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[Dehai-WN] Weekly.ahram.org.eg: Collective suicide Sudanese-style

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Fri, 15 Jun 2012 14:25:45 +0200

Collective suicide Sudanese-style

The two Sudans are edging closer to war, but will Washington manage to save
the day, writes Asmaa El-Husseini

14 - 20 June 2012

  _____

"The governments in Khartoum and Juba are committing collective suicide," is
how Princeton Lyman, United States special envoy for Sudan and South Sudan,
described the dispute between the states of North and South Sudan, who
failed after 10 days of intensive negotiations recently in the Ethiopian
capital Addis Ababa to reach an agreement on any of the many outstanding
issues. These issues should be completely settled, according to UN Security
Council Resolution 2046 that calls for sanctions according to Chapter VII of
the UN Charter against the party that is blocking progress.

Collective suicide, as Lyman put it, does not only apply to economic
conditions in both Sudans, but also includes all aspects of political,
social and security conditions, and even the state of mind of citizens in
both countries.

"The governments of both Juba and Khartoum are waiting for the other to
collapse and are using oil as a weapon to this end," Lyman explained. "But
in reality, both are being harmed." He ridiculed assurances by both sides
that they do not want to start all-out war despite continued violence. In
fact, conditions for citizens in both countries can no longer endure more
suffering which is on the rise as political tensions and military escalation
continues, and fighting continues in many regions.

Hunger and famine are spreading in both countries as both economies fail,
their currencies collapse and prices rise. The cost of living is no longer
affordable for the average citizen in cities and villages in North Sudan
since the country lost three quarters of its revenues after the secession of
South Sudan. Khartoum is now taking harsh measures to weather the new
conditions as conditions for Sudan's citizens continue to deteriorate in
Darfur, South Kordofan and Blue Nile. The levels of misery, destitution,
poverty and disease are on the rise, as are the numbers of deaths,
displacement and refugees.

Things are not much better in the nascent South Sudan whose citizens had
aspired for a leap forward in their lives. For the majority of the South
Sudanese, life is harder and worse after independence, which failed to
achieve the once hoped for stability or development. The country stopped
producing oil in January after Juba accused Khartoum of stealing its oil.

Dire economic conditions could now have serious consequences on the
political situation which is usually resolved not through consensus and
political solutions, but by paying the opposition for their silence or
fragmenting it. Disputes are also resolved through extensive spending on
armament, weapons, armies and mobilisation, which some observers estimate at
a staggering 70 per cent of the budget or even more. There is also excessive
political spending because of sagging state agencies and increased political
appointments.

Making economic conditions worse is corruption and misappropriation of
available resources, a malaise that both countries suffer from in a variety
of ways. Some are easy to pinpoint and discuss in specific figures, while
other cases are witnessed by citizens, but due to corrupt conditions it is
difficult to bring perpetrators to justice. Corruption not only consumes
state resources but is also an obstacle to investments in both countries,
since the pristine territories of Sudan are less attractive if they do not
address corruption or achieve security and stop going to war.

The scale of corruption is indicated in statements by Silva Kiir, the
president of South Sudan, who said current and former officials in his
government embezzled $4 billion. The young country has yet to even celebrate
its first anniversary after independence.

Today, after the first round of talks between the two sides failed, Kiir has
called for international arbitration in regions of dispute between the two
states. This may not be acceptable for Khartoum, and even talks took place,
they may not resolve the outstanding issues which require a different
mindset, prioritising good neighbourly relations over conflict, division and
war.

Neither will arbitration resolve disputes; in the past, arbitration was used
in Abyei but the conflict there is not over yet.

 




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Received on Fri Jun 15 2012 - 08:26:10 EDT
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