Ramciel is the best place for the capital city of South Sudan!

BY: Matot Akech Matot, AUSTRALIA

AUG. 29/2012,SSN; South Sudan has just celebrated the first
anniversary of our being a new country. After many years of terrible
pain and suffering, we triumphed over our enemies. We fought bravely
for so many years and were rewarded with success at last. South Sudan
Oyee!

One of the many tragic outcomes of the years of war was the untimely
death of our beloved Dr. John Garang who died in a helicopter
accident. This was and still is a terrible blow to our young nation,
but we kept going forward. We knew that John Garang would want us to
keep heading towards the life of success that he and many others
sacrificed their lives to achieve.

I have decided not to spend a lot of time talking about the recent,
foolish letter from Dr Luka Biong Deng, published in the Nation
Newspaper this month. In his letter, Mr Luka says that Juba should
stay as the capital city of South Sudan. And why? What is his
reasoning? Because Juba is there. Because Juba has been the capital
for some time now. And then he says, because Dr John Garang is buried
there.

Yes, our leader is buried there but on its own, this is not a good
reason for having Juba as the capital. There are not real points in
these words. John Garang said we will “take the town to the people”
and not the other way around. So he is saying let us build new towns,
and Ramciel was one place suggested.

In fact, all of Luka Deng’s points are easy-to-beat arguments. John
Garang himself did not want Juba to be our capital. With his
intelligence, John Garang knew that Juba would not be the best capital
city that we can have. Just because something is there already is not
a convincing argument. We do not have to accept it.

I have another much better idea. All my arguments add up to my saying
Ramciel is the best place for a capital and Juba is not good as a
capital of our glorious new country.

Juba does not and will never suit the numbers of people, the size, the
numbers of buildings, the necessary infrastructure, the numbers of
workers, international tourists and Investors that South Sudan needs
to become a strong independent country.

It is not good enough to say that Juba should be the capital because
it was already there. The small city existed and we used it as a place
to sit and think and plan for the good future of our country. Since
our Independence, Juba has seen all of the first days and struggles of
this new nation. A lot of new business and overseas people are now
coming to South Sudan, wanting to bring investment in business and
where do they stay?

Juba, a city that is too small, where the indigenous peoples of this
place do not want anyone to come and where it is impossible to develop
Juba into a great city of the world.

Juba actually is land belonging to the Bari tribe and their people do
not want the capital city to keep growing over their ancestral lands.
This has been a cause of violence. The indigenous people do not want
their land taken for a capital city. Were the Bari people asked at all
by anyone about building a capital city right on their lands? Did
someone ask their permission to do this? I do not think so. Juba was
there, had some services and so it grew.

Now Juba is not coping well with being the capital city. The roads are
narrow and cars rush through them, often knocking down the people on
foot and killing them. As well, there is not a satisfactory water
supply and waste disposal pipes and treatment plants. Houses are just
put anywhere and this looks very untidy and not permanent.  Roads are
too narrow. Juba is very close to the borders of Kenya and Uganda.

In Juba, there is not enough land to cover the 31 or so square
kilometres (about 12 square miles) needed for the construction of new
government buildings in the present capital city. Since the time Juba
has been the “stand-in” for our capital city, Juba has grown and grown
without planning. Juba was never meant to be a capital city for the
whole country. Since that time, Juba has grown buildings and roads
which are not suited to large numbers of people who have come there.

Dr. John Garang commissioned a study and the area of Ramciel was
suggested as a good place for a new capital city.  John Garang wanted
Ramciel as a capital, but he died before this was accomplished. It is
in The Lakes State of greater Yirol people, Even the name “Ramciel” is
suitable, because it means where the Rhino meet and it can be now
refer as a centre of ten states of South Sudan “town between”. A
shared area, a place for different people to come together and meet.

Ramciel is the areas of Awen (Thian) Malek payam of Langmatot Boma. It
is more in the centre of the country; at its heart. For the people of
all South Sudan it gives a central focal point. It is an area where
not many people have lived before. It is not putting buildings on top
of family areas and graves.

Ramciel is inhabited by the Awen clan from Ciec, members of Yirol.
Ramciel is their land.  These are the indigenous people of this place
and they must decide. They have said yes to building Ramciel. Now they
have to decide which of 2 possible areas they will move to, take their
cattle to and stay in.

The Ramciel area is used by three Greater Yirol communities: Ciec,
Aliab and Atut. They understand that the Government of South Sudan has
a right to develop land so as to benefit all our citizens. Ramciel has
good hills where the city could be developed. There is plenty of space
in the hills for a large city.

There are several international examples of a country building a new
separate City for their capital. I can talk about Brazilia, in Brazil
and Canberra, in Australia, as two examples. There are a tremendous
lot of positive reasons for South Sudan building a new capital. The
indigenous people of that area will not behave in a violent manner if
Ramciel was made into the capital.

The opportunity to build a truly well planned capital should not be
ignored. South Sudan needs to build our democracy and part of that
building is making a beautiful capital city where our leaders will
meet and make important decisions concerning our future. We want a
capital city to be proud of. Roads and buildings would be properly
planned, with water and waste systems, hospitals and schools included.
We would showcase our abilities in designing a capital which would
reflect our beloved, great country.

On April 5, 2012, the survey for the proposed new capital of South
Sudan, Ramciel, was reported in the Sudan Tribune and in other papers.
The survey will be completed within the next six months, reports the
official in charge of the project.

This gives us, as proud citizens of the new country of South Sudan, a
once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to design a city built for a purpose:
to be the centre of the life for our country. In an age where effects
on the natural environment are serious issues, South Sudan can employ
the best possible environmentally aware architects and road planners.
In this way, South Sudan can show the rest of the world that we are
good global citizens. We have suffered and lost so much, but now we
are starting to say “Look at us. We are building our nation in the
best possible way.

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