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Sudan Tribune

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Too Many Agreements Dishonoured, Revisited

By Aly Verjee

April 6, 2011 – Former Vice-President of Sudan Abel Alier’s 1990 book, Too Many Agreements Dishonoured, chronicles the history of Sudan’s first major peace treaty, the 1972 Addis Ababa Agreement. Brokered by the World Council of Churches and Emperor Haile Selassie, the agreement was the first long-term deal to bring peace to a country that had been at war since 1955. Holding for 11 years, the treaty was consistently and continually undermined until a full scale return to hostilities was inevitable.

Describing the period of negotiations, Alier notes, “the resolutions were quite satisfactory on paper and could have gone a long way to meet some of the complaints of the South…[b]ut none of the parties believed they would be implemented!”

“[There was] a wealth of reasons to justify being cautious. Historical experience with past agreements in the country; a tendency to ignore, quite casually and irresponsibly, their mandate and to act against the interests of the very electorate they represented.”

Without context, it would be difficult for any historian (even a historian of Sudan) to know to which era Alier’s comments pertained. Perhaps more than any other comparable country over the same period of time, Sudan’s history is littered with agreements and declarations, treaties and testimonials. And while the Addis Ababa Agreement may be long consigned to the archives, today’s Sudan again faces a similar moment, where past paradigms of peace are on the verge of being discarded.

The most prominent of these is the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), which will be popularly remembered for allowing Southern Sudan to become an independent country. But the CPA was, and is, much more than one vote for independence. It is itself a series of other agreements, agreed at different times: a Protocol on Power Sharing; a Protocol on Wealth Sharing; a Protocol on the Resolution of Conflict in Southern Kordofan and Blue Nile; a Permanent Ceasefire and Security Arrangements. Only partially implemented, its provisions will likewise be only partially remembered. No matter their detail, much of the 241 pages of text of the CPA will suffer the same fate as the comparatively sparse 13 pages of the predecessor Addis Ababa Agreement.

Abyei deserves a special mention. This mere spit of land still disputed by both north and south has been a source of continued instability and violence. Agreement after agreement has failed to resolve the conflict. The Addis Ababa negotiations did not settle Abyei, nor did another chapter of the CPA, the 2004 Abyei Protocol, although the latter remains legally in force. The report of the Abyei Boundaries Commission was rejected, the Abyei Roadmap was violated, the judgement of the Permanent Court of Arbitration unimplemented. The latest attempts to manage, if not solve the conflict, January’s Kadugli Agreements, were respected for mere days before they were undermined.

Then there is the Darfur Peace Agreement (DPA). This attempt to end the conflict in Sudan’s western provinces was rejected from the start by all but one rebel movement, and thus destined to fail. And while even the United Nations African Union Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) peacekeeping force which ultimately emerged from the DPA process privately concedes that the agreement is long dead, formally, the signatories, including the Government of Sudan, treat the agreement with great solemnity. It is the DPA which calls for a referendum on the administrative boundaries of Darfur, which the chief government negotiator has announced will proceed, no matter that the war continues, millions remain displaced and other political movements currently in negotiations with the government in Doha completely oppose the referendum vote. And in that, one of Sudan’s key lessons of treaty making emerges: that sometimes, selective implementation of an agreement is even more dangerous than complete abrogation.

Little need be said for the Eastern Sudan Peace Agreement, the ugly sister of Sudan’s many peace agreements – hardly anyone knows what it says, nor recalls what was supposed to be done. From the government’s point of view, the most important objective – reconciliation with Eritrea – has been achieved, and that is enough.

Still a figure in Sudanese public life, Abel Alier’s reputation has been tarnished by his association with the flawed 2010 national elections, for which he served as a reluctant commission chairman. He has rarely commented publicly on Sudan’s contemporary politics outside of the strict duties of his chairmanship; while he could easily compile a second volume for his 1990 book, one is not expected; he has served his country and has earned the right to a quiet retirement. Time and circumstance bound his experiences may be, his observations remain revealingly astute. As Sudan heads towards a two state future, those that seek change from the politics of old could do worse than to once more peruse the words of a wise old man.

Aly Verjee was Deputy Director of the Carter Center’s international election observation mission in Sudan. He is currently a senior researcher at the Rift Valley Institute and a contributing author at the Centre for International Governance Innovation’s Security Sector Reform Centre.

He is the author of Race Against Time: Countdown to the Referenda in Southern Sudan and Abyei. Aly Verjee can be contacted on the following e-mail address: [email protected]

8 Comments

  • Hero
    Hero

    Too Many Agreements Dishonoured, Revisited
    Dear Aly Verjee,

    No, Sir, I thinks there’s a clear different with the previous agreements and the then CPA of which most us are now enjoying.We believed that, in this agreement we have what we wants and people hope is, it will hold. And with it, we will surely attained our freedom beacuse in it, it has what we have fought for the last 22 years.

    Frankly, I don’t know why people keeps blaming Mzee Abel Alier Kuai, yet he has done his part and he was very glad to see our late HERO DR Garang takes on and finished the unfinished job.So, to anyone it’s silly to keeps blaming the man for no reason at all. He has not betrayed our course since the day until now he remained faithful to the course and love it very much,likewise to us all, therefore it’s better for us all to respect him and cheers him as he near his last days of live on this planet.
    Otherwise thank.

    Reply
  • Cibaipiath Junub Sudan
    Cibaipiath Junub Sudan

    Too Many Agreements Dishonoured, Revisited
    Dear Aly Verjee,
    I appreciate your article that is reviewing “Too Many agreements Dishonored” By Abel Alier. Infact that is your own view and oppionion and some of my three collegues have also provided that view on your article. For me the agreements and treaties that were made in Sudan are too many and none of the agreements/treaties had been fully implemented as agreed or signed upon by the parties. There is fall in between and that fall is always from the north side. The Addis-Ababa agreement began with ” A draft Organic laws..” The Democratic Repulic of the Sudan” and so forth and signatories on the Government side where led by the author- “Too Many Agreements Dishonor”.

    You are counting many agreements dishonoured wih your countdown agreements- best example is the CPA. Not all context/contents in the CPA will be implemented that means what Alier wrote is in its place.

    Many politicians both in the North and South believes in the Agreement but for sure the current Generation of the South believed that Agreements are sort of culture designed by Arabs to cover up eyes of Southerners- just like officials uses reading glasses. They can be violtated at any time just like removing reading glasses from official eyes.

    We do not mind about the agreements since we have known impacts and outcomes of the agreements.

    I believed that the History of Sudan from its background does not allow a room for change or effect change- to be one of the true Democratic State- and South will be like that and it is not far from the truth that South will follow footstep of her master- North. Nicola Gogol author of the Animal Farm reveal the truth of colonization.

    If one compare Addis-ababa Agreement with the CPA in Naivasha you find the diference and if you compare past youth or generation of South Sudan with the current youth, you find that current youth or generation is very much informed about Sudan Politics and the way forward.

    Alier should not be kept if he is a genuine politician in South Sudan Politics. Otherwise thank you for taking us back for review.

    Reply
  • Paul Ongee
    Paul Ongee

    Too Many Agreements Dishonoured, Revisited
    Cibaipiath Junub Sudan,

    Correction: “Animal Farm” is authored by George Orwell not Nicola Gogol (or Nicolai Gogol). Check it out, please.

    Aly Verjee must have simply omitted Inafmous Khartoum Agreement (IKPA) intentionally because he knows it’s one of the useless agreements ever signed in the history of signed agreements with Khartoum. IKPA is no different with Fashoda Agreement used as a short-cut approach to assume leadership position in the South Sudan without considering the guarantee of the environmental factors.

    The issue that “the resolutions were quite satisfactory on paper and could have gone a long way to meet some of the complaints of the South…[b]ut none of the parties believed they would be implemented!”

    Something is missing here because of generalization. Abel Alier should not generalize as someone who usually sits on the sideline to make such comment. It’s indeed,southerners who believed Addis-Ababa Agreement would never be implemented as it happened.

    How can a negotiator representing Khartoum turned the other way round to be the first President of the Hight Executive Council in 1972? Why did he not make the effort to get the AAA of 1972 implemented partially if not all to avoid the the genesis of another deadly civil war of 1983? Who was too close to Khartoum/Gaffar Mohamend Nimeiri before Joseph Lagu was brought close to Khartoum in the late 1970s?

    The skillful negotiation of CPA under the leadership of Dr. John Garang De-Mabior, regional body (IGAD) and international community led by USA deserve a lot of credits. It’s the right and duty of every southerner to enjoy and protect the hard-won freedom and peacer that were missed for nearly two centuries.

    Paul Ongee
    Khartoum, Sudan

    Reply
  • Paul Ongee
    Paul Ongee

    Too Many Agreements Dishonoured, Revisited
    Cibaipiath Junub Sudan,

    Correction: “Animal Farm” is authored by George Orwell not Nicola Gogol (or Nicolai Gogol). Check it out, please.
    Aly Verjee must have simply omitted Infamous Khartoum Agreement (IKPA) intentionally because he knows it’s one of the useless agreements ever signed in the history of signed agreements with Khartoum. IKPA is no different with Fashoda Agreement used as a short-cut approach to assume leadership position in the South Sudan without considering the guarantee of the environmental factors.

    The issue that “the resolutions were quite satisfactory on paper and could have gone a long way to meet some of the complaints of the South…[b]ut none of the parties believed they would be implemented!”

    is missing here because of generalization. Abel Alier should not generalize as someone who usually sits on the sideline to make such comment. It’s indeed, southerners who believed Addis-Ababa Agreement would never be implemented as it happened.

    How a negotiator representing Khartoum can turn the other way round to be the first President of the High Executive Council in 1972? Why did he not make the effort to get the AAA of 1972 implemented partially if not all to avoid the genesis of another deadly civil war of 1983? Who was too close to Khartoum/Gaffar Mohamed Nimeiri before Joseph Lagu was brought close to Khartoum in the late 1970s?

    However, the skillful negotiation of CPA under the leadership of Dr. John Garang De-Mabior, regional body (IGAD) and international community led by USA deserve a lot of credits. It’s the right and duty of every southerner now to enjoy and protect the hard-won freedom and peace that were missed for nearly two centuries.

    Paul Ongee
    Khartoum, Sudan

    Reply
  • Pilieny
    Pilieny

    Too Many Agreements Dishonoured, Revisited
    The Article of this man don’t have any meaning according to my analysis, as a historian, you are not suppose to hide any fact in the ground, he either have no knowledge of what he is writing or he is bais in his report or writing, Khartoum Peace Agreement can’t be left out if he was a man who know something about Sudan, he is just drive by his tribal hatred and trying to promote Dinkasm by giving credit to Abel and Grang not even mentioning Lado who was the founder.try to write something which has a meaning

    Reply
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