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Northern panicky reaction to imminent independence of Southern Sudan

By Jacob K. Lupai

June 15, 2010 — The countdown to the referendum in Southern Sudan in January 2011 as per the comprehensive peace agreement (CPA) of January 2005 seems to be unstoppable. The time of truth has dawned on Northern Sudan that the numerous strategies employed since the Juba Conference of 1947 to maintain the unity of Sudan at any cost have reached the point of diminishing return. Aware of this the North is now in a frenzy of panicky reaction. However, the question to ask is, will this panicky reaction make unity of Sudan any attractive to the South? This is an open question. One thing, though, is clear. A drowning person will always panic and will cling desperately onto anything for dear life.

Northern Sudan has always considered Southern Sudan as its lifeline since time immemorial and recently a lucrative source of oil. For the North the people of the South do not matter an iota but all that matters are the abundant natural resources found in the South. Arguably the unity of Sudan has never been attractive to the South except for some lip service and cosmetics here and there. The northern panicky reaction is nothing but a cosmetic package in a desperate attempt to rescue an imaginary unity that is all but gone down the drain. Even if the prophets, peace be upon them, were to rise from their graves they would not rescue the unity of Sudan. The prophets might instead sympathise and support the total independence of Southern Sudan. They would have known the history of North-South dichotomy.

It is not necessary here to relive the history of North-South dichotomy. However, in brief it is said it takes two to quarrel. In theory then the ever strained relations between the North and the South may suggest that the two are responsible for having brought the unity of Sudan into disrepute. Nonetheless, to determine the extent to which either side is responsible may need expert knowledge of judges like those in the International Criminal Court (ICC) at the Hague. For the North and the South they will always trade accusations on who is the bad guy in making the unity of Sudan unattractive. One way forward, however, is for a critical analysis of conditions for unity of Sudan. People have to be scientifically objective. Basing arguments on mere assumptions unreflective of the reality on the ground is not helpful.

The North had every opportunity to make unity attractive from 1956 when the Sudan got its independence from colonial rule. In contrast, however, the North instead chose to work feverishly to create conditions conducive for separation of the South. Paradoxically the North is now panicking at this late hour and pointing fingers at the South as a separatist. The North erroneously sees itself as the angel of perfect unity that the South will enormously benefit. A little over half a century of independence the North has shown its colours of neocolonialist mentality.

Arguably the North is the separatist because of the policies adopted since independence. Apart from having used the South as a source of lucrative resources, the North has not exerted enough effort to make unity attractive. Why did the North adopt the policy of declaring the Sudan an Arab country knowing very well that the South was and is non Arab and that the Arab element in the Sudan was a minority? Why has the North adopted Islamic Sharia as the law in the Sudan while the South needs a secular constitution in line with Sudan as a multi religious country? Why is the North having the lion’s share of development while the South is one of the most under developed regions in the world?

Answers to the above questions may provide some explanation of the South’s reluctance to vote for unity in the referendum. There is no way that the unity of Sudan will be attractive when the South is aware and knows that Sudan is being groomed into an Arab Islamic state with development deliberately concentrated in the North.

It is clear that the North has run out of time to make unity attractive hence the panicky reaction to the strong expression of separation. In my previous article, “Unity of Sudan not possible at this late hour”, I tried to argue that time was too short for any attitudinal change in the South for unity of Sudan. I also tried to argue that separation of the South was not the end of the road. In our hearts we shall be Sudanese as do the Arabs in the Middle East although they are of different countries. The fact that southerners may prefer to live in Khartoum to living in Kampala or Nairobi is a message that we should treat each other with loving care. There are also northerners who have made the South their home. Even if the South separates no northerner in the South should be categorized as an alien and vice versa.

In conclusion unity of Sudan is not music to ears in the South and this should not be a surprise to the North. If the North is still adamant then the result of the referendum will wake it up. The offer of confederation is a non starter because the South has moved on beyond the concept of a confederal system. Instead a fresh look and arrangement for a peaceful co-existence between two independent states, the North and the South, should be the best option in promoting harmony in Sub Saharan Africa. We should now end the blame game and embark seriously on a roadmap that will lead the North and the South to peace, development and prosperity in post referendum era.

The author can be reached at [email protected]

12 Comments

  • Sudan virus
    Sudan virus

    Northern panicky reaction to imminent independence of Southern Sudan
    The coming referendum will be the time southerns get rid of the Virus that quite a loooooooong tiiiiiiiiiiime exhausted their soil (development).

    Thank you Lupai.

    Reply
  • Santino Nuan
    Santino Nuan

    Northern panicky reaction to imminent independence of Southern Sudan
    Thanks Jacob Lupai

    I think no one will ever write this sophisticated and well written article-with fair analysis that is very free from biasness but it is a truth telling article. I wish our pro-South Sudan’s independence dailies should publish this article so that the northerners who do not have access to use website information read it on hard papers.

    You hit the nail to its real place. The northerners are manipulating the issue of seperation by misinforming the public that seperation will never occur. This is their bussiness and not our bussiness as Southerners to hide the truth until the chok hours touch their noses. The entire northern citizens are being fooled by the ruling party and other northern political parties about what is going on between South and north.

    They are inform with cover page and not inside the book of what will happen in 2011 between South and the North. And this is Arab norm to hide the truth even to themselves. South Sudan till now is being potrayed in media as a rubbish place where human being cannot live in it. Few Southerners in the north are used as an example to fool innocent northern citizens about the presence of Southerners in the north and about unity which has already died in the South since the election day.

    Please, Mr Jacob inform northerners again about their alien behaviour which led to the disunity of this country. Let them hide the truth and preach wrong message if they like it. we don’t care.

    Reply
  • David Glenn
    David Glenn

    Northern panicky reaction to imminent independence of Southern Sudan
    Dear Jacob Lupai
    I have deep respect for your views,but please,be objective and truthful,it is true that the referandum will take place and the Southerners will decide,but please note that the South has never been a colony to gain independence.You may campaign for secession as much as you like,but when we talk of independence,you seem to miss the mark.
    As for the South holding the life of the North,my brother,it is God Almighty,who gives life,the North will not die.
    Look around you dear brother,how many countires in the world have oil,yet poverty is rampant.

    Reply
  • Young Nation
    Young Nation

    Northern panicky reaction to imminent independence of Southern Sudan
    Dear Countrymen and women,

    This Islamist conservative and the former defense force mobilizer called Karti, should genuinely understand that South and North Sudan are no longer one country. What seems to deceives this Northern Sudan foreign minister is the current short term political, social and economic relationship between the two regions if not not countries.

    However, the North should be warned that the people of Southern Sudan particularly the youth are nevertheless extremely united than before by South Sudan’s referendum. This means that any attempt by anybody from any corner of the world would meet a serious and an uncompromising resistance by the inhabitants of the region.

    SPLA Oyee
    SPLM Oyee
    South Sudan Oyee
    Salva Kiir Oyee
    Our fallen heroes/heroins Oyee

    Young Nation is a student of International Relations/Political Science at The University of Queensland, Australia

    Reply
  • Akoch
    Akoch

    Northern panicky reaction to imminent independence of Southern Sudan
    Mr. Lupal, Your article is an eloquent piece of literature, well written and extremely persuasive, however, the panic in the north is utterly misguide. If Khartoum fully understood the important of New Sudan Vision established by Sudanese People Liberation Movement (SPLM) call for in (CPA) that clearly stated, Sudan should remain a secular nation, guide by rule of law, that grants freedom, peace, justice and equality for all it citizens, to dismay of the world the Khartoum rejected this provision, therefore, citizens in the south, Blue Nile, and southern Kordofan, where given a choice of a referendum as compromise and they accepted it, Southerners never demanded or asked for separate south it was jammed in their throats, and now northerners are panicking? The opportunity for a realistic and practical unity has been lost. Unity is lost cause and gone forever, (SPLM) armed with (CPA) has changed our nation’s political landscape forever.

    Akoch Johng Wai
    San Diego, CA
    United States

    Reply
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