now do not), want to be identified with the local people. So they live in colonies of their own. Worse still, they live or want to live like colonisers of the native Sudanese.

It is possible to live in the Sudan without being a Sudanese or becoming a Sudanese. The English were here, and when their time was up they packed and went. It is also possible to be an Arab in the Sudan and to refuse to become a Sudanese or refuse to be identified as a Sudanese. It is possible for a Fadl Hassan or an Ahmed Gaafer to have belonged to five generations of Arab migrants in the Sudan and still to hate to be identified as a Sudanese, as such. Perhaps grudgingly he could concede to being referred to as an Arab Sudanese, but not Sudanese Arab. In international circles of Arabs of course he would wallow in the status of a diasporan Arab. Though to the Middle Easterners, especially the people of Arab stock, they would not see the difference between him and the next Southerner. Perhaps his shortness would be the difference. Though not a big one, since some Sudanese ‘Arabs’ have Nilotic blood running in their veins.

With wealth from oil, no doubt, in modern time the overall Arab rating in the world has gone up. And if the Arab rulers were as mindful in using the resources of their countries in developing their lands and peoples as Muamer el Gadafi has been in taking care of the ordinary Libyans, the general rating of the ordinary Arabs everywhere would have also gone up. Unfortunately, in some cases, including ours in the Sudan, having oil under our feet has been a curse than a blessing for the ordinary people.  That, notwithstanding, to be an Arab now means to be identified with possessors of mega-petro-dollars. It also means to have powerful friends or allies. And these friends and allies have been of much help to the Arab Sudanese in the promotion of their ideology. Especially in financing the earlier stages of their wars of oppression against Southern Sudanese who were resisting their aggression. When oil money was not yet available for waging the war. But to be counted among the Arab nations also means to be suspected of terrorist designs and extremism in religious matters. As well as short temperedness in matters touching on Islam. With an Iranian megalomaniac here, and a Gadafi here and a regime which defies the United Nations at home here why would any non-Arab want to be in this company?

Secondly, the distinction between a racial Arab and a speaker of Arabic has been made confusing and ambiguous. To the extent that in the Sudan to be a speaker of Arabic makes you liable to being mistaken for a racial Arab. But, if you, a black Sudanese are in England, however well you speak the Queen’s English, nobody would call you an Englishman.But it is precisely what the National Congress Party  strove to do during the course of the last war: to turn the whole country over into an Arabic speaking nation. On the advice, as said before, of Ali el Amin Mazrui.The reasoning was: once you have filled their heads with Arabic they will never know how to say ‘grudge’ or ‘rebellion’ in Dinka, or Nuer or Bari.Besides they would not know enough Arabic to craft any meaningful sentences. Those who will have gained some mastery of it will have to reason with you in their imperfect Arabic. Where you will be the masters; they will be inadequate, having inferiority complex.

To a Southern Sudanese, of these two foreign languages, though our Arabic can make you get along in the Sudan, it sounds like a dialect to Middle Eastern Arabs. But the Southerners who have knowledge of English become members of a language with vast coverage and the amplest vocabulary that covers knowledge in most disciplines. Simply put, English is now the world’s foremost language and it pays to know it.Indaians and Pakistanis compete in English. Whilst I am at it, I might as well recommend our return to the Commonwealth of Nations. Muslim nations like Pakistan, Malaysia and Bangladesh are there.

Thirdly, the stage gets more and more confused when Islamic religion, which is in the spiritual domain, gets lowered by politicians to serve their selfish ends. Even amongst fellow Moslems, fellow Arabs. The mundane level of political wrangling to which the noble religion has been dragged for scoring political points is pathetic. Why not separate matters of this world for the world of politics and keep religious matters up there to lift up our hearts and souls? There is too much undermining of Muslim parties by their rivals for political gains. Simply put, as seen by those of us who are outsiders, this misuse of religion in political matters cheapens religion. When shall we fight fair political fights and win or lose on the strength of our arguments and the promises of services we shall provide and the human improvements we intend to render to the generality of the Sudanese people here and in this life? When shall we distinguish between the hunger for spiritual sustenance and the hunger of the stomach? When will politicians know that after they have fed our stomachs then they have freed us to pursue the matters of the heart and spirit? With gladness in our hearts. As the Acholi say: ‘Yom cwiny a ki i ojoga.’ — Happiness comes from a full stomach.

You can be an Eskimo and believe in Islam without its being demanded of you, or its    being assumed, that you are an Arab as well. In the Sudan it looks as though political expediency demands of our rulers (as well as other politicians) that they bundle up belief in Islam with being an Arab or speaking Arabic. Or they misuse the Koran and Islam for scoring political points against their opponents in the North or against us in the South. Up to the present war in Darfur, the Darfurians had been humoured that they were better off than Southerners because they are Moslems. But after Darfuri soldiers had seen how relatively advanced Southerners were, and how better off they would be under CPA, the Darfuri realised that they had been deceived. Know Arabic, they did. That did not improve their position. Become Moslems they did, that did not help matters either. Marry some Arab girls they did. That did not stop the janjaweeds to destroy their houses, and drive them off their lands. What they have to realise NOW is that the 23% at 1954 Census are only interested in preserving power in their own hands. They will recruit us to fight their wars as foot soldiers. For a song.  When will politicians know that they are to feed our stomachs so that we are freed to attend to matters of the spirit?

Morality, in the private and in the public domains need being attended to, and seriously. With a people whose enlightening injunction at the height of their civilization was:

Seek knowledge everywhere. Even if it takes you to China. When Europe was still in its Dark Ages, the only scholars then available in the world who were the custodians of classical Greek philosophies were the Arabs. All the books of Master Plato and Master Aristu were studied by them in Greek and translated into Arabic. I am sure the ethical writings of Aristu were not studied for academic purposes only, but acted as lights to the seeker’s path. Now that we have Chinese in the Sudan I hope we learn some knowledge, the right knowledge, from them. Like the knowledge from the humanistic teachings of the compassionate Buddha and intellectual Confucius. For the Chinese have plenty of the wrong knowledge too. The type of knowledge that Robert Mugabe uses for harassing our people down in Zimbabwe there.

I mentioned religion purposely. For the corollary to learning knowledge ‘everywhere’ is learning knowledge of ‘all types’, especially the useful ones. I can learn much from the Koran. And I do. I have learnt a lot from the Bible. (Especially from the teachings and exemplar life of my friend Jesus). I have learnt much from the Hindus. And the Buddhists. And as far as philosophy per se is concerned, I have learnt most from the Greeks. Much more than from my Kuku heritage, seeing that our knowledge was never made subjects for scholarly studies in the schools. So I made up for that lack by studying the classical Greeks. Greek philosophy, drama and epics have supplied replacements for my native perspectives on human nature.

But I remain a believer in my ancestral religion whose God is Ngun. It is a religion, like most of our ancestral ones, with a high moral threshold. When Professor John Samuel Mbiti called us ‘notoriously religious’ he meant our total religious approach to life. Members of our religion who have been lured away but have never transplanted well are disappointing in any religion. These short-cutters in matters of faith will not go to heaven. We call our religion ‘The Faith of Our Ancestors’. If others call us kaffirs let them delude themselves, if they disparage us knowingly. (Besides, with every development in sciences and humanistic awareness, religions have to adjust appropriately. Religious pundits have to help interpret the religious Books, written or oral, in consonance with the best principled life extant. Otherwise religion becomes an old wine bag with its old and stale wine.) We do not seek to sell our faith. We know every human community has an ancestral faith. And we respect them for it: the man or woman without religion is dangerous.  We do not advantage ourselves at the expense of people of other faiths. It would be good if they reciprocated. Planet earth is our only sure and known abode. If we lived well here, and there is another world for those who were good, we hope the conclave of Gods would all sit in judgement and reward those who helped people of their religions as well as those of other religions. I think all Gods love humanists.

Let us return to our 23% Arabs of the Sudanese census of 1954. The fact that a small minority decided to stand out and be separately labeled speaks volumes. For it means they could then, and in future, do what pleased them and if the consequences were bad, they could count on powerful people, viz. the other Arabs, for help. For, for them, their patrimony is in Saudi Arabia. For them their patriotism is for the ‘Arab nation’ which means lands inhabited by the Arabs, such as Iraq, Syria, Jordan, leave alone Saudi Arabia. So they sojourn in the Sudan but their first and foremost allegiance is to the ‘Arab nation’. That is why they called themselves Arabs.

In short, they are colonists of sorts. Similar to the type that used to lord it over black and majority population of South Africa. They were called Dutch, and had settled in South Africa and after taking over the land, they later established an extreme racist regime  They were the Dutch, the Germans, the French who had migrated down there and had taken hold of South Africa for themselves, and then gone ahead to exploit the wealth of the land for their own benefit using native labour. When the ‘nationalists’ took over power in 1948, they then established their hateful system called apartheid (apart- hate) for depriving the blacks of the rich and wealthy parts of their own land. As is evidenced by their lifestyle, they were living a European life in South Africa. They were physically in South Africa, but were also spiritually and culturally Out of Africa. But like our ‘Arabs’ here they had also relied on their erstwhile relationship with the entire white world of Europe, which was also predominantly Christian, developed and wealthy. The superiority (or seeming superiority) of that world made it impossible for them to yield to being South Africans, to sharing the bounties of the land with its majority inhabitants. But at the end it was that white world of international capitalism which finally prevailed upon them to change. Using a courageous son of a Dutch priest to make the bold decision to do the right thing for the majority of the people: Wilhelm de Klerk.

The mental headache the ‘European’ South Africans used to have is now down. The die-hard believers in white supremacy have either gone back to Europe, or to other former colonies where they could still look down on other ‘lower’ races like the indigenous first nationals of Australia, Canada, or New Zealand. Some have accepted their common and shared humanity with the Coloureds and Bantus of South Africa. And settled down to being common citizens of majority rule South Africa. Since those others who had gone abroad have been coming back it looks as if the fear of life under black rulers was more in the mind than in reality.

I jumped ahead a bit. I mentioned de Klerk ‘the courageous’ before mentioning Nelson Mandela ‘the saintly’. In South Africa there are two venerable old men who are forthright and speak the true and right word: Nelson Mandela the first black president and Archbishop Desmond Tutu. Mandela had led the war of liberation against the apartheid regime. As is usual the objectives of armed struggle and its execution are always rough. But the rules of winding down the timetable towards peace, and settlement of the war peacefully later followed by befriending the erstwhile enemies rather that settling old scores are also different.

Dr John Garang de Mabior, in all his public utterances, was a staunch unionist. Perhaps he was the first overall Sudanese nationalist, or only new Sudanese nationalist. In Machakos and Lake Naivasha he conceded to the National Congress Party much, much more ground than was good for the SPLM and Southern Sudan. Some of the problems now facing the execution of the CPA are the results of matters he had glossed over. For example, why did we not have the mediators transforming themselves into becoming monitors of the CPA after it was signed? Even Liberians had sense enough to see to it that it was done. Why did he agree to share Southern Sudan’s oil wealth 50-50 but let Northern Sudanese do as they wished with all their vast oil revenue? Why was the boundary issue not settled immediately after CPA as the first order of business?

Perhaps he had hoped and reasoned it out that between him and his ‘brother’ Taha, some or all of those minor difficulties would be smoothed over in the execution of the CPA? One wished God had given him more days so that we would have seen how he was going to put the CPA in place and how he was going to pursue his quest for the just Sudan that also took care of the marginalised peoples. One had also looked forward to seeing how he was going to convert the 23% Arabs into becoming fellow new Sudanese. Especially how he would have dealt with the first hurdle the CPA had to deal with: the division of ministries. All categories of ministries were to be shared equally. SPLM gave NCP a high ministry in exchange for either the Ministry of Finance or the Ministry of Oil and Energy. The NCP refused to budge. Revelations came later. One faction, perhaps the Shaggiyin or the Jahalliyin said: ‘we have already parted with one important ministry. Now give your own.’ And that faction vowed it would never do. If it meant returning to war then be it. President of the Government of Southern Sudan, Salva Kiir Mayardit, in the absence of mediators, made the right decision: let them have it their way. Politics is a process. We Southerners should not do as Northerners do, if I may add. We should not compete with them in all they do. Their ways are different from ours.  We must uphold higher standards of morality in dealing with ourselves and others. But we should not let them do the wrong thing on us.

‘Census’ is pivotal to this discussion. Because census deals with the enumeration of people in a nation. Children and their demands on the national purse, adults and the services they can provide as well as the means they and the nation have to employ to create the national wealth. These, on top of the origins of the citizens are matters we need to know. As it is, the 2008 Census seems to have taken a short cut to the contentious issue in the 1954 Census by fiat. It simply removed ‘race’, ‘tribe’ and ‘religion’ from the form. So the two most contentious items in the Sudanese body politics have been swept under the carpet.  I hope now that we are a land without religion and without race or tribe things will be better thus for everybody! I hope nobody is going to wake up from a nightmare and shout: Sudan is a Muslim country! For the only figures that tell us the racial ,tribal and religious belongings of people are those of 23% of 1954.

Sometimes it is better to laugh at seeds of tragedy and human foolishness. For surely some of these solutions are like those of children who, when they have closed their eyes and cannot see the person before them then they also think that that person cannot see them.

But seriously speaking, after all the colonialists from Europe have decamped from lands they had colonized, or have melted into the prevailing groups and given political power to the autochthonous peoples, what do our Arab colonists think? When all ‘Arab nation’ people are now engaged in inward looking exercises, do they think some help will always come their way from say Iraq, Syria, Jordan, Libya, Saudi Arabia? Nations that have done little to resolve the major Arab issue: Palestine?

Do the big people of the NCP tell their followers about the Riviera they plan to build on the northern side of the new Khartoum Bridge? Is that a cooperative venture, with donations from the party members, which will take care of every member of the NCP? With all the investments they have in the East, one hopes the money used is not the oil wealth pilfered from Bentiu, particularly in Malaysia, and perhaps more so in Thailand, are the oligarchs lining up abodes for themselves in these havens pending the day of reckoning when other Northern Sudanese will be fed up with them? When, or if, it is the oil revenue that is being used, are these Sudanese national investments? For you and also for me? When it is a few well placed ‘Arabs’ who are involved in doing these things will there be time for differentiating between the good and clean ‘Arab’ from the bad ones when or if the time of hurried reckoning and departure comes? At least one notices that there is fear of retribution. That is why the investments are taken and kept abroad. That is also why the children of the big people are not in Khartoum.

When a face-saving device had been thrown their way, in the CPA, why do they not take advantage of it? The CPA says that living in Unity with fellow Southern Sudanese should be made attractive. The Southerners, if I may put it bluntly, on the Referendum day, are going to say: ‘The Arabs have done these good things to us. /The Arabs have not done the following things to us. We therefore shall vote accordingly.’ That is how they will reason it out in the voting booth. As it is if the referendum were to take place today, I do not see many positive contributions the Northern Arabs have made towards Southern Sudanese welfare generally which would sway any of them to vote for unity. Luckily, there is still time. Time to show a different face. A peaceful face. Thee face that does not fight at the borders in the oil state, or in Abiyei, or in Darfur.We are fed up of war.Besides,where are you going to find the children to go to fight for you? Even the janjaweeds are thinning. But it is not only living in amity with Southern Sudanese the Arabs have to now worry about. It is also living in peace with Darfurians, Ingassenans, and Bejas, leave alone the Nubians, Nubas and Dongolawis. That is the burden ‘our’ Arabs have inherited from generations of their ancestors which they should successfully deal with if the Sudan is to remain one.

For the ‘superior people’, the Caesaron ideology that they had pursued from time immemorial, which was born out of fear for possible and imagined retributions for sins committed over the ages, has sent them looking for temporary and makeshift solutions. And these solutions have landed the Sudan where we are now: the lowest level of Sudanese national unity ever. Thanks, in part to the NCP’s drastic policies of little or no compromises, going back on ones’ words, defying with impunity the international community, talking big like Mugabe and some Iranian megalomaniac mullah, they are, I fear, creating and storing up problems for us now and future Sudanese generations. Future generations of diehard ARAB Sudanese, who, as the heading of my letter says are the main problem of the Sudan. Why would I or any sane Southern Sudanese wish to be associated with such a company? To belong to such a country?

Unfortunately, like national debts, all bad things a nation’s government creates become a burden for all the citizens to pay in future. That is, these acts of banditry, foolishness ,bad mouthing of Britain, America, Europe; all the defiance of the United Nations and other humanitarian organizations, though they display national pride, they also represent us in the wrong light before the civilized international community. I meant the presence of a macho culture that demonstrates locally that we have a real ragil that can stand up against the toughest in the world it also represents us badly, there is no comity, and we look uncouth in the gatherings of civilized nations. (And I chose my word carefully when I wrote ‘civilised’.) I for one feel shame when my own government defies world opinion, rides roughshod over our fellow citizens, and does not respect human rights of my fellow Sudanese. Today it is in Darfur. If we do not speak out against it, tomorrow it may be in Omdurman.Today it is a falling out between Umma and NCP. Tomorrow it may be so-and-so’s faction of NCP falling out with so-and-so’s faction. The only best remedy is to prescribe the right and righteous medicine for the same disease. To cure those already affected. And to await those headed towards contact with the same germs. That is, if they have not learnt to avoid going that way after seeing g how others who were affected by it have suffered.

(Perhaps the Sudan Peoples Liberation Movement, Northern Sector, after welcoming as many elements and splinters from other as they seem to have done, would like to also take this yoke on their shoulders: the conversion of Arab Sudanese into nationalists of the New Sudan? If they could start and succeed with Dr.Hassan al Turabi, they will have done the Sudan a big favour. For, inside Turabi I see a good Sudanese. Perhaps a New Sudanese in the making. There is also the intellectual in him who knows the role individuals can play in directing the destiny of a nation.)

To bring this discussion to a close, let me repeat: the real politic of the Arab settlers in the Sudan has been pursued through keeping political power tightly in their hands.Every Arab ruler has adhered to this faithfully. And it has caused so many sufferings to the autochthonous people: those who were here from time immemorial and who look to no other country for a home. Dr. John Garang de Mabior’s political philosophy, as I understand it from his pronouncements and writings seem to have found out a solution to this ideology of political domination: to awaken all the major marginalised ‘Sudanese tribes’, to have spread disaffection amongst them so that they joined Southern Sudanese in the quest for taking over power from the handful of Arabs. But he stopped short of saying the Arabs would then have no place in the New Sudan.

But it goes without saying that the 77%  Sudanese  of 1954 Census would need equitable distribution of wealth, would need special accelerated programmes for ‘catching up’ in all sorts of spheres. Maybe even there would have to be a deliberate planting of marginalized people in every office and parastatal organisation as Nigerians did with ‘federal characterising’ of public institutions? Whatever method of accelerating the alleviation of poverty and increasing wealth in the formerly deprived areas would have to be definitely the Arabs who had been enjoying power and wealth filling those posts will have to make way for the new comers. The new people will come in dirty, mannerless, ignorant and will ashame you in the presence of your high healed international visitors. Not because they had willed to remain that way. Not because they are intellectually daft. They lacked education because since 1956 when you took over power you did not care to educate them. You had kept them away from the washing area and monopolized it for your people alone, you selfish brutes.

If this letter can awaken feelings of comradeship among Sudanese, if it can make young ‘Arabs’ to abandon the ways their parents had roared so that they learnt to moo like fellow cows then at least I have penetrated the hearts and minds of a few people. So that though the rational part of me does not believe in Dr. John Garang’s philosophy, the coming into being of the New Sudan may be a good thing for everybody. Arab Sudanese included.

As I always say, these are my own individual thoughts. I produced them for national guidance, and not for the ear of some big man or party. Whoever cares to glean some thought from it that would be of use to my people is free to do so. I bear nobody any grudge or malice. Where I have erred in matters of facts, or interpretation, I ask for forgiveness. But I hope, all in all, in the quest for something better for my fellow Sudanese some errors here and there could not be avoided.
Paper Presented By Professor Taban Lo Liyong
Contact Email: loliyongtaban@yahoo.com

On May 01, 2008 – May 06, 2008
JUBA, SOUTH SUDAN


Speech of H.E. Gen. Salva Kiir Mayardit
The First Vice President of the Sudan and
The President of the government of Southern Sudan
On the First Session of the Opening of the Southern Sudan Legislative Assembly

Juba, 28th, May 2008

Salva Kiir

Opening Remarks

I would first to congratulate the Convention Organizing Committee (CoC) under the leadership of Comrade James Wani Igga for such a remarkable achievement

I thank also all countries that participated in this Convention as they have shown their solidarity with SPLM during this critical phase of democratic transformation in Sudan.

I would like also to extend my sincere appreciation for the valuable words of encouragement and advice from other political parties with whom we share a national commitment and agenda to realizing peace and stability in Sudan through implementation of CPA, democratic transformation and national reconciliation.

I will not also forget the valuable contribution and advice provided by our elders Molana Abel Alier and Gen. Joseph Lagu.

Above all, I would like to sincerely congratulate each of you for making this Convention a success, Maburuk Alaikum.

2. The Confidence of National Convention and People

I would like to thank each of you for electing me as Chairperson of SPLM and this clearly shows your confidence in me as the appropriate person to lead you during this critical phase of our struggle. Your trust and confidence in me pose a real challenge on me of how I can live up to your expectations. I want to assure you Comrades that I will not and I shall not let you down.

Let me also seize this opportunity to congratulate each of you for trust you have given to the newly elected members of National Liberation Council and I tell them Maburuk Alaikum. I am committed to work closely with them in making SPLM a credible political party that would bring the real change in the Sudan.

Also for delegates of the National Convention, you have the confidence of our people and each of you has a role to play in making SPLM to be felt at the grass root and to become a true people’s party. Let us return to our community and make the structure of SPLM functional and operational in the state, counties, payams and bomas.

3. My Commitments as SPLM Chairperson

As you have entrusted me to lead this great party, the SPLM, I would like to share with you my personal commitments during my tenure of office:

3.1 No to War Yes for New Sudan

I am committed, Dear Comrades, to the full implementation of CPA and as I mentioned in most of my speeches that I will not take my people again to war as they have suffered a great deal and they need to lead a peaceful life like other peoples in the world. I call upon each of you to cherish this culture of peace among our communities in all parts of Sudan . Let our people know that SPLM is a party of peace and stability

Despite our unconditional commitment to peace, the SPLM is committed to protect your rights and achievements in the CPA through the peaceful mechanisms provided for in the CPA. As I mentioned in my opening remarks that SPLA as people’s army will be vigilant and on alert to protect your rights and that is why we are committed to making SPLA a professional and modern army.

I am also, Dear Comrades, committed towards realization of the Vision of New Sudan. We must replace the Old Sudan with New Sudan. This is not a dream it is a reality as we are virtually dismantling everyday the Old Sudan. Who would imagine one day that all marginalized people of Sudan from the East, West, South, North and Centre would meet under one umbrella of SPLM. If all Sudan is here, then who would dare to stop us not to change Sudan . Sudan must and shall change in the terms and will of our people. Let us rise up to this noble challenge. As you have now elected me as Chairperson of the SPLM, I declare now with trust and confidence that I am now the Leader of the Marginalized people of Sudan and I am committed to protect their rights and realize their aspirations.

As we are committed to the principle of the right of self-determination to the people of Sudan as an internationally recognized right, I am committed to ensure that the people of Southern Sudan exercise their rights of self-determination as well as the conduct of referendum for the people of Abyei and popular consultation for the people of Nuba Mountains and Blue Nile as per the provisions of CPA. It is my personal commitment to ensure that these referenda are implemented in letter and spirit and any attempt to deny these rights to be exercised or their outcomes not to be respected shall be tantamount to gross violation of CPA that may have serious consequences on stability of Sudan.

As part of our vision of New Sudan, I am committed to work towards realization of peace in Darfur and to ensure the protection of civil population and their access to humanitarian assistance. No Peace with Darfur burning!

As First Vice President of the Republic of Sudan , I will be committed to ensure the full implementation of Eastern Sudan Peace Agreement.

3.2. Unity and Reconciliation

Dear Comrades, our survival as political party rests with our unity and I would like to assure you that I shall be committed to the unity of our party. We have come along way with bitter history of division that resulted in enormous atrocities committed against our people and we have no any option but to nurture unity and reconciliation.

Dear Comrades, I shall ensure the full implementation of Nairobi and Juba Declarations, Wunlit Agreement and other agreements.

As Chairperson of the SPLM, I will ensure that the national reconciliation and healing process is initiated and implemented as stipulated in the CPA. Besides national reconciliation process, I will renew the South-South Dialogue as well as encouraging the Darfur-Darfur Dialogue.

Dear Comrades, I would like to remind you all that my personal relations with comrades Pagan Amum, Riek Machar, James Wani Igga, Malik Agar and others go back to the early and difficult days of our Movement. These values of comradeship and solidarity are the ones that kept us together during our struggle till we realized the CPA.

We need to renew these values to be the basis for our team work as we enter this critical phase of our struggle. I would like to assure you that I will work with them in the spirit of comradeship and trust and within the vision of New Sudan. SPLM can only be strong with our unity and shall only be victorious with spirit of comradeship. Can we stand up all and hold our hands together to symbolize the spirit of our comradeship and let us say loud and clear “SPLM Oyee, Unity Oyee, Comradeship Oyee”.

I would like to use this opportunity to appeal to each and every one of us to forgive each other and to open a new page so that we can focus together into our future and to rise up to the aspirations of our people. We have a lot to loose in our disunity and more to gain in our unity.

3.3. Democratic Transformation and Democracy

Dear Comrades we have been talking loud about democratic transformation and democracy, it is now high time to walk our talks and away from rhetoric to action. We have no any other option except the path of democracy. I know that sometimes we confuse ourselves by exaggerating the cost of maintaining unity so that we can undermine the democratic process.

If we allow some of us to temper with democratic process in the name of unity then we will be making disservice to our people. Any unity that is based on pillars other than commitment to SPLM principles and respect of democracy and the free will of our people shall be fragile and may produce “Old Sudan” and wars. I truly believe that the basis of our unity is democracy and free will of our people and these are cardinal values that we need to cherish in our party. As we are initially witnessing democratic process based more on ethnic representation than on individual merits, it is a challenge for us of how we can gradually replace ethnic allegiance with that of SPLM. Democracy is a process, not a single event.

Me personally, I am committed to these democratic process within the Party and I hope that in our next meeting of the NC we will have by then a credible and democratic SPLM not only established at all levels but the only ruling party in parts of Sudan.

Also as SPLM, we are committed to conduct fair and transparent general elections as per the provisions of CPA. I am committed to champion the SPLM’s election campaign that shall hopefully result in landslide victory in all parts of Sudan . We must win the forthcoming general election so that we can set Sudan on the path of New Sudan and away from the “Old Sudan”.

3.4. Transparency and Corruption

Besides ensuring democratic transformation, the SPLM is committed to economic transformation that would ensure transparent and efficient management of public resources so that we can provide peace dividends and realize the Millennium Development Goals.

Dear Comrades, I want to assure you that I am adamant to fight corruption not only in the Government of Southern Sudan and the SPLM but also in the Government of National Unity in my capacity as First Vice President of the Sudan . Based on the resolutions of the Interim National Council, I will ensure that all levels and structures of the SPLM to finish the audit of their accounts as basis to improve and ensure prudent financial management of the SPLM meagre resources.

3.5 Party Discipline and Code of Conduct

The issue of the party’s discipline is critical for making our party stronger. Of late we have seen some members in key positions making public statements that are contrary to the vision of the SPLM and even some members decided to undermine the activities and programmes of the SPLM while others directly interfered with the functions and duties of other levels of SPLM.

I would like to reiterate that if these individuals managed to get their ways again into the SPLM key offices, I would strongly advice them to adjust in the new spirit of National Convention and to respect the rules and regulations laid down by the SPLM. Let us be vigilant in identifying those who will rock our boat. The enemy from within is more dangerous than a well known enemy. We have a lot ahead of us and we need not to waste more time in disciplining ourselves.

3.6. Women Rights, Youth and Diaspora Participation

Our commitment to women empowerment has now become a national agenda as it has been adopted by all political parties.

I would like to assure you Dear Comrades that I am not only committed to women empowerment but I will also continue with my noble mission of ensuring as well that women are represented well in the SPLM structures and at all levels of government in Sudan.

Besides women empowerment, I would like to assure you that I am committed to making SPLM young by ensuring active participation of youth in all activities and their adequate representation in the SPLM structure. I am delighted to tell our youth that our Comrade Yien Matthew B. Chol (he is here with us in the hall) has now been released and we expect the rest of our comrades who are illegally detained in various prisons to be released as well.

Diaspora used to be our Seventh Front but now I am giving you another mission. You are now given another task to become our “CPA Watch Dogs” and you are tasked to mobilize international community and peace-loving nations to ensure the implementation of the CPA and to mobilize development assistance for realization of peace dividends. I am delighted that among you, you have Madam Fatima Yusif Kwa Makii, whom I believe will play a critical role in promoting the unity among the Sudanese people in Diaspora, particularly in USA .

3.7. Full Implementation of Abyei Protocol

Lack of implementation of Abyei Protocol is not only a gross violation of the provisions of the CPA and Interim National Constitution, but it is questioning the political will of our partner NCP to the implementation of CPA. If Abyei Protocol is not implemented, the same will happen to general elections, demarcation of North-South border, referendum and popular consultation.

Added to the injury is the current massive displacement of the entire population of Abyei town that became one of the worst provocations and violations of CPA since its signature in 2005. Virtually tens of thousands of civil population, mainly women and children, are uprooted again from their houses and are now in open areas under heavy rains with no shelter, food and water. This human tragedy is caused unfortunately by Sudan Armed Forces Brigade 31 that is illegally present in Abyei town and against the provisions of the CPA. Dear Comrades it is not only Darfur that is burning but Abyei also and we hope it will not reach other areas.

In the same way we condemned the attack on Omdurman , we condemn in the strongest possible terms the gross violations of the human rights in Abyei area. We call not only the immediate redeployment of these forces outside the area but they should be brought before the court of law. For the aggrieved people of Abyei area, I would like to assure that the SPLM is standing by you and is committed to protect your rights and full implementation of Abyei Protocol.

4. Concluding Remarks

Dear Comrades, I am extremely delighted that the SPLM 2nd National Convention has ended peacefully with strong sense of unity. The SPLM to all of us is not just a party but it is a life project and commitment.

My key message to all of you Dear Comrades is to your grass root where you came from. Tell them that “SPLM is the only party for a change in Sudan ”. Tell them also that SPLM with their support shall win the forthcoming general elections in 2009.

SPLM Oyee

New Sudan Oyee

Unity Oyee

Thank you and God Bless You All


The Hague court readjust the boundaries of Abyei region
(Summary by Charles Amoli)

22nd, July 2009

On Wednesday 22nd, July 2009, the Hague court readjust the boundaries of Sudan’s disputed oil-producing Abyei region – ceding the key oilfield areas of Heglig and Bamboo outside Abyei and placing them in the north Sudan district of Southern Kordofan.

(Click on either maps to see enlarged map)

abyei
Abyei – PCA Tribunal Boundary, 22 July 2009

abyei
Abyei region included in the 2005 ABC Report

The Tribunal defines the western and eastern boundaries of the Abyei Area as indicated on the Tribunal’s Award Map: The western boundary runs along longitude 27o50’E from latitude 10o10’N south until it intersects with the 1956 Kordofan-Darfur boundary. The Abyei Area’s western boundary then follows the latter until it meets the former. The eastern boundary of the Abyei Area runs along longitude 29o00’E, from latitude 10o10’N south until it intersects with the Abyei Area’s southern boundary:

(a) Northern Boundary

  1. In respect of the ABC Experts’ decision that “[t]he Ngok have a legitimate dominant claim to the territory from the Kordofan – Bahr el-Ghazal boundary north to latitude 10o10’N, the ABC Experts did not exceed their mandate.
  2. In respect of the ABC Experts’ decision relating to the “shared secondary rights area between latitude 10o10’N and latitude 10o35’N, the ABC Experts exceeded their mandate.
  3. The northern boundary of the area of the nine Ngok Dinka chiefdoms transferred to Kordofan in 1905 runs along latitude 10o10’00N, from longitude 27o50’00E to longitude 29o00’00E.

(b) Southern Boundary

  1. In respect of the ABC Experts’ decision that “[t]he southern boundary shall be the Kordofan – Bahr el-Ghazal – Upper Nile boundary as it was defined on 1 January 1956, the ABC Experts did not exceed their mandate.
  2. The southern boundary as established by the ABC Experts is therefore confirmed, subject to paragraph (c) below.

(c) Eastern Boundary

  1. In respect of the ABC Experts’ decision that “the eastern boundary shall extend the line of the Kordofan – Upper Nile boundary at approximately longitude 29o32’15″E northwards until it meets latitude 10o22’30″N, the ABC Experts exceeded their mandate.
  2. The eastern boundary of the area of the nine Ngok Dinka chiefdoms transferred to Kordofan in 1905 runs in a straight line along longitude 29o00’00E, from latitude 10o10’00N south to the Kordofan – Upper Nile boundary as it was defined on 1 January 1956.

(d) Western Boundary

  1. In respect of the ABC Experts’ decision that “[t]he western boundary shall be the Kordofan – Darfur boundary as it was defined on 1 January 1956, the ABC Experts exceeded their mandate.
  2. The western boundary of the area of the nine Ngok Dinka chiefdoms transferred to Kordofan in 1905 runs in a straight line along longitude 27o50’00E, from latitude 10o10’00N south to the Kordofan – Darfur
    boundary as it was defined on 1 January 1956, and continuing on the Kordofan – Darfur boundary until it meets the southern boundary confirmed in paragraph (b) above.

(e) Grazing and other Traditional Rights

  1. In respect of the ABC Experts’ decision that “[t]he Ngok and Misseriya shall retain their established secondary rights to the use of land north and south of this boundary, the ABC Experts did not exceed their mandate.
  2. The exercise of established traditional rights within or in the vicinity of the Abyei Area, particularly the right (guaranteed by Section 1.1.3 of the Abyei Protocol) of the Misseriya and other nomadic peoples to graze cattle and move across the Abyei Area (as defined in this Award), remains unaffected.

In arriving at its decision, the Tribunal emphasizes that its mandate was limited by the Parties’ agreement in the Arbitration Agreement. The Tribunal acknowledges the possibility that the boundary lines may inadvertently lead to the partition of an inhabited permanent settlement, such as a village or town, in a manner that causes manifest impracticability to the inhabitants. In this regard, the Tribunal urges the Parties to begin immediate discussions with a view to reaching express agreement to mitigate hardships on the ground and to facilitate resolutions to such problems.

Point Latitude (N) Longitude (E) Description
1 9o47′ N* 27o50’00” E

Intersection of the Kordofan-Darfur boundary, as it was defined on 1 January 1956, with the line of longitude.

2 10o10’00” N 27o50’00” E

Intersection of the lines of latitude and longitude as determined by the Tribunal.

3 10o10’00” N 29o00’00” E

Intersection of the lines of latitude and longitude as determined by the Tribunal.

4 9o40′ N* 29o00’00” E

Intersection of the Kordofan-Upper Nile boundary, as it was defined on 1 January 1956, with the line of longitude.

 

* The latitude values are approximate only and have been derived graphically from maps submitted by the Parties.

REFERENDUM

  • Leaders from both sides accepted the ruling, calling it a compromise.
  • “We think about a minimum of 10,000 square kilometers have been returned to the north. Most importantly this territory includes the disputed oilfields,” said Dirdeiry Mohamed Ahmed, representing the NCP at The Hague.
  • “We want peace. We think this decision is going to consolidate the peace,” south Sudan’s Vice-President Riek Machar told reporters at The Hague. “We came to see justice and it’s a decision we will respect.”
  • “We have given our word (to accept the judgment) and by our word we will stand,” said the South Sudan President Salva Kiir.
  • The residents of Abyei region said they were satisfied with the ruling. “The important thing is we know where our territory is now,” said tea stall owner Nyan Abok. “Land is more important than oil,” added aid worker Kuol Deng Alak.

Documents and maps Detial:

Will the two parties abide to this document…?


The Newly Elected Governors of the 2010 GoSS general elections are:

# State Governor Party
1. Centeral Equatoria Clement Wani Konga SPLM
2. Western Equatoria Bangasi Joseph Bakosoro Independent
3. Lakes State Chol Tong Maya SPLM
4. Jonglei State Kuol Manyang Juuk SPLM
5. Uper Nile State Simon Kun Puoch
SPLM
6. Eastern Equatoria Louis Lobong Lojore
SPLM
7. Northern Bahar algazal (Awiel) Paul Malong Awan
SPLM
8. Warab State Madam Nyandeng Malek Dielic
SPLM
9. Western Bahar al Gazal Rizik Zakaria Hassan SPLM
10. Unity State Taban Deng Gai SPLM

South Sudanese celebrated the birth of their new nation in Israel. Photo: faithfreedom.org

By PaanLuel Wel, Washington DC, USA

“We have the discretion to deal with any nation we want to deal with; we will establish good relations with Israel and open an Israeli embassy in South Sudan.”—Anya-Anya One Leader General Joseph Lagu.

July 21, 2011 (SSNA) — The present of an Israeli flag on Juy 9th, 2011, as South Sudanese were marking the birth of their new nation, raised many eyebrows from certain quarters both within and outside the Sudan. That some South Sudanese would celebrate their independence by waving Israeli flag alongside theirs seemed to have stunned many South Sudan observers as well as angering the Northern Islamists who are long used to the racial dehumanization and political caricaturing of the state of Israel.

And nowhere is that propaganda of lies, hatred and racism more pronounced and registered than within the pages of the country national passport: this document is valid to all countries except Israel. For the millions of South Sudanese Christian communities who considered the Jewish state of Israel as their spiritual homeland—the cradle of their faith, being issued with and using the old Sudanese passport was not only a humiliating smack in their face but it would essentially tantamount to, for instance, the newly independent state of South Sudan issuing her Muslims population a national passport that read: to all countries except the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia—the birthplace of Islam.

The Islamist age-old seething against the Jewish state is often publicly projected as a solidarity posture towards the Palestinian Arabs whose land is said to have been occupied by the Jews. Yet, it is the very Jews, now internationally paraded as settlers and occupiers of their own ancestral land, who gave birth to both Christianity and Islam (Islam might have been born in Saudi Arabia but three-quarter of the Quran is from the Bible) in the presently contested land of the state of Israel, Judea and Samaria or West Bank as it was renamed by the British.

There would be neither Christianity nor Islam without Judaism, and that Judaism was born in the current Holy Land of Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Galili, and Jericho etc till the Romans destroyed the temple and exiled the Jewish. Afterward, Islam conquered the land around 638 A.D and installed their mosque on the very spot where the famed Biblical Temple of Solomon once stood, after its destruction by the Romans.

Understandably, South Sudanese have no sympathy for the Palestinians’ cause because their judgment and stance is informed by the fact that they view Palestinians Arabs, just like the so-called Sudanese Arabs, as occupiers of the Jewish ancestral land rather than being victims as South Sudanese are at the hand of the northern Arabs. Thus, South Sudanese Christians could not bring themselves to comprehend how Muslims could, on the one hand, bar everybody else from their Holy Land of Mecca and Medina and yet, on the other hand, have the audacity to lie claim to Jerusalem and Bethlehem as theirs, let alone branding the Jews—their own Semitic kinsmen—as occupiers and settlers of their own Biblically land.

That the Bible and the Quran recorded that the Jews and the Arabs descended from Abraham in the present day Middle East does appear to be beside the point in the conflict. Even the veracity that the Quran and the Bible are full of Jewish references, not to mention the fact that the Holy Quran (just like the Bible) specifically prophesied the return of the Jews to their ancestral homeland, could not save the Jews from being cast and portray as an invading alien race from Europe.

That narrative, however, has not been fully monopolized by the Arab and Islamic world; it has a considerable following in Europe and America too among the left-wing academic circles where anti-Semitism still rears its ugly head. To both camps, Israel is the single causative of all world problems and her delegitimization is deemed as a lifelong noble cause to pursue or/and a quick gate-path to Paradise.

Although the old state of the Sudan has been technically at war with the Jewish state of Israel, South Sudanese, nonetheless, have been long-time friends to and of the state of Israel since her founding in 1948. That friendship, besides its religious roots, can be traced back to the time of Anya-Anya One Movement under General Joseph Lagu. For many years during that first South Sudanese struggle of 1955-1972, the Jewish state of Israel was the main moral supporter of the Southern rebels and the chief supplier of physical materials such as arms and international maneuverings.

Consequently, it didn’t come as a big surprise when General Joseph Lagu was among the first world leaders to send a letter of congratulations to Israeli Prime Minister, Levi Eshkol, after the outbreak of the 1967 Six Day War, in which Israel launched successful, pre-emptive attacks on a combined forces of Egypt, Syria and Jordan who had threateningly amassed their respective armies at the Israeli border ready to strike. To the Southern rebels led by General Lagu, Israel was fighting the very enemy that they have taken up arms against for discriminating against and oppressing them. As old adage demonstrate: your enemy’s enemy is automatically your friend.

But that cordial relationship between the Jewish states of Israel is not only consigned to the past: it was very much alive during the SPLM/A war of liberation and even today among current officials and leaders of South Sudan government as their statements attest. SPLM/A leaders, under the command of Dr. John Garang, were reported to have received some training in, and military backing from, Israel. As for today, the current vice president of the Republic of South Sudan, Dr. Machar, just before independence, announced that the future state of South Sudan would have formal relationship with the state of Israel.

It was the same sentiment reinforced by Hon. Deng Alor, the current acting foreign minister of the Republic of South Sudan, when he officially invited other countries to open embassies and diplomatic missions in Juba, the seat of the new state. Alor emphasized that the new Republic of South Sudan will have full diplomatic relationships with all countries of the world, a subtle message to Khartoum as regarding Israel relationship to South Sudan.

But it was Dr. Marial Benjamin, the current caretaker minister of Information in the Government of the Republic of South Sudan, who put it bluntly: “We will establish relations with any state that recognizes us.”

As a long time friend of the people of South Sudanese, the state of Israel was among the first nations that publicly recognized and welcomed the new-born state of the Republic of South Sudan, just a day after South Sudan officially declared her independence.

There are many potential benefits that South Sudan will accrue by associating herself with and cementing her long friendship with the Jewish state. For one, Israel is among the most economically advanced OECD member states—the richest and the most technologically advanced countries in the entire world. With our own naturally endowed abundance of resources, befriending such a country will open many doors of opportunities for the mining and exploitation of our own resources using our own domestically grown technologies and the economical know-how.

Unlike China which is hungry for African resources or the West that is known for economical exploitations and the breeding of the culture of dependency—be it on aids or on the technological know-how, Israel has no history of neo-colonialism that the West is known for nor the 21st century economic imperialism champions by China across Africa in collusion with some corrupt, dictatorial African leaders.

And with the ever-looming military threat from the North on the horizon, if not already on the ground in the occupied region of Abyei, South Sudan would be better secured if and only if it has close military relationship with such military superb nation as Israel. In term of military technology, Israel is only second to the USA—forget China, it is only muscle in numbers with no brain. (And did I mention that both the Atomic bomb and the Hydrogen Bomb were both invented by the Jews, though be they from the USA?). Who knows that Iran may be exporting her Atomic Bomb program to the Sudan and what kind of a nation would South Sudan be if it were to live in the dark shadows of a nuclear armed North Sudan?

Of course, South Sudan has no intention, whatsoever, to create an arm race in Africa akin to the one that evolved between India and Pakistan after their bitter separation. South Sudanese just need to be secured, be confident and capable of safeguarding their own national security and territorial integrity. Our close friendship to the state of Israel is one surest way to wean ourselves from the perpetual danger of being invaded or even re-occupied by the better armed, much bigger, merciless northern army.

And if it is not about Israeli’s enviable economy, advanced technology or the superb military, then it is about their excellent system and level of education—the very fabric that underlie their economic, technological and military successes. Owing to deliberate oppressive policies from successive regimes in Khartoum and decades of war, South Sudan system of education is in a pathetic condition that is crying out for refurbishment. What is needed is a technologically-based system of education, one that befit the 21st century we are in. The state of Israel has it and, as our long time friend, it is willing to help us getting on our own feet, after decades of painfully crawling on the rough edges of illiteracy, poverty, desolation, and disillusionment. To paraphrased the Christian’ hymn, there is no better friend than in Israel when it come to the renovation of our educational system.

With good education in place, our economy would prosper and flourish just like the Israelis’ because, owing to their system of learning, Israel has effectively turn the desert of the Middle East into the real Promised Land that flow with milk and honey. Instead of experiencing resources curse as it is the case in many African countries like DRC Congo where the present of resources engender more wars and death than peace and economic prosperity, South Sudan would thrive long enough to demand a seat at the high table of well-to-do emerging economies.

Such emerging countries, or the newly industries nations or the Asian Tigers as they are also known—China, South Korea, Singapore, Taiwan, and Japan—were once socially and economically destitute and politically unstable as South Sudan is today. But because of their nationally well-planned-out and focused economic policies, stable political environment, and technologically-oriented system of education, they were able to surpass most pundits’ forecasts and propelled themselves out of social decadence, economic impoverishment and political oblivion into world economic and political powerhouses.

Though our friendship with Israel would come with a price in terms of rhetoric or real actions from the north, the benefits awaiting us are much more indispensable compare to the short-term setbacks such threats might embody. After all, South Sudanese are not entirely oppose to the roadmap of two states solution as outlined by President Bush provided that the security of Israel is guaranteed and there is willingness among the Palestinians to abide by the final agreement rather than using the future state of Palestine as a launching ground to attack the state of Israel in the proverbial quest to drive the Jews into the Mediterranean Sea as Hamas professes. Therefore, our friendships with Israel will not circumvent any international law.

However, with constant harassments and an ever-present threat of deligitimization from some Western elements and the Arab-Islamic world over the millennia-old Arab-Israeli conflict, Israel would need us politically and diplomatically to shield itself from the weapon of political isolation and deligitimization being wielded by its enemies who have the numbers on their sides.

It would be a win-win situation among two allies that made it through the wars. If anything, the memories of our mutual sufferings would bind us together. We suffered under the Arab oppression for over 190 years. The Jews too were persecuted in Europe for millennia till it culminated in the holocaust that was masterminded by the Nazis under Adolf Hitler.

Like no any other race on planet earth, the Jews were considered foreigners and wanderers, and hence, persecuted in Europe and told to go home, only to be branded as  settlers and occupiers (by the world) in the same home they were told to go to. Yet none of their tormentors is prepared to declare them as an alien race that came from another planet and are therefore not entitled to any piece of land on this planet to be called their homeland. Can anything be more absurd than that?

As evidently clear, maintaining and promoting our mutual friendship with the Jewish state of Israel is vital to the success of our young state. Israel is our old friend and we are their friends too. We should never allow the north to dictate our international associations, lest there is no independence per se, for to be independence is to have the freedom to chart your own destiny in whichever way or direction you see fit and with whoever you feel like associating with.

South Sudan has a good friend in the USA whose pressure and constant support and vigilance led to the materialization of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement under President George W. Bush. The next dear friend is the Jewish state of Israel! In the words of our Anya-Anya One war veteran and leader, General Joseph Lagu, Israel must have an embassy in Juba city.

You can reach PaanLuel Wël at paanluel2011@gmail.com , Facebook, Twitter or through his blog at: https://paanluelwel2011.wordpress.com/


South Sudan’s minister for peace, Pagan Amum, has resigned to make way for the new generation
S. Sudan minister resigns to ‘make way’ for new generation
KHARTOUM — South Sudan’s minister for peace, Pagan Amum, has resigned to make way for the new generation but will remain secretary general of the ruling party and chief negotiator with the north, his assistant said Wednesday.
“His resignation as minister of peace and CPA implementation has been accepted by the government. But his resignation as secretary general of the SPLM (Sudan People’s Liberation Movement) has been turned down,” Atif Keer, a senior staffer in the secretary general’s team, told AFP.
“He thought it was the right time to step aside and free the stage for the new generation.
“This is not a sign of weakness or defeat. He chose to do this when we had our moment of victory… One of our weaknesses as individuals (is that) most of the people stay in their positions for a long time,” he added.
The 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement between north and south ended decades of devastating conflict and paved the way for southern independence, which was formally declared on July 9, after southerners voted overwhelmingly to secede in a referendum in January.
Corruption among politicians is one of the main challenges that the fledgling nation faces.
Another major concern is the failure of Khartoum and Juba to implement key aspects of the CPA, such as determining the final status of the disputed Abyei border region, prior to partition, despite concerted international pressure and last-minute negotiations in Addis Ababa.
Amum, who was the SPLM’s chief negotiator on other unresolved post-referendum issues, including on managing the country’s oil sector, demarcating the north-south borders and debt, would continue in this role, Keer said.
“As secretary general of the SPLM he will continue to negotiate our position on the outstanding CPA issues, and on post-referendum issues,” he said, adding it had not yet been decided when the negotiations in Ethiopia would resume.
South Sudan’s SPLM SG resigns from his ministerial position
July 18, 2011 (JUBA) – The Secretary General of the ruling party in South Sudan, the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM), Pagan Amum, is said to have submitted his resignation from his ministerial position of Peace and CPA Implementation, Sudan Tribune has learnt.
JPEG - 13.2 kb
Pagan Amum (Getty)
According to official sources from the SPLM who preferred anonymity because the president has not yet approved the submission by Amum, the SPLM SG as a result did not show up to take oath of office as a caretaker minister with the rest of ministers last Sunday, July 10, despite his reappointment by the president to temporarily remain as caretaker in his ministry until the new cabinet is formed.
Amum was appointed last year as the minister in the newly created portfolio of peace ministry and recently led the SPLM delegation to the talks in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, over the issue of Abyei.
The SPLM official further told Sudan Tribune that Amum’s resignation may further affect his current position as the Secretary General of the party and may as well resign from the party position.
There was no clear explanation given as to why he decided to resign at this moment. Different speculations by officials suggest that Amum has recently differed with his boss, the SPLM chairman, Salva Kiir Mayardit, over issues not specified.
Others say the new government to be formed does not allow party cadres holding positions in the party secretariat, such as Amum, to also work at the same time as constitutional post holders in the government.
Amum recently also exchanged counter-accusations with his junior in the party, the former federal minister of petroleum in Khartoum, Lual Achuek Deng.
The SG accused the former petroleum minister of betraying South Sudan by illegally giving 40% of July share of the oil revenues to North Sudan despite the ending of sharing on July 9, in accordance with the CPA. Deng reacted by counter-accusing his senior, Amum, of embezzling three million dollars and selling VIVACEL telephone company in South Sudan.
He also denied the sole responsibility of selling the oil, saying the process was blessed by the president of South Sudan.