In the 2 Sudans: War by any other means – By Jean-Baptiste Gallopin

August 1, 2011
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Southern secession has passed, and the return to all-out war between
Khartoum and the south that many feared has not occurred. The run-up
to independence was accompanied by large-scale northern offensives on
Abyei and South Kordofan, with mounting evidence of grave human-rights
violations by government forces against supporters of the Sudan
People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) in the north. But as Khartoum’s
provocative actions brought the two Sudans dangerously close to the
brink, the southern authorities refused to react, preferring to focus
on the goal of independence. The immediate build-up to the 9 July
independence celebrations saw President Omar al-Bashir make a sudden
volte face – as he had done on the occasion of the referendum – to
profess his desire for ‘brotherly’ relations with the south.

By Jean-Baptiste Gallopin – 29th July, 2011

Nonetheless, less than a month later, tensions have erupted again,
this time indirectly. An economic war might have broken out. Following
a series of restrictive measures adopted on 10 July by the Central
Bank of Sudan against the southern financial system, South Sudanese
Finance Minister David Deng Athorbei on 11 July announced that his
country would launch its new currency within a week, rather than the
six months initially agreed. The southern authorities appear to have
simultaneously asked the Khartoum government for hard currency in
exchange for the estimated $700m-worth of Sudanese pounds they were
subsequently expecting to phase out of the market.

The move angered the north, which feared the South Sudanese government
would attempt to dump the old pound on the Sudanese market (notably by
importing goods for free), causing a massive increase in money supply
in an economy already facing double-digit inflation. Khartoum rapidly
struck back. Bashir on 12 July announced that Sudan would launch its
own new currency, effective from 24 July. This kicked off a race to
exchange currency: the first government to roll out its new money
could hope to reduce inflation and use old pounds in its neighbour’s
market. Khartoum’s minister of finance, Ali Mahmud, on 19 July
introduced regulations banning the use of the old pound in trade with
the south, and South Sudan on 26 July decided to shorten the
currency-conversion period to 45 days, down from the 90 days initially
planned. Unless the two Sudans agree to set up a co-ordination
mechanism in the next few weeks, this currency war could have a
significant impact on both economies. Meanwhile, unrest could break
out if prices soar while segments of the population fail to convert
their savings in time.

This currency war illustrates a key emerging dynamic in post-secession
relations between the two Sudans: the adoption by both sides of
tit-for-tat unilateral measures aimed at influencing the final shape
of the relationship through ‘facts-on-the-ground’ policies. The formal
negotiations between the National Congress Party (NCP) and the SPLM
over crucial issues such as citizenship, legal affairs and the economy
(including currency, debt and oil) in the post-secession era have so
far failed to yield a comprehensive agreement. Meanwhile, the end of
the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) on 9 July has created the
opportunity for both sides to take unilateral decisions on some of the
key contentious points that were frozen by the CPA or form part of
bilateral negotiations.

Although most obvious in the currency question, this new dynamic is
also evident in a number of other areas. While citizenship issues are
meant to be solved through bilateral negotiations, the Khartoum
government prior to secession unilaterally dismissed all southerners
from the administration and the armed forces (except, by design, from
the Ministry of Energy and Mines, which manages the oil sector). It
also announced that southerners would be stripped of their citizenship
in April 2012 and that they would need to apply for work permits for
private-sector jobs. Despite repeated promises by South Sudanese
President Salva Kiir that northerners in South Sudan would be granted
dual citizenship, the Juba government in late July was apparently
reversing its stance on the matter. South Sudanese Minister of
Information Barnaba Marial Benjamin on 25 July said that skilled
northerners and investors from the north would be given ‘permanent
residency’, rather than citizenship. Making things difficult for
northerners in South Sudan would damage the southern economy, given
its reliance on imports from northern traders, but this is one of the
only cards that South Sudan can hope to play to influence the Khartoum
government.

With regard to oil-revenue sharing, unilateral decisions are also
becoming the norm. The two governments agreed to a continuation of CPA
wealth-sharing provisions, which equally divide oil revenues from the
south between the two governments, for the month of July. The South
Sudanese government has remained adamant that any suggestion of
subsequent ‘wealth-sharing’ would infringe its sovereignty. But
Khartoum wants to continue receiving a wide share of revenues through
indirect means. SPLM secretary-general Pagan Amum on 25 July accused
the Sudanese government of imposing a $22.80 fee for the use of
pipelines and refining facilities located in the north. This figure is
20 to 40 times higher than international standards, and would allow
Khartoum to retain about 30% of overall South Sudanese oil revenues.
The move prompted outrage in South Sudan, but the Juba authorities
appear to have little choice but to accept this decision: they rely on
oil for 98% of their revenues and lack alternative oil-export routes.

These developments hint at what could prove a defining feature of
relations between the two Sudans in the coming months, and possibly
years. If the two governments manage, as they did in the CPA period,
to prevent heightened tensions from escalating into full-fledged
conflict, their incentive to reach a negotiated settlement could
progressively diminish. As a result, they might find the
‘trial-and-error’ approach more attractive, and temporary arrangements
could provide a useful blueprint for a final accord. This is made all
the more likely given that the opportunities for direct military
confrontation – even if only short-lived – between the Sudanese Armed
Forces (SAF) and the Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) have
significantly diminished since the northern invasion of Abyei in May.
The border remains contested, but the two armies are no longer facing
each other in one of the two Sudans’ most emotionally charged areas.
The birth of an international border might reinforce this, given that
the country choosing to engage in direct military actions across the
border would be responsible for triggering a de facto international
conflict. The SPLA in recent days has begun to withdraw from the
northern side of the contested area of Kiir Adem, and both parties
have shied away from clashing directly across their established
positions in the past two months.

However, this approach is likely to prove highly damaging for the
populations of the two countries if the governments continue to
manipulate the question of citizenship and choose to intensify their
economic war and proxy conflict. The many thousands of southerners
living in Sudan – some of whom have lived there for decades – stand to
lose much from the lack of a negotiated agreement. The residents of
South Kordofan, Unity state and Jonglei are likely to continue to bear
the brunt of the fighting as governments suppress armed groups
supported by their neighbour. Hurried and competitive
currency-exchange processes could affect the livelihood of entire
populations by triggering large exchange-rate variations, fuelling
inflation and wiping out families’ savings, leaving them with only
worthless paper.

Jean-Baptiste Gallopin is is a Middle East and North Africa analyst at
Control Risks, a political risk consultancy.

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