http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2010/1023/op1.htm

11 - 17 November 2010
Issue No. 1023

Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875

Waiting for Sudan

If the secession of south Sudan occurs, as it appears likely to in 2011, the 
north may move closer to Egypt, which could help maintain a fragile balance and 
forestall renewed conflict, writes Abdel-Moneim Said 

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Sudan is rapidly approaching 9 January 2011, when the people of the south are 
scheduled to vote on the framework in which they will exercise their right to 
self- determination. One of the provisions of the 2005 Naivasha Agreement for a 
comprehensive peace between the north and south of Sudan calls for a referendum 
to be held among the people of the south in which they will decide whether to 
remain in a unified Sudan or to secede and create a new, independent and 
sovereign state, with its own flag, national anthem, army, national currency, 
embassies and its own seat in the UN and other international and regional 
organisations.

The north and south of Sudan have clashed militarily for more than two decades. 
There have also been numerous peace initiatives: the Machakos Protocol signed 
in Kenya in July 2002, the agreement on security arrangements signed in 
Naivasha in September 2003, the wealth-sharing agreement signed in Naivasha in 
January 2004, the power-sharing agreement signed in Naivasha in May 2004, the 
protocol for the resolution of the conflict in south Kordofan signed in 
Naivasha in May 2004 and the protocol for the resolution of the conflict in 
Abyei signed in Naivasha in May 2004, and finally the Comprehensive Peace 
Agreement (CPA) signed in Naivasha in May 2005. The chief points of the CPA are 
as follows:

Self-determination: At the end of the stipulated interim period the people of 
the south would determine by referendum whether or not they want to remain in a 
unified Sudan.

Power-sharing: The ruling National Congress Party (NCP) and the Southern 
People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) would form a centralised national unity 
government. The SPLM would also establish a separate semi-autonomous government 
in the south. The NCP would have a 52 per cent representation in the central 
government, and the SPLM 28 per cent; 14 per cent would be reserved for other 
political forces. Arabic and English would be the official languages, and 
people of the south would hold 30 per cent of civil service posts. 

Garang as first vice-president: SPLM leader Colonel John Garang would be 
appointed first vice-president of the national unity government and enjoy a 
broad array of powers. General elections would be held at all levels no later 
than four years after the beginning of the interim period.

Wealth sharing: National wealth, especially the oil revenues from the south 
would be divided equally between the central government and the government in 
the south, after deducting at least two per cent for the oil-producing 
provinces. Half of the revenues that the central government derives from 
sources other than oil, such as taxes and tariffs, would be allocated to the 
south under the supervision of a joint organisation. A dual banking system 
would be instituted whereby the north would retain an Islamic banking system, 
which prohibits interest, and the south would follow the conventional system. 
The Sudanese Central Bank would open branches in the south and mint a new 
currency with designs reflecting the nation's cultural diversity.

The administration of the Nuba Mountains and Blue Nile regions: As these two 
regions are situated along the borders of the north and the south, the SPLM and 
NCP would alternate administrative control over them. Then, following general 
elections in the middle of the interim period, the governors of these provinces 
would be elected locally by registered voters. Each of the provinces would have 
a state legislature consisting of approximately 55 per cent representatives of 
the NCP and 45 per cent of SPLM representatives.

Abyei: This oil-rich region, which is currently part of West Kordofan, would 
have a special status in the interim period. Its inhabitants would be 
considered citizens of Kordofan (the north) and Bahr Al-Ghazal (the south) and 
would be governed by a local executive council that they elected. International 
observers would be sent in to monitor the implementation of the agreement on 
Abyei. There would be a referendum at the same time as the referendum in the 
south in which the people of Abyei would decide whether to retain their special 
status in the north or whether they would merge with the Bahr Al-Ghazal 
province and become part of the south.

Security arrangements: Under the CPA, the north would withdraw more than 
100,000 troops from the south and the SPLM would withdraw its forces from the 
Nuba Mountains and the Blue Nile regions. The withdrawals would take place 
under international supervision and ensure the preservation of the north- south 
border as delineated in 1956. A new council for joint defence, made up of 
senior officers from both sides, would supervise coordination between the 
commands of the northern and southern forces. The two armies would keep their 
separate identities but be accorded equal status and treatment in the framework 
of a Sudanese Armed Forces. Also during the interim period, the two sides would 
contribute an equal number of troops to a joint force to be deployed along the 
north-south border as follows: 24,000 troops in South Sudan, 6,000 in the Nuba 
Mountains, 6,000 in the Blue Nile province and 3,000 in Khartoum.

The agreement has entered a very critical stage. Controversy has flared inside 
Sudan over several pending issues regarding borders, the division of oil wealth 
and the disputed Abyei region. Talks are currently in progress in Addis Ababa 
in the hope of resolving these problems. In addition, there has arisen the 
question of nationality in the event that southerners opt for secession. The 
SPLM has proposed dual nationality or "joint nationality" for citizens of the 
south. 

The repercussions of secession of the south could be powerful and far-reaching. 
Many fear that it may trigger renewed conflict between the north and the south 
if tensions flare over the many pending issues. Disputed border regions, such 
as the Blue Nile, Nuba Mountains and Abyei areas, could well become 
flashpoints. The contagion of conflict could spread to other strife-ridden 
areas, such as Darfur and West Sudan. In the newly independent entity in the 
south, leaders will face enormous challenges, not least of which is the need to 
develop the means to counter security threats. Repercussions of the south's 
secession could snowball regionally, particularly into neighbouring countries 
such as Kenya, Ethiopia and Uganda, all of which have ethnically diverse 
populations and could be potential candidates for ethnic strife. 

Northern Sudan will be in for an even greater share of difficulties. It is 
geographically larger and demographically it is more populous, more 
economically productive and better educated. However, these advantages could 
evaporate in the event of the fragmentation of the Sudanese elite, whose 
disputes and fault lines might no longer be containable by a Sudanese army that 
had fallen into disrepute for having "lost the south". More serious problems 
could arise in the process of the search for the identity of the newly reborn 
Sudan in the post-secession era. 

After its separation from Egypt in 1956, Sudan was founded as a multi-ethnic 
democratic state. It contrasted starkly with the more demographically 
homogeneous Egypt, which had moved towards authoritarian government following 
the removal from power of General Mohamed Naguib, who had Sudanese roots, and 
the end of political party plurality and, hence, the dissolution of parties 
that had championed the unity of Egypt and Sudan. One of those parties was the 
National Unionist Party whose Sudanese chapter came to power in the 1956 
elections in Sudan and then opted for separation from Egypt. The same 
phenomenon would reoccur in the early 1960s between Egypt and Syria, when the 
Baath Party that had originally spearheaded the Syrian drive for unity with 
Egypt changed its mind three years after the creation of the United Arab 
Republic and spearheaded the breakaway drive.

In all events, such wondrous ironies are not of immediate concern here. The 
point is that time has come full circle and Sudan is once again on the verge of 
having to discover a new identity after having lost a large component of its 
plurality with the secession of the south, which appears to be the most likely 
outcome of the forthcoming referendum there. Will Sudan move closer to Egypt? 
This seems like the most natural and logical outcome. Certainly it would offer 
the two countries great strategic advantages and it would give the south an 
incentive for maintaining a close and constructive relationship with the north, 
or at least for avoiding an adversarial and destructive one


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