|
The
viability of the two Sudans, South and the North
BY: Nhial
K. Wicleek, CANADA
JAN 15/2010, SSN;
Conditions never better the achievable political structure when A system
acts against the will of the aspirers for a better system. It only
increases and intensifies the jeopardy to the system and so comes
restlessness of the State. This is symbolic framework of a failed system
in Sudan.
But the
irony in relative to question is should a viable south Sudan be seen
before or after twelve months period? When I came across this title
“Can
south Sudan be a viable state?”
on A BBC headline NEWS JANUARY 12, 2010,
I smiled and giggled for I know the political arena of the Sudan and all
its trends. On a daily basis I do follow daily events to which most of
them are uncondensed and yet with no clarity, they represent the
illogicality of forming a solid structure leading Sudan to be what it is
today. Yet, with utmost atmosphere these things are part of ongoing
circumstances ignited by the wake of ideologies before any clashing of
the ideologies is seen surfacing. With no doubt, the considered
ideologies as the engines of the liberation struggle come to play in
favor of the parties’ interest. The main fuel of the engines (to the
south, democratic rule and right of the people, and to the north sharia
law) was not so complex, but has developed a strong base in the hearts
of the people who opposed the arrogant people who assumed superiority
than the others.
Moreover, Sudan is one and is more diverse fitting the popular
ideologies to clashes. For lack of acknowledgement, and less regard to
living a communal life, the protagonists (Jellaba) in such a dull
ideology thought that primitiveness has no end, and that their hidden
secret would never be uncovered. As time goes by, the formation of
ideologies dating back to 1962 as the birth of Anya nya I intensely
remain the continuation of the birth of the many ideologies (Anya nya
II, and the SPLM/A). This is the foundation of the bridges which have
never had connection.
The protagonists (Jellaba) aspire deep with no sense of judging what
should be considered a legitimate aspiration for all, they;
nevertheless, segregate and keep such form of humility without knowing
the building block which would later become these ideologies (Democratic
rule, freedom of the southern people, and the south Sudan independent
movement ‘Pioneered by Dr. Machar’ that is based on what to be the
independent state). A gap that has never closed since the first
rebellion remains the power engine of the proxy ideologies that
clashes. What implicates the clashes of ideologies which were brought
to being through cultural differences, religious differences, racial
segregation, and language differences was the wider gap created by the
Jellaba between yellow and green regions (south & north). The creation
of this gap should have been closed if Jellaba had known the perplexity
of today’s political change to convince the destitute about togetherness
and living a life in one country, the Sudan. Today is too late to close
this gap.
Even if some would view these points less important and unrealistic
reasons, complication of the situation was actually facilitated by these
above mentioned words. As a matter of fact, it is to be recalled that
Sudan operates as a sovereign state since after the end of British
colonial rule in 1956 where the today’s gap could have been closed.
Arabs dominated regime says unity is number one choice which mean to
exploit the rich south Sudan and that people would still have wider gap
economically. This means the first class southern Sudanese elites would
fit the second class in the entire Sudan so that the first class Arabs
in the north would still rank first economically. This is the reason
Jellaba favor the notion of a united Sudan for. Can this be favored as
great move southerners?
If not clear, another reason would be the current political sidelining
of the northern regime against its marginalized regions or other
areas. One can deny the feasibility of Sudan political differences,
but it should be northern individual to say no such complications in the
expense of the current ideological differences. However, the
significant differences should have been placed over racial lines and
political segregation where Arab Sudanese remain to be that way because
they consider the
“southerners as slaves” (Mohamed
Suliman) and that they should never give up in persisting with hectic
behavior against southerners and other marginalized people in this
meantime. These important reasons alone shrink the diversity Sudan
where all races and religion should have been represented with equality
and equity, and discourage the two viable Sudan, come 2011 referenda.
As brought
forth by the reporters of the BBC, it is in fact a wonderful time to
question these significant questions of unity and separation, to be able
to find how reliable they should be in the following twelve months. But
the thing is those who put more analyses to occurring circumstances in
Sudan have met the answer long before any of these questions is asked.
They know in their heart that there is no united Sudan, period. But
question remain to how a viable state such as young south Sudan should
be run, not will it be a viable state?
On the
basis of the political change, the perception of the black African
Sudanese for a united Sudan fad away during the first bullet fired. The
grudges between the two opponents grow rapidly. There were;
nonetheless, varieties of strong barriers leading to caring the
development processes on unequal basis. Building the north Sudan in
form of neglect to the South Sudan accelerates the conflict to its peak
scale where the conflicting issues remain none resolvable. This fits
the category of a divided county.
To nail
out the point, beginning with the title that question the viability of
the south Sudan and “the two states,” I would say division of the Sudan
has long been encouraged on the basis of the simultaneously restricted
development and political growth of the black African Sudanese by their
counterpart the Arabs dominated north.
Some
typical reasons that bear the truth of the great division of the two
Sudan to come are as follow:
First,
after the rectification of the government bodies in 1972, southerners
and the other marginalized people were underrepresented. They were
denied access to laddering, to successfully obtain the political growth
like most other northern Arab politicians in all levels of government.
Second,
access to education was denied, and people were enslaved to the point
they had become unhappy for their counter-Arab individuals whom they
view equal with them. Scholarships were distributed on racial lines and
placed neglect and ignorant attitude to non-Arab children in the
country. Services distributions were made unequal for all, some were
favored and others remained unfavorably given their shares.
Third,
developments were carried out through neglect and social indulgent or
nothing as such at all. The southern part and other marginalized areas
faced this neglect and developmental isolation by the successive regime
of the Arabs dominated north of the country. Lack of infrastructure
rampant and the beating of drums continue for southerners outright the
nationwide humility imposed upon by their foe. What a regime?
Fourth,
extermination of the politicians was the subject discourse in the
mosques, and some other secret areas where politics is played by the
likeminded Jellaba who perceived themselves superior and highly consider
Jellaba a civilized being which was nothing but a racial segregation
like the apartheid in South Africa.
Should the
Arabs claim for a united Sudan in this regard or better for them to
remain silent and leave the fate of separation and unity to the suffered
people who undergone marginalization for so long to decide on their own?
I think
Sudan had seen this invisible great division. A division that had not
favored togetherness has long been witnessed through these different
occasions. I can refer back once again to 1972 agreement which could
have been regarded fake agreement because there was nothing special in
it. It only implicates the current political struggle causing much
destruction than to cut short and embraced the today’s sense of a united
Sudan if function and structural forms were fulfilled once after the
agreement. Are we one really, Sudanese? What happen was that
undervaluing of the southern people had come to play and so humility had
to occur fitting southerners against the northerner Arab elites for
another time. With the introduction of the mischievous rule, come the
Sharia law in 1989, and that contributes to the inception/continuation
of the SPLM/A which was the reason for southerners to take up arms
against the oblivious regime that lives in ignorance and dull ideology
favoring only Arabization in a land that combines different ethnic
backgrounds.
The
hardest war was fought for 21 years to the extent that lives were lost
on both sides. None would ever feel happy about this unjustified
condition of the Jellaba that had enormously remained extreme, but as a
matter of fact, struggle is what it is to take, given the circumstance.
It is in no way that southerners could not opt for war, for there was no
ultimate reason to resort to war. If agreement favors a united Sudan,
it should have been met with the 1972 agreement. But, because Jellaba
considers deception as a formal political growth, they never hold on to
their signature, and that disruption had to take part every now and
then. In this, where is the unity Arabs always cry for?
In 2005,
the comprehensive peace agreement (CPA) was signed. Attended by
dignitaries from across the globe, the Arab-led regime called national
congress party (NCP) dishonored the demands and protocols that could
contribute in reconciling the long stand differences between the warring
parties that have clashing ideologies (one that favor Sharia law and the
one that favor democratic rule). The worst case scenario that comes to
play is unattractiveness of the development as agreed upon, lack of
wealthy sharing, and lack of political transparency which is why south
and the north will have to be divided and remain separate states without
resistant from the people that underwent such a hardship and sorrowful
condition.
For those
who question the viability of the south to become an independent
country, of course, is true for them to ask. The viability of the South
Sudan is realistic for the following reasons. It has big oil reserves
throughout the land, it has good fertile soil that will enhance the
growth of crops, it has all other minerals such as uranium, gold, and
cooper, and it has everything a state can have, so why not stand on its
own as a sovereign state and manages her own resources like most other
states in Africa continent?
But for
unity lovers, if the above mentioned points had been fulfilled by the
northern regime, the aspiration of the people throughout the country
could have remained together and so all spirits should favor unity of
the Sudan or a united Sudan that is built on a common ground with viable
objective. But what happened in the first place should not be confused
with short lived agreement that did not do anything in this current
tough time, but to exploit the south Sudan resources. Those things
created a divided Sudan to my personal view based on how I understand
Sudan politics.
I like
the quote
“vote for unity and you will become a second class citizen, or vote for
separation and you will be free,” said John Garang. If that is
so, I am more likely impressed by the ideology of separation and those
who stood firm with it. To become separatist means to stop dishonoring
behavior of the Arab regime-led government in the north Sudan.
In
conclusion, Sudan was already divided and so comes the finalization of
this great division in time of referendum. Whether you and I like it or
not, there is no ultimate solution to stop all these garbage of Jallaba
in the north than to separate. However, southern Sudan would become a
viable state no matter what it takes. The land is rich in everything
acquired by any county on the planet earth. It has all necessary might
it should for it to be a sovereign state. So why should we boast for a
united Sudan where our partner had been cheating us throughout all these
years?
Nhial K. Wicleek lives in Canada. He can be reached at korow1st@yahoo.ca
COMMENTS, PLEASE CLICK HERE
Disclaimer:
The views expressed
above are solely those of the author(s) and do not represent those of the
website. |