DW.de: Ateny Wek Ateny - 'It Is the People of South Sudan Who Decide'

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Thu, 23 Oct 2014 16:05:21 +0200

South Sudan: Ateny Wek Ateny - 'It Is the People of South Sudan Who Decide'


interview

By Asumpta Lattus

23 October 2014

The leaders of three East African nations have been visiting South Sudan to
discuss the peace process in the war-torn nation.

Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, Kenyan President Uhuru
Kenyatta and Ugandan Prime Minister Ruhakana Rugunda met South Sudan's
President Salva Kiir in Juba on Wednesday.

The talks came just two days after Kiir and his rival former Vice President
Riek Machar accepted mutual responsibility for ten months of fighting in a
declaration signed in Arusha, Tanzania on Monday. Previous deals between the
two have crumbled within days. Thousands have been killed in the hostilities
which erupted in December 2013 and almost two million have fled their homes.

Q: How close is South Sudan to peace?

The parties came up with a declaration that will actually pave the way for
the fragmented SPLM leadership to be reunited once again, if the agreement
is signed in Addis Ababa. I can say that - based on the Arusha agreement and
on the breakthrough that happened in Bahir Dar in the fifth session of the
IGAD peace process. If the rebels are now able to accept the basis of
negotiation for power sharing, then the breakthrough is likely to be
achieved.

Q: You mentioned the Arusha Declaration - there you agreed to reunite the
divided ruling party. What will this mean for President Salva Kiir?

The declaration talked about the SPLM coming together - to pave the way for
conventions which will actually be the determining factor for the leadership
of the SPLM. It is not for the Arusha Declaration to talk about the future
of President Salva Kiir as the chairman of the Sudan People's Liberation
Movement, but it is the people and the members of the SPLM in a convention
that will decide on the leadership of President Salva Kiir.

Q: Do you think that this will work in South Sudan?

All the things that happened in the eyes of the people of South Sudan -
these are the processes that will be decided by the South Sudanese
themselves.

You say that it is the people of South Sudan who are going to decide, or who
should decide, if they do, or do not, want this or that. But the people who
are fighting - they are not the South Sudanese but rather Salva Kiir and
Riek Machar. What would you say about this?

That's not true, my dear, because these are the leaders of the people.
President Salva Kiir was elected by the people of South Sudan. We are a
democratic country. Should people decide to vote for someone else in the
next election, then President Salva Kiir will leave power. But if the people
of South Sudan still support President Salva Kiir, then President Salva Kiir
is not alone.

Machar was vice president to Salva Kiir and as vice president he was running
mate to the president during the 2010 election. So you cannot say it is
Salva Kiir and Riek Machar that are making the war. It is the war that has
divided the people of South Sudan. So it is the people of South Sudan who
decide at the end of the day.

Q: Was it wrong of the international comnmunity to insist that Preisdent
Salva Kiir and Riek Machar sit down at a table and discuss these things.
Should it have been done differently?

The role of the international community is very much appreciated in South
Sudan. We cannot do without it - we are not an island. So the role of the
international community is correct. But what we do say is that it is equally
important that all exercise of the role of international community has to be
in conjunction with the people of South Sudan, realizing that they also need
peace and it is they who will eventually bring peace to South Sudan.

Ateny Wek Ateny is a spokesman for South Sudan's President Salva Kiir

Interview: Asumpta Lattus
Received on Thu Oct 23 2014 - 10:05:21 EDT

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