Border state governor says ‘mismanagement’ led to South Sudan split
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August 15, 2011 (KHARTOUM) – Chronic mismanagement is a major factor
behind South Sudan’s split from the north, according to the governor
of a northern state abutting the south.


Malik Agar, head of the northern branch of the Sudan People Liberation
Movement (SPLM) speaks during a joint news conference with SPLM
north’s secretary general Yasir Arman, in Khartoum, July 3, 2011
(Reuters) Sudan split in two in July 9 when the south officially
seceded in line with the outcome of the region’s vote on independence
at the start of this year. The plebiscite was promised under the
Comprehensive Peace Agreement which ended in 2005 more than two
decades of north-south civil wars.

Malik Aggar, governor of Sudan’s southern state of Blue Nile which
lies on the ill-defined borders with the South, on Sunday addressed a
farewell ceremony of 201 southern employers in his state’s capital
Al-Damazin.

In his speech, Aggar said that mismanagement in Sudan was a major
reason for the south’s split.

“Secession was caused by the policy of intolerance,” he added.

Aggar, who chairs the northern offshoot of Sudan People’s Liberation
Movement (SPLM) which rules the south, advised the southerners to
“adopt the beautiful things from the north and refrain from
intolerance.”

The Blue Nile State lies inside the north but it shared political and
military struggle with the south. The state’s population largely sided
with the south during the civil war with the north on basis of common
grievances of neglect and underdevelopment.

Aggar expressed his dissatisfaction with the south’s secession but he
later said he was optimistic the two countries could reunite. He added
that the south’s resources could reflect positively on the level of
development if these resources were to be used judiciously.

According to Aggar, problems occur in the south due to the lack of education

Under the CPA, Blue Nile State and South Kordofan were promised a
plebiscite dubbed “popular consultation” in order to gauge local
satisfaction with the agreement’s implementation and produce
recommendations on re-structuring governance relationship with the
north.

However, the popular consultation in Blue Nile stalled as South
Kordofan descended into a state of war between the northern army and
forces aligned with the south since early June.

Aggar lamented the fate of the “dying” popular consultation process.
He pointed out that the vote was supposed to take place within the
CPA’s six-year transitional period, adding that the transitional
period has not been extended.

Sudan’s parliament last month endorsed a bill extending the popular
consultation process by six months after its deadline expired with the
end of the CPA in July.

Aggar previously warned that approving the law would be a violation of
the CPA and that he would not recognize it.

He called on the citizens to "resist the unjust and oppressive law
which was passed by a single party that represents no one but itself,"
in reference to the ruling National Congress Party in the north.

(ST)

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