|
Making
Unity of the Sudan attractive is Now Obsolete.
“Egypt should
be better off abiding by the CPA, and accept the outcome of the 2011
referendum, if it really wants to remain a friend to the people of south
Sudan”.
By: Justin Ambago
Ramba, MD.
MAR 4/2010, SSN;
Sincerely speaking, I thought the south Sudanese are already finished
with this tenacious issue of the Islamic Shari’a Law in the Sudanese
politics and its relationship to the unity of the country from the time
the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) was signed in Naivasha, Kenya in
2005. And it all came to me just as a surprise that the peace partners
of the NCP and SPLM are still negotiating this good-for-nothing topic.
It can be recalled
that , of all the countries in the world it was Egypt and Libya who came
up with a joint initiative in the early 2000 to block the inclusion of
the self determination clause from appearing in the north/south Sudan
peace agreement. These two countries were drawn into this obstructive
position by their misplaced uneasiness that such an agreement would the
pave way for an independent state in south Sudan to which they hold a
great deal of distrust.
But because the US
administration under former president George W Bush knew exactly that
south Sudan can never remain to be an integral part of a united Sudan
without reverting to war, so it chose to undermine the joint
Egyptian-Libyan Initiative and rather concentrated on the IGAD forum and
its chief negotiator retired General Lazarus Sumbeiywo.
The religious
dimension to the Sudanese problem that remains as an obstacle between
the majority Islamic north and the Christian and animist south is in
many ways a blessing in disguise. Though it was intentionally added by
the Islamist elites of northern Sudan in line with their declared
Islamic agenda of Islamizing the African continent from Alexandria to
Cape Town and from the Indian Ocean to the Pacific Ocean, however it has
become a God given barrier to protect south Sudan from being
unconsciously pulled into the abyss of Arabisation and Islamisation.
Rightly so to Khartoum
Islamists’ disappointment, this improperly sought policy will come to
haunt them and their Arab allies worldwide as this policy to its best,
only made any peaceful co-existence between the south and the north
impossible to achieve. This double edged- sword was first put to use by
the Islamic fundamentalist advisors of the late president Jaafar Nimeiri
when they successfully coerced him into decreeing the Islamic Shari’a
Law in 1983 that came to be known as the infamous September Laws.
The latest attempts by
the Egyptian government to re-start discussions on how to maintain the
Sudan as a united country is bound not go well with the majority
disadvantaged south Sudanese masses. As per the CPA, the choice of
whether the Sudan remains one or becomes two separate states entirely
depends on the decision to be reached at by the south Sudanese
electorates in the self-determination referendum scheduled for 9th
January 2011. However the central issue as whether the option of a
united Sudan does ever appeal to the southerners is a conclusion that is
only objectively done through the promised plebiscite and never
otherwise without risking the current peace.
Furthermore it would
sound rather naive should any political circles be them local of foreign
if they instead of working for the full implementation of the remaining
articles of the CPA, something that for sure can sustain the signed
peace than wasting the few remaining valuable months in attempts to
salvage a less appealing unity, a move that is obviously unrewarding by
all standards.
Comrade Pagan Amum the
Secretary General of south’s dominant party, the Sudan People’s
Liberation movement Khartoum (SPLM) and Dr. Nafie Ali Nafie of the
National Congress Party (NCP), of Khartoum’s Islamist regime being
chaired by President Omer al Bashir are to be applauded for their
positions on the calls of the Egyptian government when it decided to
engage the two in yet another round of fruitless discussion over the
future of Unity and Shari’a Law in the Sudan.
The Sudanese
Undersecretary of Foreign affairs Mutrif Sideeg and member of the NCP
delegation said that this position is not negotiable.
“We will not abandon
our Shari’a nor do we call on the others to accept what they do not
accept. We accepted the principle that citizenship is the basis of
rights and duties, and we have accepted the principle of unity in
diversity, and therefore will not commit others to what we are committed
to. We do not accept that the others void our personality, religion and
identity under any circumstances,” he said.
The above position of
the NCP and quite so shared by most northern Sudanese Muslims is not
anything new. Even going to the depths of the phrases, it is clear that
the Islamic regime in Khartoum is more bent towards the establishment of
an Islamic nation in the Sudan, more than ever bringing up the issue to
a broader discussion given the undeniable fact that this fundamentalists
are never ever keen to engage in any issues that make their view of the
Islamic faith a topic for discussion.
On the other hand it remains true that the major Northern opposition
parties in Sudan are supportive of the Islamic Law implementation
although with minor varying views on modalities. The Umma party and
Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) with hegemony over two major religious
sects will find it hard to publicly support a secular state so as not to
be at odds with their bases.
The Umma party leader Al-Sadiq Al-Mahdi has consistently said that
Islamic law can be implemented within the context of granting all
citizens equal rights regardless of their religious background. Yet this
is short of the secular state the SPLM has persistently stood by, in
their promotional bit to bring about their vision of the New Sudan.
However should the
south Sudanese at large give themselves the time it needs, they will
find in Dr. Mutrif’s loaded statement, a lot of inspiration for
secession, be that through the ballot box or otherwise. Our reply
message to this diplomat and his type should be in the most practical,
an unambiguous and an unequivocal way.
We must be seen
working and preaching day and night for our Independent South Sudan
State because down inside us, all know that the call for ‘the voluntary
unity’ is no different to a voluntary walk into a calculated hell. We
know who the north is, and what the Shari’a is and how it operates.
Please count us out!
However it is very
fundamental for this argument that the real source of the Sudanese
national problem, which I would prefer to refer to as the “Southern
Sudan Problem”, is taken within its traditional context that dates back
to 1947, when it was decided by the colonialist in the interest of the
northern Arabs to annex south Sudan into this incompatible relationship
and anomalous union with the north.
The Sudanese nationalism, as it developed after World War I, was an Arab
and Muslim phenomenon with its support base in the Northern provinces.
Nationalists opposed indirect rule and advocated a centralized national
government in Khartoum responsible for both regions. Nationalists also
perceived Britain's southern policy as artificially dividing Sudan and
preventing its unification under an arabized and Islamic ruling class.
Whatever followed from there up to the declaration of the Sudan as an
independent united country, incorporating both the north and the south
under one sovereignty was all works of conspiracy, where the British,
the Egyptians and the northern Sudanese Arabs took part, and eventually
decided the fate of the people of south Sudan as if it were a no man’s
land and never ever fit for any right to self-determination. Maybe
because we are too black for that, but yet as human beings we remain
entitled to our human rights and our right to exist in an independent
country of our own, separate from both the northern Sudan and Egypt.
The People of south Sudan have no grudges against anybody over their
lack of development should they be allowed to exercise their rights
to exist in their own right as a people with an independent nation,
living side by side with others in a peaceful and symbiotic fraternity.
The Egyptian government can be seen to have got it all wrong, otherwise
it should be concentrating on building the necessary bridges that can
sustain future friendship between it and the people of an independent
south Sudan state, come 2011, instead of wasting its efforts on trying
to preserve a unity that has since its conception, suffered ill health
as a result of undue manipulations and inborn anomalies. And even under
the current settings it continues to suffer from a wide range of
distrust and in no any way can such an ill intended relationship ever
flourish to the satisfaction of anybody.
A point to reconsider here is that, whoever is called upon to represent
the people of south Sudan in any future talks, they should be able to
articulate to the Egyptian government and its people that, the Sudanese
politics as bound by the CPA it can only resolve the issue of unity or
two states through a plebiscite in 2011. No politicking at these late
stages of the truce will ever add any positive impacts on the already
made up choice of the people when we are only left with a few months to
go.
This statement as uttered by President Salvatore Kiir Mayardit, June,
2008 when speaking to an Egyptian delegation,
“Unity of Sudan is the basic option for all the South Sudanese in their
different components. The political cooperation between North and South
....as well as support of Egypt and Arab countries, would make unity
attractive in South,”
The above statement is now obsolete and can become more so when we get
to January 2011. This is also true of the speaker himself and what the
future holds for him.
We hope that any future meetings between the CPA partners from the NCP
and the SPLM wherever the forum is should be better utilized for
discussing the timely implementation of the remaining items on the CPA
shopping list. Taking the Sudanese people aback in order to
re-negotiate the CPA, by ruminating on the Shari’a Law, and issues like
making unity attractive ...etc would frankly be a sort of an irrelevant
engagement and an off point diplomacy from our Egyptian friends or any
others for that matter.
Freedom
is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the
oppressed. King
Jr. Martin Luther
Dr. Justin Ambago Ramba, M.B,
B.Ch, D.R.H, MD. The Secretary General of the United South Sudan Party (USSP).
The Party that stands for the Independence of South Sudan. He can be
reached at either justinramba@doctors.org.uk or justinramba@aol.co.uk.
All the articles of the author are available at
www.nilebuffalo.com
and blog http//ussp-news.blogspot.com
COMMENTS, PLEASE CLICK HERE
Disclaimer:
Disclaimer: The views expressed
above are solely those of the author and do not represent those of the
website. |