---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: John Ashworth <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, 14 Sep 2011 18:38:03 +0300
Subject: [sudan-john-ashworth] Fwd: Sudan border fighting challenge for Bashir
To: Group <[email protected]>

ANALYSIS-Sudan border fighting challenge for Bashir

Wed Sep 14, 2011 2:00pm GMT

By Hereward Holland

JUBA, Sept 14 (Reuters) - Fighting spreading along Sudan's new
southern border could develop into a coordinated insurgency and
encourage efforts to mount a political challenge to President Omar
Hassan al-Bashir.

Clashes broke out earlier this month between the army and rebels loyal
to Sudan's opposition SPLM-N party in Blue Nile state, the third area
along the border with the newly created South Sudan to explode into
violence in recent months.

The Sudanese army is already fighting SPLM-N rebels in South Kordofan,
an oil state west of Blue Nile. And the United Nations is enforcing a
ceasefire in the disputed region of Abyei after Khartoum seized it in
May.

"There's a new 'South' in the north of Sudan. From Blue Nile to
Darfur, people are seeking the restructuring of the centre," Yasir
Arman, secretary general of the SPLM-N, told Reuters.

"This will put an end to Bashir's regime," he said.

Apart from South Kordofan and Blue Nile, dissent is simmering in other
regions such as Darfur and east Sudan, a neglected region which has
seen an insurgency in the past and where opposition groups demand more
development.

Analysts say instead of seeking political compromise, Khartoum is
counting on the military to crush rebellions and wants to placate
hardliners in the army who see the loss of the south as a humiliation.

Bashir has replaced the SPLM-N's elected governor of Blue Nile, Malik
Agar, with a temporary military leader and imposed a state of
emergency.

The government blames the SPLM-N for the fighting and offers fighters
who surrender the opportunity to become integrated into the regular
army. It says the SPLM-N is an illegal party.

Some analysts say the fighting could push Agar, a popular SPLM-N
leader who has built good working relations with Bashir's party since
the 2005 peace deal, firmly away from resuming talks with Khartoum.

"Khartoum believes that the only way it can survive is by cracking
down, but I think that could backfire. There's a possibility that this
could fuse opposition factions," said Harry Verhoeven, a PhD candidate
at Oxford University focussing on Sudan.

With much wealth and power concentrated in the hands of a few families
in Khartoum, Sudan has faced insurgencies and armed opposition on its
peripheries since independence from Britain in 1956.

While foreign investment has been on the rise since the 2005 peace
agreement ended decades of civil war with the south, little has been
done to develop infrastructure beyond the capital and central Sudan,
which is fuelling anger elsewhere.

The government is building a huge new airport for Khartoum, but the
capital of Blue Nile state, Damazin, has only a tiny airport, for
example.

If the fighting continues to spread in a sustained way, it will put
significant financial pressure on Bashir. Khartoum faces budget
problems after losing 75 percent of its oil production when South
Sudan became independent in July.

PARTY SPLIT

The SPLM party split into north and south along with the country
itself earlier this year. The northern party now says it is looking to
team up with rebels in the western region of Darfur, scene of an
almost decade-long insurgency, on both a political and military level.

"We are going to have a political and military umbrella," the SPLM-N's
Arman said.

He said SPLM-N was about to sign an alliance with the Sudan Liberation
Movement (SLM) and Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), two Darfur
rebel groups which have some historical ties with southern-allied
opposition.

He said he envisions a group with a single leader which would later
include "all other opposition political forces."

Analysts say such an alliance could pose a threat since the SPLM-N in
South Kordofan and Blue Nile has several thousand troops and some
military hardware left over from the civil war.

"The combination of extensive (combat) experience and regional network
of the SPLM-N with the ongoing ability of the SLM and JEM to hold
ground and maintain pressure in Darfur suggests that such an alliance
has considerable military potential that could change the dynamics of
politics in north Sudan," said Sharath Srinivasan, director of the
Centre of Governance and Human Rights at the University of Cambridge.

JEM spokesman el-Tahir el-Faki said an agreement would be inked in the
next few weeks.

"The first process was the formation of a political and military
process. The next step is discussing how that framework will work," El
Faki said.

Analysts say the SPLM-N would be a fit for Darfur rebels who are
searching for new allies after the fall of Libya's Muammar Gaddafi,
who gave them support and allowed the use of his territory.

"It's very clear that the SPLM-N have no other choice than mobilising
their constituents for a popular uprising," said Fouad Hikmat at the
International Crisis Group.

"An alliance would allow their forces to be more dynamic. I think it
could be beyond rhetoric. It could go from an alliance to a joint
command and create a wider opposition in the north but only time will
tell if they can turn that into reality," he said.

A LONG WAR

Magdi El Gizouli, a fellow at the Rift Valley Institute, said the
success of the planned alliance would depend whether it got any
significant backing from abroad.

"Politically it's good because it sounds like there's a ring of
rebellions in a big alliance. But militarily, they can't link all
these fronts, not with the number of troops that they have," Gizouli
said.

"This is going to be a long war," he said.

Western powers are pressuring South Sudan to stay out of the fighting.
Analysts say its army, the SPLA, might have some ties with fighters on
the ground but Juba denies it supports them.

"With the historic relationship there it's a temptation (to interfere)
and it's one we want them to resist because... they are in a position
to encourage the peace process," U.S. Special Sudan envoy Princeton
Lyman said last week in Khartoum.

To ease tensions in the poorly marked joint border area, Khartoum and
Juba agreed to withdraw their forces from Abyei which both sides
claim, the U.N. said last week.

"These offensives in Abyei, South Kordofan and Blue Nile are a
manifestation of a regime that is worried about their future," said
Roger Middleton at Chatham House.

"The main threat is no longer just in Darfur. I don't know if they
have the military capability to walk into Khartoum, but they might not
need to. If they can keep the government tied down then it opens the
possibility that political opposition can take the advantage through a
popular uprising in Khartoum or a coup," he said. (Additional
reporting by Ulf Laessing; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)

http://af.reuters.com/article/sudanNews/idAFL5E7KB0L020110914?sp=true

END
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