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Sudan Tribune

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Confederation for Sudan: Is it a good idea?

By Zechariah Manyok Biar

June 4, 2010 — National issues sometimes are very complicated, especially for leaders who have a lot of difficult questions to deal with. In the world of today, nations have the duty to take care of their neighbors. It is not like the world of the nineteenth century when it was easy not to be the keeper of your brother.

The late leader of Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A) Dr. John Garang de Mabior had a lot of enemies in the South during the North-South war because he repeatedly said that he was fighting for the liberation of the whole Sudan that would be based on new way of governing. How easy that liberation of the whole Sudan was remains with Dr. Garang in his grave today. But we who are still alive are not free from the burden of taking care of our brothers and sisters who are suffering in other parts of Sudan; if at all what we fought for was the freedom for the marginalized people.

The question that I had to struggle with over the last few years was how to take care of our suffering neighbors in other parts of Sudan under the united Sudan without falling into the bottomless fit of suffering with them. In other word, how can we not abandon the Nubians, the Eastern Sudanese, and some Northern Sudanese who fought on our side during the North-South war without endangering our own freedom? On the other hand, how can we feel good when we see the same marginalized people suffering under oppressive system and pretend that we do not care for people outside South Sudan? For the sake of emphasis, how can we turn a blind eye to those who support us in the North? These questions are beyond a mere style of public relations or the need for the scoring of political points. They need selfless thinking.

I advocated for the secession of South Sudan and the peaceful co-existence between the North and the South in my writings over the last two years because I had no answers to the above questions under unity or secession choices that we are entering into next year.

I am still standing my position that the only solution for differing systems in North and South Sudan is secession. Not that secession will solve every problem we have in South Sudan (I should be honest that we will have scores of other problems that we will face even without North Sudan’s influence in our affairs) but that secession is simply the only model that we have never tried in Sudan.

What if we tried self-rule for some times in the future and North Sudanese learned from our successes or failures and became a changed country, ruled under secular law that we advocate for, would we initiate the reunification discussions in order to take care of those who were for us during our suffering or would we pretend that we do not see their suffering? If, on the other hand, we think we care for the suffering people in the North and we need to reunite the country to take care of them or give them freedom that they need, then who will initiate the talks for the reunification between the independent North and South? Are we ready for these discussions now?

Here is what I am driving at: the talks about confederation should not be thrown away with bath water, simply because we are fed-up with the system in Khartoum. We have the ability to know what is good and what is bad for us in negotiations. We should not be the people who appear on the side of unconcerned when we know that we fought for the freedom of the marginalize people, most of whom fought on our side during the war.

We need to look into confederation proposal and ask some questions: How will the confederation look like? The report from the Sudan Tribune seems to give a glimpse of what the National Congress Party (NCP) and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) negotiators are thinking about. According to the Sudan Tribune report, “The confederation model entails a system where two countries achieve a high degree of autonomy while maintaining a minimal central authority in areas such as trade, defense and foreign policy.” It sounds good, at least to me.

The next question would then be: Would the referendum take place first to find out whether South Sudanese want to secede or not before the formation of confederate government? This is the question that is not yet answered under the proposal. If the answer is that the referendum will take place before the formation of the confederate government, then many Southerners may buy the idea of confederate government. But questions are not yet over.

If we have the President of the confederate, what levels of power will he or she have? If the defense will be at the level of federal government, does that mean that the army in the South will be mixed with that of the North? If the answer is that the army of South Sudan will cease to exist and be mixed into the federal army under the confederate government, then the confederation is a bad idea. But if South Sudan will have its army like it has today and North Sudan has its army and the Join Integrated Unit becomes the confederate army, then I have no problem talking about confederation now. The powers of the federal president will then be limited during the talks. But we are not yet satisfied here, I guess.

The pressing question then is this: Will we still share the oil under the confederate government? Many Southerners who are bitter against the system in Khartoum will say no to the idea of sharing of resources with the North. That is understandable. But don’t we have the duty to pay back to those who stood with us during the war against the system that we did not like? Do we hold everybody, including innocent women and children in the North, as our enemies that should not eat from our plates? Think about it!

My answer is that we can share the oil with the North under the confederate government as long as we remain with our independent army to protect our interest, both locally and internationally. I have no problem sharing resources with our brothers and sisters suffering in the North, regardless of whether they were for or against us during the war. I have no problem sharing resources with brothers and sisters in the North as long as the federal government will be based on secular laws, exempting North Sudan from these laws until they choose to adopt them. I have no problem sharing resources with anybody in this global world.

Remember how we South Sudanese survived during the war all over the world? We survived in the hands of the international community who has the duty to take care of its neighbors. We are not exempted from this kind of duty.

In conclusion, I favor the confederation that will leave South Sudan with its army, secular government system, and a freedom that we want to have in governing ourselves. A confederation is not a bad idea because it answers some tough questions that we cannot answer under unity-separation-only model. But this confederation will only be an option if South Sudanese have chosen to be a different country in 2011. The confederate government will give both the North and the South a bigger market that we desperately need in the world of today. East Africa would be part of this market, too. So, the need to cooperate with East Africa is not the excuse for the throwing away of the idea of confederation with bath water.

Zechariah Manyok Biar, BA. Edu., MACM, MSSW. He can be reached at [email protected]

21 Comments

  • Aduol Liet
    Aduol Liet

    Confederation for Sudan: Is it a good idea?
    Zechariah Manyok Biar.

    I think you will be out of touch very soon if you don’t review your question man. According to your article above what do want from the SPLM in South to do.? Do you real understand how much the frustation of Southern Sudanese people.? Well, I wonder if you got emiricism since the beginning of the Anya Anya One movement and along with the period of the SPLA/SPLM for two decades this is a ridiculous brother and I got to advise you because your mouth some time can punishing you and your people but don’t let such silly question take place when you are educated guy than me.

    Yes, there is no doubt the SPLA/M were absolutely fighting for the change of the Old Sudan government and replace it with New Sudan meaning the new constitutional unfortunately, others sides of the Sudan’s regions seem not to help Southern Sudanese through politically and all others mean as you Sudan is too big for one region to dominate. In that situation what can you do if others regions are not serious politically and even the militarialy so don’t try to blame yourself the Sudan’s problems did not end what the SPLM has is your problem too. Eastern Sudan when the referendum law was pass recently in the Khartoum MP, we saw them acting negatively that, they were unhappy to let Southern Sudanese assume their rights from that law, my question to you is that, are you really following very closely the Sudan government and Omar al Bashir’s tactices.? You must be careful for what you say, changing Sudan government need all sides of the regions to show their struggles but not only region like Southern Sudan can liberating people while others regions in Sudan are taking silent about it.

    Map does not blocking you, me and other Nubian region to join Southern Sudan if the people are interesting in leaving Arab alone to rule themselves. There are 25 States in Sudan and if the Sudan successful divide in to two States whoever region, will chose from either North Sudan nor Southern Sudan. Please I would like you brother to understand that, the reason why we will be looking for separation is because there is no other choice for instance, those Islamic Old Ideas which led the founders of the SPLA/SPLM to moved a way in 1983, are still with Omar al Bashir and his guilty National Congress Party, was your question smart or work absolutely no, and certainly don’t your mine be out of control and this is for your advice.

    Reply
  • Machingela gai
    Machingela gai

    Confederation for Sudan: Is it a good idea?
    Brother Biar,

    Confederation is not a bad idea for our country to have, but it has some technical issues in its implementation before and now. Here are simple questions for all of us to ponder: Where is Southern independant after 1956 when the British left?
    Where is Addis-abba’s agreement in 1972 when Southern Sudan was declared a state under the pretext of confederation?
    My friend, we are negotaiting our freedom with monsters who know how to manipulate people for their interest instead of sharing the truth with people.

    If there is a way union or confederation will come true as you said and as the idea goes, then Northern government must be a minor paterner in negotiation and leave marginalized areas with workable deal on the table. Southern Sudan is a major factor in the process of making idea of confederation achievable some days, when there is any. It will come after the exit of Southern Sudan as an independant state after referendum. This will allow oppressed people in marginalized places to choose between two sides: the North and the South where to go. And if Darfur, Nuba, and Fuja choose us and follow us, There will be then a possibility at some point that confederation is reachable. And therefore, North will become minority in the dialogue among the sharing regions.
    However, it will not happen as the North continues to look down on us. Their tricks plus power in their hands will never let us be blind to accept that idea of union under their directives. It will be just the same like the rest in the past.

    I am not supporting confederation than Southern independant. History shows where we fall in the past and it is likely to repeat itself if we allow such again to happen. The act of forming an alliance or confiderate government is against our waiting freedom and it is against the two million lives lost during our struggle. How many times are we going to fall into the same hole? Do we need war to continue after many empty promises, again and again? How and why?
    No confederation, not now. Let 1956 and 1972 be our memorable testimonies for a failed past confederations.

    Reply
  • James Okuk Solomon
    James Okuk Solomon

    Confederation for Sudan: Is it a good idea?

    Brother Manyok,

    Why do Southerners have to waste time, souls and resources to secede in order to unite with the North again under the so-called confederation? I think there is something crooked and fishy in your pro-confederation good idea.

    If it is for the simple reason that we want to take care of the suffering people who have helped us in our struggle why is not appearing in your article that we should care of the suffering Ugandans and Kenyan neighbors who have helped us as well during the struggle, rather than confining our help alone to the suffering marginalized comrades in the North?

    Please don’t support your pro-confederation zeal with weak reason. Find a comprehensive reason if you think your are intelligent than those who rejected the idea of Confederation during the CPA negotiations.

    If you are thinking by doing this you will give your new father (Mr. Salva Kiir) another five years of disastrous rule in Southern Sudan then you are not living in a concrete world. 90% of Southerners have already made their mind to leave the North alone first and then deal away with Kiir and the SPLM once the independence is achieved. If this ideal has not come into your mind just take it freely from me without any payback.

    Reply
  • Luk K Dak
    Luk K Dak

    Confederation for Sudan: Is it a good idea?
    Ustaz Manyok,

    It’s well-documented, that the NCP’s negotiators (which was headed by Ustaz Ali Osman Muhammad Taha) vehemently rejected just the thought of (anything) called confederation between the two parts of the country!!!

    However, the historical CPA made the choice crystally clear: either an attractive unity, which has never been given a chance by the NCP, or peaceful secession, which is backed by the overwhelming majority in South Sudan.

    Nothing in between, for now.

    Luk Dak

    Reply
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