Sudan’s SPLM-N vows to buck Blue Nile’s ‘coup’
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September 3, 2011 (KHARTOUM) – The Sudan People’s Liberation Movement
North (SPLM-N) on Saturday declared resistance to what it described as
a coup against the elected governor of the Blue Nile State, Malik
Aggar, announcing intensification of its efforts to forge a nationwide
alliance to execute regime-change agendas.


Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) north’s secretary general
Yasir Arman speaks during a joint news conference with Malik Agar,
head of the northern branch of SPLM, in Khartoum, July 3, 2011
(REUTERS PICTURES) Sudan’s southern state of Blue Nile on Thursday
became the latest flashpoint, since South Sudan seceded from the rest
of Sudan in July, when clashes erupted between Sudan’s army (SAF) and
forces of the SPLM-N led by Malik Aggar.

A similar scenario has been taking place in South Kordofan, an
oil-rich state which also borders South Sudan, where fighting between
Sudan’s army and SPLM-N forces erupted in early June and led to the
displacements of thousands of people and many deaths.

It is not yet clear who instigated the clashes but both sides accused
each other of doing so. The SPLM-N claimed that Sudan’s army started
the attacks and targeted the house of Aggar, Sudan on the other hand
claimed it was the SPLM-N which launched the attacks.

Sudan’s President on Friday declared a state of emergency in the state
and later sacked Agar from the position to which he was elected in
April 2010, appointing in his place the commander-in-chief of the SAF
base in the state capital Al-Damazin as a military ruler.

Meanwhile, fighting has continued amid concerns of a potential
humanitarian crisis. The UN refugee spokeswoman, Fatoumata
Lejeune-Kaba, said that the UNHCR had received reports of some 16,000
people fleeing across the border into Ethiopia.

In a statement, the SPLM-N’s secretary-general Yasir Arman said that
the unfolding events in the Blue Nile represent a continuation of the
attempts by the ruling National Congress Party (NCP) in Khartoum to
“uproot active and democratic” forces in the Sudanese political arena.

Arman said that the last episode in this policy appeared in the
“political and military coup” against Agar and the stalled popular
consultation vote in the area which was promised under the 2005
Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) between Sudan and South Sudan
which gained full independence as an outcome of the same deal.

The SPLM-N, which says it is now structurally separate from the ruling
party in South Sudan, urged the Sudanese people to respond to this
policy which will “tear apart the rest of Sudan.”

It further urged members of the international community, including the
CPA’s troika consisting of the United States, Britain and Norway, as
well as the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), to respond to the
impact of this “blatant coup,” by preventing further displacements in
Blue Nile and South Kordofan as well as prevention of “ethnic
cleansing” and targeting of civilians by the “NCP’s [Sudan’s] air
forces.”

“It is time for imposing a no-fly zone stretching all the way from the
Blue Nile to Darfur through a resolution by the UNSC,” Arman said.

The SPLM-N reported that abuses were already being committed by
Sudan’s army, citing allegations of attacks on civilians, abduction
and destruction of public facilities in the state.

Arman claimed that attacks on SPLM-N’s position continued since
Thursday, saying that their forces had managed to chuck Sudan’s army
out of Al-Kurmuk town and few other areas.

“We vociferously declare that the only option before us is to forge a
nationwide democratic front with the agendas of a radical
restructuring of the power’s center in Khartoum and build a new state
that recognize others and their right to be others,” Arman announced.

He further said that the SPLM-N would seek to solidify the strategic
alliance it forged last month with rebel groups in the western region
of Darfur. Arman revealed that a meeting took place on Friday between
him and Manni Arkoi Minnawi of Darfur rebels Sudan Liberation Movement
(SLM) and Mansur Abdul Gadir of the Justice and Equality Movement
(JEM), another Darfur rebel group.

According to Arman, the meeting resolved to finalise the alliance’s
political program and arrange for a conference to create a strong
political and military body to lead the opposition.

“We also declare that Aggar will remain the elected governor of the
Blue Nile,” Arman said, saying that NCP leaders must face justice for
their crimes.

The events in Blue Nile drew condemnation from Sudanese rebel forces
and political parties.

Darfur’s SLM rebels denounced the events in Blue Nile as a
continuation of the “never-ending crimes of genocide and crimes
against humanity” by the NCP government.

It echoed calls for a wide-ranging coalition to topple the government
in Khartoum and called on Agar to join the struggle to achieve that
goal.

The rebel group also urged the international community to support and
respect the will of Sudanese masses which joined the quest for a
government change.

Another Darfur rebel, JEM, condemned in the strongest terms Khartoum’s
attempt to “assassinate” Malik Agar and the ongoing military assault
against people of the Blue Nile. The rebel group vowed to work in
tandem with the SPLM-N to defend the people in Blue Nile.

In Khartoum, the opposition National Umma Party said it condemns the
outbreak of violent events in the Blue Nile and called for an
immediate ceasefire to stop the bloodshed and address the humanitarian
situation.

The genesis of the ongoing clashes in the Blue Nile and South Kordofan
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.

Blue Nile and South Kordofan are part of north Sudan but their
population sided largely with the South during the second Sudanese
civil war 1983-2005.

Under the CPA, the two states were supposed to hold “popular
consultations” to determine the level of local satisfaction with the
implementation of the agreement.

But the vote stalled in both states as efforts to reach a political
settlement failed to yield results.

(ST)

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