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[Dehai-WN] Africanarguments.org: East Africa: Celebrating the Bureaucratisation of Peace - the Addis Implementation Matrix

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Thu, 21 Mar 2013 23:26:46 +0100

East Africa: Celebrating the Bureaucratisation of Peace - the Addis
Implementation Matrix


By Aly Verjee, 21 March 2013

Analysis

March 2013: another Addis negotiating marathon, another
<http://www.rssnegotiationteam.org/uploads/1/2/8/8/12889608/implementation_m
atrix_on_cooperation_agreements_120313.pdf> document heralded as the '
<http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5ihgZL0C0PZwsF68MeHlJUV1_
LRHQ?docId=CNG.cde49ed486e9c7912c436ca7e9aa6701.51> breakthrough' agreement
between Sudan and South Sudan.

The 68-point implementation matrix (not counting sub-points), signed on
March 12 by Idris Mohamed Abdel Gadar for Sudan and Pagan Amum for South
Sudan, follows the meeting on March 8 of the defence ministers of both
states, who
<http://www.rssnegotiationteam.org/uploads/1/2/8/8/12889608/sudansouth_sudan
_implementation_modalities_for_security_080313.pdf> agreed again to withdraw
their forces from the previously defined Safe Demilitarized Border Zone
(SDBZ).

Or as South Sudan's
<http://www.rssnegotiationteam.org/modalities-for-security-arrangements.html
> negotiating team put it, with a first sentence tongue-twister for bored
diplomats and journalists covering the next meeting in Addis: "On March 8,
2013, after months of negotiations, the Republic of South Sudan and the
Republic of Sudan's Joint Political and Security Mechanism (JPSM) came to an
agreement on the content of a framework for implementing the commitments
made in the bilateral September 2012
<http://www.rssnegotiationteam.org/security-arrangements.html> security
arrangements agreement.

This important development should result in the creation of a safe
demilitarized buffer zone along the two countries' shared border. Both sides
have already ordered their armed forces to withdraw to their side of the
buffer zone."

Point seven of the March 8 document tells of the delays suffered after the
last supposed breakthrough agreement, the cooperation accords of September
2012.

It subtly ignores that failure of implementation and just says: "the
original D-Day for the implementation plan matrix was 19 December 2012. The
matrix has been reviewed and the JPSM have set D-Day at 10 March 2013."

Three months delay could be forgiven if the intentions of the parties were
now honourable. Unfortunately, there is reason to be sceptical of that being
the case.

Orders by Khartoum and Juba to withdraw their troops from the border are
encouraging, but are just as easily reversed. Resuming oil production is
welcome, until the next crisis comes. We celebrate the matrix, because even
modest progress is better than the alternative.

Our faith is in this new bureaucratisation of peace: the idea that if only
there are or were enough technical benchmarks, processes, committees,
mechanisms and modalities, on paper and on the ground, all that underlying
emotional antipathy and mistrust and suspicion could be controlled if not
eradicated entirely.

Turning on the oil taps averts economic annihilation for both sides. But
having initially shut down production in a bold attempt to show Khartoum
that seizures of oil cargoes would not be tolerated, Juba has no guarantee
of future good behaviour.

That, for example, there will be an end to aerial bombardment by the
Sudanese Armed Forces on South Sudan's territory; that Khartoum will lose
interest in the various rebel militias of Jonglei; that Khartoum's share of
oil revenue isn't used to finance future military action against South
Sudan.

For its part, Khartoum hasn't ensured that South Sudan will really expel the
SPLM-N officials who frequent Juba, cut off access to South Kordofan from
Unity State, or stop exploring alternatives to the Port Sudan pipeline
through Kenya and/or Ethiopia.

Plenty of official allegations of bad behaviour have been made by both
sides. For the most part these fall to the JPSM to address.

In almost every case, the security modalities document says one of the
following: "refer to Joint Border Verification and Monitoring Mission
(JBVMM) for investigation," "refer to Ad-hoc Committee for investigation,"
or, "on receipt of evidential detail it is recommended JPSM form Committee
... to determine veracity of the concern/complaint."

In the unlikely event a thorough investigation is conducted, neither side is
likely to be satisfied with the findings: each side believes it is the
victim of the other.

With no end in sight to the war in the Nuba Mountains, South Kordofan makes
a guest appearance in discussion of border arrangements.

More than a year and a half after UNMIS left South Kordofan, and a decade
after the successes of the
<http://pbpu.unlb.org/pbps/Library/JMC%20Lessons%20Learned%20sum%20_past%20t
ense_26Aug.pdf> Joint Military Commission (JMC), international monitoring
returns to Kordofan: the JBVMM will move from Assosa, Ethiopia, to Kadugli,
the capital of Sudan's presently most troubled state.

As the meeting minutes state: "Kadugli was accepted as a suitable temporary
JBVMM HQ before moving to final location in Abyei.

There was acceptance that there would be no move of the JBVMM HQ to Abyei
until the Temporary Arrangements were implemented and accommodation provided
by UN."

The JBVMM borrows the successful joint monitoring team concept from the JMC.
Teams made up of SAF, SPLA, and police and NISS personnel from both sides
are joined by international monitors to investigate agreement violations,
report on security in the border zone, arbitrate local disputes and report
unlawfully held weapons.

But whereas in 2002 the JMC monitored violations of a genuine ceasefire in
South Kordofan while the war continued in southern Sudan, today's JBVMM
deals with the inverse: international border management between two states
legally at peace while civil war continues in the Nuba Mountains, a few
towns away.

In the aspirational matrix, where three of the 68 points are marked
'complete', and work on most other issues is yet to start, there are the
usual bugbears:

"1.4 Obligation: Determination of the final status of Abyei and
consideration of formation of the Abyei Referendum Commission (Art 4.2).
Timing: Date to be agreed. Responsible: The Presidents."

"5.4.3. Obligation: Completion of non-binding opinion of the AU Team of
Experts (AUTE) on the status of the 5 Disputed Areas. Timing: 5.4.1 [D-Day +
66] + 60 [translation: 126 days from March 10, or July 14]. Responsible:
AUTE. Remarks: Parties have commenced cooperation with the Experts in line
with draft Terms of Reference for the AUTE. Timeline subject to change by
Parties pursuant 5.4.2."

Indeed, nothing sums it up better: 'responsible: the Presidents', and
'subject to change'. The end of matrix modifications has not yet arrived.
But spreadsheets are better than embargoes and air strikes. One hopes the
need for urgent breakthroughs does not return too soon.

Aly Verjee is senior researcher at the Rift Valley Institute.

 




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