home
about
terms of use
- - - - - - - - -
research
publications
- - - - - - - - -
search
contribute
add links
contact
kids
guestbook
1st time visits: 27094
email: sora
|
PUBLICATIONS
The Sudanese Online Research Association welcomes contributions of essays,
papers and projects about Sudan and the Sudanese Diaspora. The following headings
link to research papers that are published exclusively through the Sudanese
Online Research Association Online Library. If you require further details about
the authors please email.
All works submitted here are published with the author's informed
consent. The views in the articles are those of the author only.
On behalf of all of the authors we ask that you please acknowledge
their work if you choose to cite it elsewhere.
To contribute your own research to this library please go
here.
What Are The Sudanese People Fighting For? - Douglas Johnson book review, By Chaplain Kara Yokoju
|
Click here to download the full text, printable version
**This
article is kindly published with permission and support from the
Australiasian Journal of African Studies and the Author. **
What Are The Sudanese People Fighting For? Douglas
H. Johnson, The Root Causes of Sudan’s Civil Wars, Oxford, James
Currey; Bloomington & Indianapolis, Indiana University Press;
Kampala, Fountain Publications, 2003. pp 234; bibliographical essay;
appendix; index; maps. ISBN 0-85255-392-7 (James Currey Oxford) ISBN
0-253-21584-6 (Indiana University Press).
Douglas H. Johnson
draws upon his extensive knowledge of the Sudan to seek a broad
explanation of the root causes of what is described on the cover as
‘one of Africa’s longest and most intractable conflicts’ and one which
for some thirty years has threatened to break-up this vast country of
many racial, ethnic, cultural, religious, political and economic
differences. He begins with the historical structure of North-South
relations which relationship he argues in Chapter 1 has been
misunderstood and its historical causes ‘ misrepresented’. States;
trade & Islam before 1820; the Egyptian conquest and the Mahadiyya
& internal colonialisms are used to reject the claim that Sudan’s
civil wars are the result of colonialism alone. Chapter 2 however
stresses the impact of British overrule from 1899-1947: the pattern of
the conquest & occupation, North & South and Southern policy
were based on the concept of one country two systems, so that after the
departure of the British in 1956 it was impossible to run the country
as one country one system.
Chapter 3 covers the period deals
with the period 1942-72, the rise of Nationalism leading to
Independence; how, in the eyes of Southerners, the Northern rulers who
took over from the British at independence were regarded as new
colonialists; and the outbreak of the first civil war was a result of
that Southern disappointment. Chapter 4 which deals with The Addis
Ababa agreement & the regional governments 1972-83 underscores the
significance of that agreement but the difficulties encountered in
implementation process. Issues such as security; integration; political
interference by Khartoum in the Southern region’s affairs; economic
confrontation between Khartoum and Juba; the borders problem with the
North annexing parts of the South; the oil found in the South but
exploited by the North; the North and Egypt dependent on water from the
South; Dinka domination in the South; political fights in the North;
and international pressures on Nimeiri. Nimeiri’s unwillingness to
address Southern grievances and his unilateral decision to abrogate the
agreement in 1983 resulted in Southerners taking up arms to fight the
government in the second civil war 1983-5 dealt with in Chapter 5 while
the Northern parties’ political decision to turn Sudan into an Islamic
state increased the momentum of the fight for liberation in the South
between 1986 to 1991, dealt with in Chapter 6, which shows how the SPLA
position improved as more Southerners join in to fight.
From
Chapter 7 the author then traces the internal conflicts that led on the
one hand to factionalism in the SPLA and on the other the civil war
within Islam and which have meant that ‘(t)he current civil war has
intensified in complexity the longer it has been fought.’(p 127) The
internal power struggle within the SPLA leading to the 1991 split into
two factions (Torit and Nasir ) of 1991. Chapter 8 discusses the Nuer
civil war following the split of the SPLA in 1991. The Nasir faction,
which became known as SPLA-United, has had its own internal power
struggle between Riek Machar and Lam Akol. The Nuer civil war also saw
the traditional Nuer-Dinka hatred intensified. The fighting left many
killed on both sides.
Chapter 9 deals with multiple civil wars
1991. During this period ‘a network of internal wars’ were taking place
in many parts of the country; for example, the civil war within Islam
where Islamic factions in the North were fighting each other to install
their own brand of political Islam in Sudan. The Islamic civil war
spread to the Nuba Mountains, Southern Blue Nile, Eastern Sudan and
Darfur. The SPLA became involved in the Islamic civil war in order to
defend the non-Arab population in these areas. It was successful in the
Nuba Mountains and Southern Blue Nile. Chapter 10 deals with the war
economy and the politics of relief.
The author argues (see
Chapter 10, The War Economy & the Politics of Relief) that ‘the
civil war has been fought on the ground as a resource war’ (p151) and
that civilians ‘have often been treated as a resource to control’. Both
sides in the war involve capturing labour and territory. The relief
agencies were faced with a dilemma-were they to satisfy the demands of
the Sudan government, the SPLA or the donor countries.
These
ten, detailed chapters lead to the conclusion that ‘no single factor
can account for the profound divide now separating the main regions of
the Sudan, nor for the ferocity of the multiple civil wars which pit
different parts of Sudanese society against each other’ (p.167). In
the final Chapter 11 the author therefore turns to the question of
Sudanese ideas of peace and war and the attempts the Sudanese
themselves have made to resolve the conflict; internally as well as
through international intervention. The author points out that the
internal peace attempts include Wunlit Dinka-Nuer conference of 1999
which paved the way for resolving not only the Dinka-Nuer conflict but
other people to people conflicts in the South. This became a model for
a grass roots ‘peace movement’ in the South based on the notion of a
‘moral community’. While in the North, the Islamic ‘moral community’ is
based on the principle of exclusion. Peace can only come with the
exclusion of other Islamic and non-Islamic groups. The other internal
peace attempt was the so called ‘peace from within’ 1996/97 in which
Riek Machar signed an agreement with Khartoum which promised the South
more powers to run its own affairs. However that proved to be a false
promise and Riek Machar rejoined the SPLA to fight Khartoum. The
international interventions to try to bring peace to Sudan include the
Frankfurt Declaration of January 1992, Abuja 1 and 2 and IGAD
(Inter-governmental Agency for Draught and Desertification) consisting
of Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, Djibouti, Somalia and Sudan. Under
IGAD these countries agreed to mediate a peaceful end to Sudan’s civil
war. The other peace initiative was the so-called Libyan-Egyptian peace
plan of 1999. However, IGAD remains the only credible agency charged
with the task of ending Sudan’s war and bring peace to that country. It
has done well so far in bringing the parties together and commits them
to sign a memorandum of understanding (MOU) in which they agreed to
negotiate until an agreement on all contentious issues is reached.
The
author notes the pressure from the international community for the
parties to reach an agreement by the end of 2003 but warns against a
repeat of the ‘shambles of independence, when international
intervention circumvented the self-determination process’ in which the
people of the South were denied a vote through referendum to decide for
their future. It is to be hoped that those who have been engaged in the
on-going peace talks in Kenya that currently (late 2003) bring hopes
for success have born this in mind. It was the deferment of the
decision to allow Southerners to exercise their right of
self-determination that resulted in the current civil war. No peace
agreement should be imposed on the people of the South because of
interest of foreign governments seeking access to and exploit its oil.
A peace agreement that fail to address ‘the root causes of Sudan’s
civil wars’ will lead to a third wave of civil wars throughout the
country the end of which will mean many Sudans.
In conclusion,
I recommend this book to scholars of Sudanese Studies, Africanists,
Diplomats, Relief and Human Rights workers and any one seeking to
understand the root causes of Sudan’s conflict.
Chaplain Kara Yokoju School of Politics and International Studies Murdoch University, Perth WA. |
|
|
|