This is a long but interesting article from Bor (where I just was from the last post). I think this is fairly accurate, and reminds me how much prayer is needed here.
Most situations in the world are much more complex then the media portrays. It is not simply one group against another but often involves 100's of years, multiple political agendas and motivations that do not seem logical to the western mind. I am still trying to understand the conflicts here in Sudan but this article gives a little insight.
SOURCE: | The Washington Post - April 25, 2009
By Stephanie McCrummen
Washington Post Foreign Service
Saturday, April 25, 2009
BOR, Sudan -- The nascent government of southern Sudan, a key U.S.
ally in the volatile nation, is threatened by severe problems
including severe cash shortages and growing ethnic tensions spawned by
a national ruling party determined to see the south fail, southern
officials say.
The future of Sudan as a whole is closely tied to what happens in this
oil-rich region, where the rebel Sudan People's Liberation Movement,
or SPLM, fought a brutal, 21-year civil war against the government
rooted in claims of discrimination by a northern, Arab elite. More
than 2 million southerners died in the conflict, and millions more
were displaced.
A U.S.-backed deal ending the war in 2005 transformed the rebels into
a semiautonomous government, and promised power-sharing with the
central government and a referendum on southern independence in 2011.
In the process, the SPLM emerged as a symbol of hope for millions of
Sudanese and became one of the few viable political challengers to the
ruling party led by Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, whom the
International Criminal Court has charged with war crimes in a separate
crisis in the country's western Darfur region.
But as attention has focused on Darfur, the south's troubles have
multiplied. The four-year-old government is facing a $100
million-a-month cash-flow shortage caused by declining oil revenue,
according to a recent report by the group Refugees International. And
across the south, massive cattle raids are overwhelming local
authorities and increasing tribal tensions kept at bay during the war.
In the scrubby landscape surrounding this town where the civil war
began, the spear-and-machete raids of the past have become more like
military operations. Machine-gun toting, camouflage-wearing tribal
militias use satellite phones and launch rocket-propelled grenades to
move thousands of stolen cattle. In February, young militiamen from
the Lou Nuer tribe captured an entire town, displacing at least 5,000
people as southern soldiers stood by and watched, according to local
officials and aid workers, who say that more than 700 people were
killed in the incident. A retaliatory attack by the Murle tribe
against the Lou Nuer this month killed more than 250 people, according
to local officials.
"With this insecurity, we can't collect taxes, we can't open schools,
we can't drill for water," said Abraham Jok Aring, the Bor county
commissioner. "Sometimes people tell me it was better during the war,
because at least then we were getting support from the international
community."
Southern officials accuse Bashir's inner circle of continuing to arm
tribal militias that were used as proxies during the civil war and of
other dirty tricks aimed at destabilizing the region ahead of the 2011
referendum on its independence. They say the north has gerrymandered
boundaries to ensure that oil areas are in the north, undercounted
southerners in a recent census, and dispatched militia leaders to
contested oil areas to intimidate war-weary southerners.
The incidents are "indicative of the ruling party's intention to
sabotage the referendum," said John Prendergast, co-chairman of the
Enough Project, an advocacy group working to prevent genocide. "This
regime will set the south on fire using these proxy militias rather
than allow a referendum to occur."
Corruption and Tribalism
Increasingly, though, southerners are blaming the southern liberation
movement itself.
In recent years, southern officials have been caught up in corruption
scandals in which they have been accused of wasting millions of
dollars. Tribalism is emerging in southern politics, with politicians
accusing one another of manipulating ethnic divisions for their own
gain. Some complain that power is concentrated in the hands of the
Dinka, the tribe of the movement's revered late leader John Garang.
Government campaigns to disarm civilians have been spotty at best,
with weapons left over from the war fueling the cattle-raiding
epidemic devastating southern communities that depend on cows for
everything from marriage dowries to school fees.
"The SPLM has not endeared itself to many parts of south Sudan," said
Taban Lo Liyong, a literature professor at the University of Juba, in
the regional capital, and a frequent critic of the movement. "You
can't keep repeating, 'It's the Arabs, it's the Arabs, it's the
Arabs.' "
The government of southern Sudan started from scratch four years ago.
Newly appointed officials fresh from the bush had to learn to call one
another "honorable" instead of "comrade," as well as how to run a
government. Juba, the swampy capital, was essentially a collection of
straw huts along the Nile River. Outlying towns, including Bor, were
mostly bombed-out bush clearings.
These days, the capital has a few paved roads, power in some spots,
newly constructed government buildings and fleets of government
sport-utility vehicles that clog the roads along with goats and cows.
But as millions of southerners have returned home, the government has
had trouble extending its reach beyond the capital, a problem evident
in this town four-hours away by dirt road.
Maj. Gen. Riak Akon Riak, the state police commissioner here, said he
has 3,000 officers to patrol his state, Jonglei. Most of his police
officers don't have weapons. For the entire force, he has eight
trucks. By comparison, he said, the various tribes in his area are
"armed to the teeth," with people able to acquire a Kalashnikov for
about two cows.
"All the counties around here have tribes that took on the military
culture during the war," he said. "And the police cannot do anything
unless the tribes are disarmed."
Distrust of Government
Just 10 miles or so beyond Bor, the village of Chuet Padol -- an
expanse of a few hundred straw huts and yellow grass ringed by forest
-- has one officer on foot patrol.
Cattle raiders from the Murle tribe struck four times this year, in
groups of 50 or more. Recently, the raiders came in broad daylight,
shooting one herder and shooing away 50 cows into the surrounding
forest, said Daniel Chol Anyeth, a local Dinka chief, who was sitting
under a tree with several other men with little to do now that almost
all their cows are gone.
Like many villagers around here, Anyeth complained that the government
had disarmed his people but not the Murle, some of whom served as
militiamen for the Sudanese government during the civil war. Recently,
southern soldiers intercepted several cases of ammunition that were
being floated down the Nile in a boat from points north, allegedly
headed to Murle territory. People here suspect the Khartoum government
of providing the ammunition to the tribe, which many here accuse of
stealing young children during cattle raids and selling them to
childless families.
The result is growing frustration among locals who suffered through a
war and now must teach their children to hide before a raid.
"We've not received anything from the CPA," said Anyeth, referring to
the peace deal, known as the Comprehensive Peace Agreement. "Even
during the war it was better -- at least we had guns. We've had one
water tap since the CPA. One school. One health clinic."
But many SPLM loyalists say the movement is suffering from
understandable growing pains complicated by the ruling party's
attempts to undermine it.
Many southern leaders acknowledge that much of the movement's success
was wrapped up in the persona of Garang, who died in a helicopter
crash in 2005 and whose photo hangs over every government minister's
desk.
A charismatic and at times ruthless leader, Garang put his young
rebels through political training intended to stifle tribal issues and
instill his vision of uniting all of Sudan's marginalized people.
"Garang's vision was more powerful than clans and divisions," said
Bouth Chou, a local SPLM party official. "I'm not saying the
government is not capable, but you can be effective during war, but
with development, not be so effective."
END
13 years ago
1 comment:
Wow - I can't imagine my livelihood being violently stripped away from me four times in one year.
Praying with you, for them...
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