Archive for October 8, 2011


By Rosie Goldsmith BBC News Independence Day celebrationsSouth Sudan’s leaders believe English will make them “different and modern”

The young nation of South Sudan has chosen English as its official language but after decades of civil war, the widespread learning of English presents a big challenge for a country brought up speaking a form of Arabic.

I knew there might be problems as soon as I arrived at Juba International airport – and was asked to fill in my own visa form, as the immigration officer could not write English.

The colourful banners and billboards hung out to celebrate South Sudan’s independence back in July, and still adorning the streets now, are all in English. As are the names of the new hotels, shops and restaurants.

After decades of Arabisation and Islamisation by the Khartoum government, the predominantly Christian and African south has opted for English as its official language.

‘One nation’

At the Ministry of Higher Education, Edward Mokole, told me: “English will make us different and modern. From now on all our laws, textbooks and official documents have to be written in that language. Schools, the police, retail and the media must all operate in English.”

Classroom in South SudanSouth Sudan’s education system is very short of resources and most people are illiterate

This was “a good decision for South Sudan”, he added forcefully, rather playing down the fact that there are very few fluent English speakers in the country.

As a devastated country of remote villages and mainly dirt roads, with no industry, banks or landlines, with erratic electricity and connectivity, where 85% of people are illiterate and the education system is shattered, South Sudan does not just have very little English, but very little written language at all.

I visited schools without textbooks.

The head of English at Juba University had no books in his office, let alone electricity or a computer.

I saw no bookshops.

For the new rulers, who fought with the Sudan People’s Liberation Army, learning English is a new struggle.

“With English,” the news director of South Sudan Radio, Rehan Abdelnebi, told me haltingly, “we can become one nation. We can iron out our tribal differences and communicate with the rest of the world.”

‘Development tool’

But peace is still fragile.

The whole of Sudan is riddled with conflicts. About 150 different languages are spoken in the South and there are thousands of guns out there, as well as a quarter of a million former guerrillas being demobilised and disarmed.

There are soldiers everywhere in Juba.

But there are also traders from Uganda and Kenya, as well as about two million returnees from the north, refugees and thousands of Westerners seeking fortunes or bringing aid.

I met the new British Council director in his office – in the grounds of a notorious nightclub (the club had free office space, and in Juba you take what you get).

After 65 years operating in Sudan, the council appointed Tony Calderbank to oversee the spread of English in the new nation.

Wherever Tony went, I saw people approach him, desperate for courses, books, teachers and grants.

“English has become a tool for development,” Tony told me, “and, even if the British in Sudan are sometimes seen as colonial overlords, the English language is respected.”

Shakespeare’s influence

Brigadier-General Awur Malual had asked the British Council to teach his soldiers.

The general had grown up speaking his tribal tongue Bor and Juba Arabic, a colloquial form of Arabic, but can now speak remarkably good English.

When I asked him how he had learned it, he told me: “By picking up books in the bush when I was fighting. I read some things about that man Shakespeare.”

Map of South Sudan

“What about Dickens or Jane Austen?” I asked. He scratched his head and said: “I don’t know them.”

I promised to send the general some Dickens.

During my time in Juba, several people asked me for books – a dictionary of law and biographies of Nelson Mandela and Barack Obama – black leaders who, for them, inspire hope.

Already, I have put copies of Shakespeare’s Cymbeline in the post.

Next year, as part of the 2012 Olympics arts programme, the South Sudanese Kwoto Theatre Company is to perform this tale of love, death and war in Juba Arabic at the Globe theatre in London.

Thirty-six other Shakespeare plays in 36 other languages will also be staged.

As we swatted flies down by the Nile, I asked Kwoto’s director, Derik Alfred why he was swimming against the tide – why not Shakespeare in English?

“We must still celebrate our own language,” he told me mischievously, “but first of all we have to translate Cymbeline from English into Juba Arabic!”

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-15216524

South Sudan now confirms EAC entry

Posted: October 8, 2011 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Junub Sudan

Saturday, 08 October 2011 22:13

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By Zephania Ubwani
The Citizen Bureau Chief

Arusha: South Sudan has confirmed that it is joining the East African Community.The country’s leader, President Salva Kiir Mayardit, said it has already kick-started the application process.

"We want to join the EAC; we are not dragging our feet; we are coming," he declared on Wednesday when he met the Speaker of the East African Legislative Assembly (Eala), Mr Abdirahin Haithar Abdi, in Juba.

He said South Sudan has enjoyed enormous support from East Africa during and prior to negotiations that culminated in the signing of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) in 2005. This ended many years of war and anarchy in Sudan, then Africa’s largest state.

The peace deal led to the secession of the mainly black South from the central government in Khartoum and proclamation of South Sudan as Africa’s newest state on July 9 this year.

President Kiir, one of the top commanders of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) which waged a 21-year war with Khartoum, did not give the time frame of his country joining the EAC.

However, he said the people of South Sudan stood to benefit much from integrating with the region. This is because of the increasing economic, political and cultural ties "and willingness of EA leaders to open the door for us."

He explained that the EAC bloc gave logistic support to the SPLM during its war to secede from the Arabist North Sudan that started in 1983. It was caused by the marginalisation of South which has vast oil resources, now at the centre of renewed conflicts between Juba and Khartoum.

"Whenever Khartoum isolated Juba we ran either to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Burundi or Rwanda for shelter and assistance. The EAC is thus at the centre of our hearts," he emphasised.

President Kiir’s remarks were among major indications that South Sudan was indeed on the path to joining the EAC. This is despite the move having been expected even before its independence last July.

EAC leaders have repeatedly said Juba was welcome to join the bloc because it met most of the six conditions for states aspiring to become new members. Of special significance is the country’s proximity to the region and the potential it has to contribute to the economy of the area.

However, it is North Sudan which has sent its official application to join the EAC ahead of its former autonomous state.

The application was handed over to the Arusha-based secretariat and discussed during the Council of Ministers meeting in August. It was then referred to the heads of state summit scheduled for next month.

Increased economic ties have seen Kenya become the leading investor in South Sudan. The latter has not fully recovered from the effects of the long war and lacks basic infrastructure for the economic take off.

Available figures indicate a steep rise of trade between the country and the EAC bloc. For instance, last year exports to Juba from Uganda and Kenya topped $187 million (about Sh308.5 billon) and $184m (about Sh303.6 billion) respectively.

President Kiir told the Eala Speaker and his delegation that the existing warm relations between his country and the EAC was enough indication that his country was going to benefit immensely by joining it.

During its recent session in Kigali, Rwanda, the Eala passed a resolution urging EAC partner states– Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya, Burundi and Rwanda– to develop regional infrastructure that links the borders with South Sudan. This would enable the EAC and South Sudan unlock the vast economic potential of the region.

The resolution further urged the partner states to pursue a sustained and increased trade, political and socio-economic cooperation with South Sudan.

In addition, they were encouraged to work closely with the Parliament of the newest African nation to strengthen ties between the EAC and Juba.

http://thecitizen.co.tz/sunday-citizen/-/15933-south-sudan-now-confirms-eac-entry

South Sudan’s Kiir in Khartoum for key talks

Posted: October 8, 2011 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Junub Sudan

By Simon Martelli (AFP) –

South Sudan President Salva Kir holds freshly-minted notes of the new South Sudan pound, in Juba in this file photo.

KHARTOUM — South Sudanese President Salva Kiir on Saturday lead the first top-level delegation to Khartoum since southern secession, with key unresolved issues on the agenda, including oil and borders.

These and the ongoing conflict in Sudan’s border region between the army and rebel militiamen with historic ties to the south have heavily strained north-south relations.

But after one-to-one talks on Saturday, both presidents pledged to work together for peace and stability, and to put the years of conflict behind them.

“We achieved the comprehensive peace agreement (in 2005) through joint efforts. By the same good will, we will not go back to war,” Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir said in a speech.

“The pending issues are not too difficult to resolve if the political will is there. We appreciate the initiative of your visit, which has assured us of this political will,” he added.

South Sudan proclaimed formal independence from the north on July 9, after more than two decades of devastating civil war, a conflict fuelled by religion, ethnicity, ideology and resources such as oil, that left the south in ruins.

Negotiations to regulate Sudan’s political and economic division, both prior to and since partition, have made only limited progress.

Joint committees on security, economy, borders and Abyei held closed meetings ahead of talks between the two leaders, but it was not clear whether any new accords were reached.

Kiir is accompanied by South Sudan’s minister of cabinet affairs, Deng Alor, as well as the oil, finance, national security and foreign ministers.

“We are privileged by the warm reception that we received,” he said.

“We are here to visit whatever problems that have not been resolved… We on our side we will not let you down,” Kiir added.

Diplomats in Khartoum say they are doubtful about the likelihood of any landmark agreements, instead viewing the two-day visit as a confidence-building exercise that could lead to meaningful negotiations in the coming weeks.

Others hope that a breakthrough can be made especially on oil, most of which is produced in the south, and possibly on the future status of Abyei, which was occupied by the Sudanese army in May.

Bashir, who attended the independence ceremony in Juba as a guest of honour, said last week that South Sudan was a “top priority” for the Khartoum government.

On Saturday, he promised to keep Sudan’s ports open to the south for imports and exports “according to international standards,” and to work with the south to secure their shared borders.

But despite such pledges of future cooperation, neither side has so far shown any intention of making serious compromises on any of the key outstanding issues since partition.

In addition to Abyei and oil, these include border demarcation and debt.

The lack of progress has aggravated the lingering mistrust between Khartoum and Juba, occasionally triggering pointed accusations by senior officials.

Sudan’s failure to withdraw its troops from the bitterly disputed Abyei border region by September 30, as agreed, prompted a senior South Sudanese official to charge that Khartoum had no intention of doing so and was blocking the return of displaced southerners on purpose.

Separately, disagreement over how much Juba should pay to use the north’s oil infrastructure has resulted in Khartoum blocking southern oil exports twice since July.

Further clouding the atmosphere has been the spread of violence in Sudan’s border region, where Khartoum has accused Juba of supplying rebels, claims strongly rejected by the south.

Fighting in South Kordofan, where Nuba militiamen who once fought alongside the ex-southern rebels have been battling the Sudanese army since June, last month spilled into Blue Nile state, which also has strong political ties to the south.

The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) said on Friday that the clashes in Blue Nile had caused more than 27,500 people to flee to Ethiopia and South Sudan in the past month.

It said it had opened a new refugee camp in western Ethiopia to cope with the influx, after the other main camp in the area, at Sherkole, reached its full capacity of 8,700 people.

Copyright © 2011 AFP. All rights reserved. More »

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Thousands flee fighting in Sudan border state: UN

Posted: October 8, 2011 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Junub Sudan

UNITED NATIONS: Thousands of people are fleeing conflict in Sudan’s Blue Nile state and theUnited Nations has opened a new refugee camp in western Ethiopia to cope with the influx, officials said.

More than 27,500 people have fled Blue Nile to Ethiopia and South Sudan over the past month, amid clashes between the Sudanese troops and rebel forces, according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

UNHCR spokesman Adrian Edwards said in a statement on Friday that 533 of the refugees had already moved into the new camp at Tongo, just across the border from the Blue Nile regions of Kurmuk, Bamza and Almahal.

The camp can take up to 3,000 people and about 400 people a day are being moved from the border to the camp. Tongo was opened after the other main camp in the area, at Sherkole, reached its full capacity of 8,700 people on Tuesday.

The rebel Sudan Peoples Liberation Army-North (SPLA-N), which is loyal to the South Sudan government, has a stronghold at Kurmuk which Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir vowed recently would be taken.

Fighting erupted in Blue Nile state, on the border with South Sudan, at the beginning of September.

The Sudanese army is fighting the SPLA-N in Blue Nile and neighbouring South Kordofan. Tensions are high between the Sudan and South Sudan in the disputed Abyei region, which was taken over by Khartoum troops in May, forcing an estimated 110,000 people to flee their homes.

South Sudan broke away from Sudan in July, seven months after a self-determination referendum. The two governments have yet to settle a common border, how to share their oil resources and pre-separation debt — all issues which are stoking tensions, according to diplomats.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/rest-of-world/Thousands-flee-fighting-in-Sudan-border-state-UN/articleshow/10275394.cms

08 October 2011 | 12:59:34 PM | Source: AFP

sudan_L_110711_sbs_1374780294

South Sudan broke away from Sudan in July and the governments are yet to decide on a common border. (SBS)

Thousands of people are fleeing conflict in Sudan’s Blue Nile state and the United Nations has opened a new refugee camp in western Ethiopia to cope with the influx, officials said.

More than 27,500 people have fled Blue Nile to Ethiopia and South Sudan over the past month, amid clashes between the Sudanese
troops and rebel forces, according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

UNHCR spokesman Adrian Edwards said in a statement on Friday that 533 of the refugees had already moved into the new camp at
Tongo, just across the border from the Blue Nile regions of Kurmuk, Bamza and Almahal.

The camp can take up to 3000 people and about 400 people a day are being moved from the border to the camp.

Tongo was opened after the other main camp in the area, at Sherkole, reached its full capacity of 8700 people on Tuesday.

The rebel Sudan Peoples Liberation Army-North (SPLA-N), which is loyal to the South Sudan government, has a stronghold at Kurmuk
which Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir vowed recently would be taken.

Fighting erupted in Blue Nile state, on the border with South Sudan, at the beginning of September.

The Sudanese army is fighting the SPLA-N in Blue Nile and neighbouring South Kordofan.

Tensions are high between the Sudan and South Sudan in the disputed Abyei region, which was taken over by Khartoum troops in May, forcing an estimated 110,000 people to flee their homes.

South Sudan broke away from Sudan in July, seven months after a self-determination referendum.

The two governments have yet to settle on a common border, how to share their oil resources and pre-separation debt – all issues which are stoking tensions, according to diplomats.

http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/1594823/Thousands-flee-fighting-in-Sudan