Sudan ruling party, opposition split over constitution

From The Washington Times, April 20, 2011:

Southern Sudan will become Africa’s newest nation in July, but politicians are already squabbling among themselves and worrying Western supporters who hoped for a smooth passage to democracy after the continent’s longest civil war.

The ruling Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) excluded most opposition parties from a committee to draft a temporary constitution. Some advocates for democracy fear that move could foreshadow the creation of just another one-party government in Africa.

“It does not appear that the process has been that open. So, unfortunately, it is not developing into a great story yet,” said a U.S. official, who spoke on background.

“There is a lot of concern given the track record of other African countries where there is a trend for single-party liberation movements that become entrenched after independence or elections. Clearly that is something to watch out for in Southern Sudan,” the official added.

The real test for the government will come when it begins to draft a permanent constitution.

“That’s when the fireworks will fly,” said a Western official based in Sudan, who also spoke on background to freely discuss developments.

The SPLM and the opposition disagree on the length of the transition period, which begins on July 9 when the south gains independence, and power-sharing arrangements in a new government.

The committee Wednesday presented its constitutional recommendations to Salva Kiir, President of the Government of Southern Sudan, who will open a seven-day public comment period before submitting the document to the legislature. He hopes to sign an interim constitution on July 9.

Southern Sudan started life with a great promise of democracy. More than 98 percent of voters endorsed independence from Sudan in a January referendum with a turnout of more than 3.8 million.

The election was part of a peace treaty with the government in Khartoum, ending a civil war of nearly 21 years that killed at least 2.5 million people and displaced another 5 million.

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South Sudan president calls for unity in Northern Bahr el Ghazal state

From Sudan Tribune, April 18, 2011:

The president of the Government of South Sudan (GoSS) on Monday broke his silence and called for peace and unity amongst the people of Northern Bahr el Ghazal state.

President Salva Kiir made the remark from his Juba office while hosting a joint executive and parliamentary delegation led by the governor of Northern Bahr el Ghazal State, Paul Malong Awan Anei. On Saturday, a 12 member delegation arrived in Juba from Northern Bahr el Ghazal via Wau, capital of Western Bahr el Ghazal from where they flew on a charted plane.

The delegation is said to have held a meeting with youth groups from Northern Bahr el Ghazal in Juba, a day after their arrival and met with Kiir on Monday. Governor Anei was appointed by presidential decree in March 2008 and contested the same seat during 2010 general elections as official candidate of the South Sudan’s governing party, the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) with candidates from other political parties including an independent candidate from SPLM.

Amid precipitous competition fraught with accusations and reports of intimidations, the National Elections Commission announced voting results in his favour, leaving some other candidates claiming they were rigged.

While several attempts were made to reconcile rival candidates including reinstatement of General Dau Aturjong Nyuol, who contested as independent candidate, into the regional army by South Sudan president, political differences between the two sides remain unresolved. There have been reports and allegations that individuals that voted against incumbent state administration were either suspended indefinitely or dismissed from their jobs. An independent investigation into these allegations is yet to take place.

On 23 March 2011, state security elements collaborating with police arrested nine senior government officials suspected writing a letter bearing no names, which called for a demonstration to take place in all five counties of the state, against its Governor. On the two occasions the case was brought to court, the judge dismissed it.

However, relatives and immediate family members in series of regular follow up interviews withSudan Tribune said the officials were again imprisoned, claiming that the state governor had threatened police and judicial officials with dismissal from their jobs for releasing the suspects without his consent. A police officer on duty was arrested and released after spending two days in prison for accompanying them to the court. The arrested officials include Lieutenant Colonel Garang Joong AkoonAngelo Machar AkecMario Angui LualAkol MayenditAchuen RouAdup Achier, Agiu Garang, Wieu Garang and Reverend Moses Aguer Bol Deng Dau.

Kiir responded to reports from influential groups and activists and a fact finding mission by the region’s human rights commission which were critical of the poor conditions in the prison in which the officials were being held. The president summoned the Governor, who, in his meeting with him in March, claimed not to know why the accused were being held. The Governor also claimed he had had no reports from his security on which he would have taken action.

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Italian Firm Says It Reached Deal to Build Sugar Refinery With Kenana

From allAfrica, April 16, 2011:

Sudan’s major Sugar-sector company, Kenana, has agreed a plan with Italy’s leading Sugar-producer, Eridania Sadam, to build a joint sugar refinery whose output will be sold in Europe and Africa.

According to a statement released by Eridania, the $129.6 million evenly-split venture will be setup near Port Sudan, the country’s sea outlet in the east, and is expected to start up in the first quarter of 2014.

Eridania said the refinery will have an initial capacity to process 500,000 tonnes of cane sugar produced in Sudan on the fields of about 50,000 hectares.

The Italian company said it plans to sell 50 percent of the refined sugar in Italy and Europe whereas the rest will be earmarked for Africa.

Sudan’s Kenana Sugar Company says it is the world’s largest single integrated producer of white sugar with a current production rate of 400,000 tonnes a year.

The Kenana sugar cane plantation and production plant is located 250 km (160 miles) south of Khartoum and 1,200 km (750 miles) from Port Sudan.

The company’s shareholders are: the government of Sudan with 35.17 percent, the government of Kuwait with 30.5 percent, Saudi Arabia with 10.92 percent, the Arab Investment Company with 6.96 percent, the state-owned Sudan Development Corporation with 5.66 percent, the Arab Authority for Agricultural Investment and Development with 5.56 percent, Sudanese banking groups with 4.45 percent, Lonrho with 0.46 percent, the Japanese Nissho Iwai corporation with 0.16 percent and Gulf Fisheries Company with 0.16 percent

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South Sudan’s reliance on NGOs

From Public Radio International, April 15, 2011:

South Sudan is poised to become Africa’s newest nation, but NGOs will still provide basic services to almost 90 percent of the country.

Operation Lifeline Sudan, launched by the United Nations in 1989, was one of the biggest humanitarian efforts ever seen. It brought together UN agencies and some 35 non-governmental organizations (NGO).

Decades of civil war ended in 2005, when a peace treaty gave the south defacto autonomy. The former rebel group — the SPLA — has been governing the south ever since. Vassar College Political Scientist Zachariah Mampilly says the situation created an unsustainable relationship between foreign NGOs and the SPLA.

“The SPLA focuses on legal and policing issues to provide a degree of stability in areas that they controlled, and they basically outsourced the rest of governance provision, health care, education, to international NGOs,” Mampilly said. “Inevitably, they are going to have to deal with this question of how do you get the NGOs to follow the directives of the new government of South Sudan?”

In the wake of January’s vote for independence, the SPLA will have to take full responsibility for all aspects of governing. That won’t be easy. Aaron Shapiro, from the Samaritan’s Purse, an American faith-based organization (FBO), or a religious NGO, says NGOs still provide basic services in maybe 90 percent of South Sudan.

“It’s a catch 22 in that if all the NGOs left, eventually something would have to give,” Shapiro said. “The government would have to be responsible, be held to account but if they all left, a lot of people would die without health care and clean water.”

Jok Madut Jok, an American-educated anthropologist who returned last year to become undersecretary of South Sudan’s Culture Ministry, says he’s well aware of the bind his government is in.

“If we dictate how we use help from outside, we will be accused of being too controlling; if we let the donor community tell us what to do with our nation, we won’t have a nation,” Jok said. “It would be a nation conceived and delivered by foreigners; it will not be raised from within our own philosophies; something that we own, that will fit in our traditions and our culture, something that will be symbolic of us being a sovereign state.”

The government in Juba is feeling pressure to provide more services itself. But it lacks what NGO types call “capacity.” There’s a short supply of educated, experienced and motivated administrators. And its institutions are far from solid. South Sudanese have only just begun to make their own.

And there’s another unforeseen consequence of having a country run by NGOs … armies of young, foreign do-gooders. There are so many 20-something Americans working at places like Save the Children that Juba can appear like a massive fraternity party.

At the Juba chapter of the Hash House Harriers, there’s a “drinking club with a running problem” that’s popular worldwide, especially with expats. This video of a charity fundraiser was posted online.

Marina Peter has worked as an advocate on peace and reconciliation issues in Sudan for 25 years. She says Sudanese have a lot of respect for their elders so young NGO staff can be hard to swallow.

“They see these young people coming in and telling them what they should do,” Peter said. “Very often with no experience in Africa, let alone in Sudan, and they are running these NGOs with thousands if not millions of dollars, and so people are saying but who are they, they don’t listen to us, they don’t ask what we really need. And they are just disconnected from our society.”

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Sudan arms buildup heightens oil war fears

From UPI, April 13, 2011:

The Khartoum government and former rebels in the newly independent south are beefing up their military forces along the still-to-be-defined border in Sudan, heightening fears of a new war over oil that could destabilize northeast Africa.

Imagery from civilian satellites show the buildups are most concentrated around the flashpoint Abyei region, the most disputed of the oil-producing zones and the scene of constant skirmishing in recent weeks.

Fighting has escalated between ethnic southern and northern tribes in the area, which international observers say appears to have been fanned by the Khartoum regime in a bid to seize the territory.

If serious fighting erupts, the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement that ended more than two decades of north-south civil war could be shattered, threatening the formal independence of the south scheduled for July 9.

In a January referendum, the people of the Christian and animist south voted overwhelmingly in favor of secession from the Arab dominated north.

But the vital issue of how Sudan’s oil resources, essential to both sides, is to be divided remains unresolved, with no indication that an agreement is likely any time soon. The south stormed out of negotiations March 12.

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US envoy to Sudan: Abyei conflict could spark war

From Fox News, April 9, 2011:

Both southern and northern Sudan have violated agreements by bringing heavily armed units into the disputed border region of Abyei, the U.S. special envoy said Saturday.

A confrontation in the fertile region could restart the civil war between north and south that raged for more than two decades and ended only in 2005, said Princeton Lyman.

The newly appointed special envoy described the situation in Abyei as “very tense.” By bringing in military hardware, both parties have violated the terms of a recently reached security deal stating that forces would be withdrawn.

“That is very worrisome,” Lyman said in an interview in the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa.

“The danger is that a confrontation in a place like Abyei could get out of hand,” he said. “And that could lead them to wholesale war with very serious consequences.”

Southern Sudan is due to become independent in July after voting for secession in a peaceful referendum in January, part of a peace deal that ended one of Africa’s longest-running conflicts. Abyei was also promised a referendum but it was not held after northern and southern leaders disagreed on who was eligible to vote.

Many outstanding issues remain to be settled between the two sides and Lyman said Abyei is at the top of the agenda.

Lyman, who attends meetings in Ethiopia and Sudan on the transition of Southern Sudan to independence in July, said Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir and southern leader Salva Kiir have both said they don’t want to go back to war.

But Bashir and Kiir “are adhering very, very tight to their respective positions” on Abyei, said Lyman. “It is a deadlock which has to be resolved politically.”

Two populations warily coexist in the fertile land: the Ngok Dinka farmers, who are loyal to the south and want independence from the north, and the Arab Misseriya cattle herders, who graze their herds in Abyei and fear losing access to the land if it secedes.

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Sudan: South’s Draft Constitution Finalized – Minister

From allAfrica, April 5, 2011:

The technical committee that was tasked with reviewing South Sudan’s interim constitution of 2005, ahead of the region’s independence in July, has successfully completed the process, with the draft report expected in a week or so, its chairperson said.

Addressing the media in the regional capital, Juba on Tuesday, John Luk Jok said the next phase of the process, expected to commence after the July independence declaration, will be transitional in nature.

“We expect the committee’s draft report either by end of this week or next week. The next phase of the process to take place after the country’s independence will be all inclusive. We shall embark on nationwide consultations with the entire population,” said Jok, also South Sudan’s minister for legal and constitutional development.

South Sudan is due to become independent after the population overwhelming chose separation in the regions’s self-determination referendum held in January. The vote was a key part of the Sudan’s 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), which ended over two decades of a bloody civil war between north and south.

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Gunmen kill UNAMID peacekeeper in Darfur

From BNO News, April 6, 2011:

Armed insurgents kidnapped and killed a peacekeeper with the African Union/United Nations Hybrid operation in Darfur (UNAMID) following a firefight in the north of the war-wracked Sudanese region.

The UN mission issued a press release late Tuesday saying that the armed men ambushed a mission patrol and carjacked a vehicle carrying three peacekeepers. The blue helmets returned fire, killing one of the attackers, but they still managed to flee.

Two of the UNAMID soldiers were later released by the gunmen, although both sustained injuries and one is in a serious condition. The vehicle was later recovered and the third peacekeeper was found to have been killed.

UNAMID has more than 17,700 troops – part of over 23,000 military personnel – on the ground in Darfur, where government forces, allied militia and rebels have been fighting since 2003.

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‘Time’: IDF official confirms strike in Sudan

From the Jerusalem Post, April 7, 2011:

Al-Arabiya reports 2 killed in strike were Sudanese national, other was from an Arab country; some reports claim man was senior Hamas operative.

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Over 100 orphans caught in S Sudan raid: officials

From Reuters Africa, March 14, 2011:

More than 100 orphans were caught in the middle of gunfire in an attack on the capital of south Sudan’s oil-producing Upper Nile state that killed more than 42 combatants, aid and military officials said.

Renegade fighters attacked Malakal on Saturday in the latest violence to stoke fears for the stability of the south ahead of its independence from the north, due to take place on July 9.

Just short of 99 percent of southern voters chose to declare independence in a January referendum promised in a 2005 peace deal that ended decades of civil war with the north.

Aid group SOS Children’s Villages on Monday said the attackers forced their way into its compound in the town.

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