Sudan’s president declares emergency in Blue Nile, sacks governor
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September 2, 2011 (KHARTOUM) – The Sudanese president Omer Hassan
al-Bashir has declared a state of emergency in the Blue Nile State and
dismissed its governor Malik Agar amid reports of aerial bombardments
and concomitant displacement in the unrest-hit region.


Sudanese army spokesman Sawarmi Khaled Saad speaks to reporters about
the clashes between the Sudanese army and the Sudan People’s
Liberation Army (SPLA) in Blue Nile in Khartoum September 2, 2011
(Reuters) Al-Bashir further decreed the appointment of the commander
of Sudan’s army (SAF) base in the Blue Nile’s capital al-Damazin named
Major General Yahya Mohamed Khair as a military ruler of the state.

The announcement follows the eruption on late Thursday of clashes in
the Blue Nile between SAF and the armed opposition Sudan People’s
Liberation Movement North (SPLM-N) which is chaired by Agar who was
elected governor of the state in the country’s elections of April
2011.

The warring sides traded accusations over who started the fight. The
SPLM-N’s secretary-general Yasir Arman, speaking to Sudan Tribune on
Friday, said Sudan’s army instigated the clashes by attacking the
SPLM-N’s Joint Integrated Units under the command of Jondi Suliyman as
well as the residence of Agar.

Speaking over the phone to Sudan Tribune from an undisclosed location
on Friday, Malik Agar chided the Sudanese army for the attack it
launched in his state, saying he was in a state of “self-defense.”

In the meantime, Sudan’s army said that SPLM-N forces carried out
attacks in Al-Damazin and more than four areas in the vicinity.

According to the army official spokesman Al-Sawarmi Khalid Sa’ad,
SPLM-N was mobilizing its forces to launch coordinated attacks on a
number of army units. He added that the army was able to vanquish the
assailing forces.

“What happened was expected and what Agar is doing was nothing but a
desperate attempt,” Sa’ad said.

The spokesman further said that SAF had asserted control over the
situation and all parts of the state, calling on the state’s youth to
hunt down the “rebel” forces of Agar.

In contrast, Agar told Sudan Tribune that the Sudanese army was the
one who instigated the fighting by attacking the positions of SPLM-N’s
troops and three vehicles carrying a number of SPLM-N military
commanders who were leaving Al-Damazin en route to Al-Kurmuk town in
the state.

He said that the fighting had lasted for quarter an hour before SPLM-N
forces withdrew. Agar said that the state in the past period had been
under growing tension due to the intensive military deployment of
Sudan’s army.

The governor went on to accuse Sudan’s army of carrying out aerial
bombardments in an area within Al-Kurmuk town.

Agar pointed out that the SPLM-N had vacated all the positions it held
outside the town, adding that they were currently counting the number
of lives lost in the attacks.

“If they resort to peace, then welcome, but I am currently defending
myself,” he nevertheless said.

Meanwhile, the clashes had caused waves of displacements in the areas
of Sinnar, Wad Alneel and Abu Hajar, according to Sudan Tribune’s
sources. The sources said that the eastern parts of Blue Nile were
also affected as a great number of citizens fled the clashes and
aerial bombardment.

Sudan’s foreign ministry announced that it intends to include the
violent events in Al-Damazin to the complaint it lodged to the UN
Security Council (UNSC) against the newly established state of South
Sudan.

The ministry said it was arranging to contact foreign diplomats and
representatives of regional bodies in Khartoum in order to brief them
on the situation in the Blue Nile.

The Sudanese government this week sent a letter to the UNSC accusing
South Sudan of supporting SPLM-N rebels in South Kordofan State which
neighbors the Blue Nile.

Both states are part of north Sudan but their population sided largely
with the South during the second Sudanese civil wars 1983-2005. The
SPLM-N, which Khartoum refuses to recognize as a legal political
party, was affiliated to the party that rules South Sudan.

Under the 2005’s peace deal that ended the north-south war, the two
states were supposed to hold a vote dubbed “popular consultations” to
determine the level of local satisfaction with the implementation of
the agreement.

But the vote stalled in both states as South Kordofan descended into
violence since early June. The genesis of the ongoing clashes in the
two states can be traced back to May’s warning by SAF to SPLM-N to
either disarm their forces or deploy to what is now the new country of
South Sudan

The SPLA, which is the official army of South Sudan, responded by
saying that the units are composed of northern soldiers, therefore
withdrawing to the South is not an option.

The Blue Nile’s governor told the New York Times (NYT) at the time
that SAF has moved “dangerously close” to the bases of SPLA fighters
and that he did not think the southern-allied forces would surrender.

(ST)

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