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      Sudan: a flawed peace process leading to a flawed peace

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      Review of African Political Economy
      Review of African Political Economy
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            Abstract

            Peace is more than the cessation of military hostilities, more than simple political stability. Peace is the presence of justice and peace building entails addressing factors and forces that stand as impediments to the realisation of all human rights. 1

            The hopes and aspirations of the Sudanese people hang on the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD)2 peace process and there are increasing doubts whether it can deliver lasting peace, much less democracy and justice. It is too early to give up on the process, but not too late to analyse and critique it, in the hope that this will encourage debate and stimulate the Sudanese to take control of the process from self-proclaimed leaders and an ‘international community’ which has not encouraged broad participation. This is all the more important because there is every indication that the flaws discussed below will be repeated in trying to resolve the conflict in Darfur.

            The following points are articulated in the pages that follow: (1) most Sudanese in both the north and south have been denied access to the IGAD peace process; (2) this process has been dominated by a handful of Western states led by the US which have injected their own interests into the process; (3) democracy and justice do not figure highly among their concerns; (4) the peace protocols that have been signed do not adequately address fundamental issues of power sharing, equity, and human rights; (5) the security agreements reached thus far, and the instruments they establish, lack accountability, transparency and professionalism; and (6) given the weaknesses of the peace process, the belligerents are indicating by their actions, if not their words, that they are not discounting the possibility of returning to war.

            Main article text

            Let us begin with an assessment of the importance given to democracy, human rights, transparency, and popular participation in the IGAD peace process. From its inception, this process has been narrowly focused, exclusionary and lacking transparency. This approach was held to be both the best means to reach a peace agreement, and consistent with peace making efforts elsewhere in the world. Based on a comparative study of international experience one analyst concluded that the dominant approach to peace building used by multilateral organisations and governments is ‘top down, externally guided, supply-driven, elitist and interven-tionist;’3 an apt description of the Sudanese case. Progress in the IGAD peace process appears to confirm the validity of this approach, however, as argued here, the use of undemocratic means raises doubts as to whether the resulting peace will prove sustainable. The contention here is that while a democratic transformation of Sudan will not in and of itself guarantee peace, a peace process that is not underpinned by democratic values will assuredly fail.

            Second, the growing domination of the IGAD peace process by the United States and its close allies is examined. While the engagement of the US was critical to putting the peace process on track at a time when it appeared on the verge of collapse, it reinforced the undemocratic approach initiated by the region. Moreover, while US engagement is a necessary component of the peace process, American interests reach beyond Sudan are not necessarily consistent with the objectives of a sustainable peace and democracy.

            After considering the weaknesses in the IGAD peace process, three outcomes will be examined in the latter half of the analysis: first, the various protocols and agreements reached thus far; second, the on-the-ground experience of the various internationally directed security instruments established as a result of the peace process, and lastly, the responses of the Government of Sudan (GoS) and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A) to the emerging political and military environment. The exclusivist narrow approach of the peace process is reflected in the protocols, which concentrate power in the hands of the two belligerents and their leaders, deny the rights of others, and give little consideration to human rights. The security instruments established are informed by the same approaches and values and this can be seen in their narrow mandates, secrecy, and opposition to popular accountability. Lastly, it should be clear that a peace process not informed by democratic values, and increasingly subject to considerations other than peace and democracy, will produce a flawed peace, a peace in which the key actors – the GoS and the SPLM/A – are seriously entertaining the possibility of a breakdown in the peace process and a return to hostilities, rather than directing all their energies to peace, reconstruction, reconciliation and good governance.

            Whither democracy in the peace process

            A thorough examination of IGAD's peace process cannot be considered in this paper. Instead, the paper focuses on the latter stage, beginning with the Machakos Protocol of July 2002, and pays particular attention to the extent that considerations of democracy, human rights, popular participation, and transparency informed the process. It is readily seen that democracy has never been a major concern of either the IGAD mediators or their international backers. But unlike IGAD and its supporters who maintain this approach was necessary to reach an agreement, it is argued that the failure to base the peace process on a commitment to democratic process, democratic values and inclusivity poses the biggest threat to the long-term viability of peace in southern Sudan. Moreover, should the same approach be applied in western Sudan – as appears to be the case – it can be predicted that it will suffer from the same flaws.

            By way of background, suffice to say that IGAD became engaged in the Sudan peace process after the breakdown of internal efforts at reconciliation, the withdrawal of Nigeria from peace-making endeavours, and the failure of other initiatives by the international community.4 IGAD provided a forum and a Declaration of Principles, which the GoS and SPLM/A eventually endorsed, that focused on the critical issues of state and religion and self-determination. Crucially also, the IGAD process gained international legitimacy. Worthy as these achievements were, the belligerent parties moved to serious negotiations only when military pressure was employed. Of particular importance was the support Ethiopia, Eritrea and Uganda gave to the SPLM/A in the mid-1990s. Such support flowed directly from the perceived threat posed to the sovereignty of these states by the GoS's aggressive and expansionist Islamist foreign policy. However, that pressure lifted when the Islamist threat declined in the late 1990s, while Eritrea and Ethiopia began a two year war in mid-1998. With Eritrea and Ethiopia thus engaged, it became vital for them to gain the support, or at least neutrality, of Sudan, their shared neighbour. This reduced the pressure on Sudan, and without it the peace process came to a virtual halt.

            After an extended stalemate, a ‘Troika’ made up of the US, Britain, and Norway stepped into the void. The basic approach of the IGAD process remained the same. It was positive, because it engaged countries from the region, and focused on the separation of state and religion and on self-determination; the principal concerns both of the GoS and the SPLM/A. It was negative, because it reinforced a process that was exclusionary, lacked transparency, and gave short shrift to issues of social inequality and human rights. The rationale for this elitist approach is (1) the negotiations are too complicated to bring in other parties; (2) the more parties that are involved the more difficult it would be to maintain the desired level of secrecy; (3) the GoS and SPLM/A do not want other parties at the negotiation table, because it would lead to further division of resources and power. When it appeared that that these arguments did not carry sufficient weight, IGAD and the Troika promised that other interested parties would be brought into the process after a comprehensive peace agreement was reached.

            This means that additional parties could be tacked on to the process to provide the necessary legitimacy, when they are no longer in a position to influence the outcome of the peace agreement. The result has been to ensure that the parties that gained power through the gun – the GoS and SPLM/A – have the blessing of the international community to reach an agreement, while the Sudanese people and their democratic organisations are reduced to endorsing a done deal.5 Until very recently, it was widely argued that the Somali approach of bringing a multitude of parties to the negotiation table would be daunting, if not chaotic. Nevertheless, the recent success of the Somali peace process challenges this contention and is further reason to question the exclusivist approach of IGAD.

            This approach was reinforced by maintaining a high level of secrecy surrounding the negotiations. IGAD mediators ensured that journalists were given the most cursory overview of the negotiations, and other interested parties were kept physically away from the negotiating teams in Naivasha, Kenya. The GoS and SPLM/A had a shared interest in keeping civil society groups at bay, at least until the final stages of the talks. The Troika endorsed these efforts and further marginalised the IGAD Partners' Forum (IPF), a group of European countries which had backed IGAD's efforts financially and politically over the years. IGAD's member states, especially Ethiopia and Eritrea, which drove the process in its early days, faded from the scene. Kenya, however, the most obliging partner of Western interests in the region, was given precedence by the US led Troika.

            It is hardly surprising that the GoS and SPLM/A would not favour bringing other interested parties into the negotiations, since they systematically excluded demo-cratic participation within their own respective domains. Even key military and political associates of the GoS, such as the South Sudan Defence Force (SSDF), and the Asmara-based National Democratic Alliance (NDA) allied to the SPLM/A, were excluded. Not surprisingly, these groups are now re-appraising their commitment to the peace process. Moreover, the exclusion of major northern political parties, in particular the National Islamic Front, recalls the making and subsequent failure of the Addis Ababa Agreement of 1972, which ended Sudan's first civil war and paved the way for the second.6 It could not be expected that the IGAD countries, all of which practice exclusionary politics, would make a stand on this critical issue. More difficult to accept is why countries like the US, Britain and Norway, that flaunt their concern for democracy world-wide, would endorse this approach.

            Probably the biggest threat posed to the hopes for peace and stability in Sudan is the refusal of IGAD to respond positively to the demand of the rebels in Darfur for their voice to be heard in Naivasha. The Sudan Liberation Movement/Army (SLM/A), the dominant rebel group in Darfur, purposely timed its insurrection as a direct response to the denial of a place for itself at the Naivasha peace talks. It has explicitly stated a fear that power and resources would be divided between the GoS and SPLM/A at the expense of the rest of the country. IGAD and the Troika also rejected demands by the SSDF, NDA, the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), and other groups for a place at the peace talks.

            Corresponding to the absence of wider participation in the peace process is IGAD's approach to human rights. Again one would not expect the GoS and SPLM/A to give priority to such concerns. Likewise with the IGAD countries, all of which have poor records in this respect. However, it is hard to understand the attitude of Western countries that preach the gospel of human rights to the world, bewail abuses in Darfur, and pay for the IGAD Sudan Secretariat which is conducting the negotiations. They cannot have failed to notice that while the belligerents have negotiated a series of protocols on power sharing, wealth-sharing, border territories, the status of Khartoum, self-determination, state and religion, security issues, etc., there is no separate protocol on human rights.

            The only attempt to address human rights were the pro forma statements in the protocol on power sharing. This, in the face of human rights' abuse on an enormous scale by both sides during the course of the twenty-one year long war. While human rights abuses in the South appear to have declined since the signing of the Machakos Accord on 20 July 2002 and the placement of international monitors on the ground, in territories under the control of the GoS and SPLM/A such abuses have continued without interruption throughout the period of negotiations. It seems IGAD's mediators fear human rights are a minefield that would complicate negotiations, and reached a tacit understanding to avoid the subject. This was made easier by the absence of civil society organisations from the negotiations. As a result, the possibility of ordinary Sudanese to bring human rights abuses to light and to hold guilty parties accountable has not been considered. Indeed, there is no public debate underway on what many consider the most critical component of the peace process. IGAD's handover of a monopoly of power to the GoS and SPLM/A will not create an environment conducive to the protection of human rights in any part of the country.

            It should come as no surprise that, apart from agreements on power and wealth-sharing, the gross social inequalities that abound in the country, and the inequitable power relations they reflect, have not been addressed. IGAD, the Troika, the GoS and, most surprisingly, the SPLM/A given its commitment to a New Sudan, have failed to make the link between the pursuit of peace and the redress of economic and social inequities in the country. There has been a minimal effort to consider the development needs of the so-called ‘marginal territories’ of South Blue Nile, Nuba Mountains,7 and Abyei,8 but social inequities hardly stop in these areas, and may be even worse in the West and East of Sudan. Indeed, the political and economic marginalisation of the latter areas has been evident for years, and is now expressing itself in growing insurrections. Nor has there been any consideration of the disparity between the long favoured riverine region and the rest of the country.

            Likewise, there has been no appreciation of class divisions in Sudan, which have widened in recent years due to the dismantling of the country's social safety net in the pursuit of a liberal economy. A recent study identified the early years of NIF rule as unique in Sudan's post-colonial history for deepening poverty and growing inequality.9 Prostitution, begging, and extremes of poverty have increased exponentially in recent years, ignored by the GoS. This is to be expected of the GoS, whose core support comes from the elite of northern riverine tribes long politically and economically dominant in Sudan. But it shows the ideological vacuum of the SPLM/A which, in the scramble for the spoils of power, seems to have lost its commitment to build a ‘New Sudan’ free of inequities. It also shows the shallow approach to the peace process of the Troika countries and their endorsement of economic liberalism that, in the case of Sudan has led to an enormous growth in poverty and social tensions.

            US engagement in Sudan: The countries of IGAD took an interest in the Sudan peace process when their own security was threatened by the civil war and the aggressive Islamist foreign policy of the GoS. When that threat receded, or, when more significant security threats emerged (as was the case with the Ethio-Eritrean war), then their interest in the peace process declined. The US and its allies stepped into the void for a number of reasons that will be considered below, but like the countries of the region, their own security concerns increasingly came to the fore.

            The US injected life into the peace process when it was on the verge of collapse. Its interests were not confined to achieving a sustainable peace, and even less to bringing about Sudan's democratic transformation. They included a response to domestic interests, the religious affiliation of President Bush and, increasingly, its own security concerns. The Congressional Black Caucus, human rights activists, a petroleum industry upset by its exclusion from potentially lucrative oil discoveries in Sudan, and the Christian Right, all pressed for intensified engagement in Sudan under both the Clinton and Bush administrations. But it was the latter that put Sudan on its agenda, and it must be assumed that the interests of the petroleum industry and the Christian Right, carried the decisive weight. The Christian Right has long sympathised with the SPLM/A, believing simplistically that Sudan's civil war pitted Arab Moslems against African Christians. President Bush himself drew inspiration from religious groups in his home town of Midland, Texas and his close friendship with prominent evangelists Billy and Franklin Graham, all of whom pressed for a deepening US engagement in Sudan and its peace process. Support for the peace process also seemed the best approach for American oil companies to re-enter a territory they had unceremoniously been forced to leave two decades ago, and to gain the GoS the international legitimacy that would justify the US Congress revoking its trade and investment embargo against Sudan.

            The first and most significant indication of a growing US interest was Bush's appointment of Senator John Danforth, an ordained Episcopal minister, as his special peace envoy.10 The fact that this crucial appointment was made five days before the events of 9/11 have led some to believe that American interest in Sudan cannot be attributed to security concerns. However, 9/11 had the effect of intensifying an already growing American security interest in Sudan. US concerns began with Khartoum's pursuit of an aggressive Islamist foreign policy, which was foremost directed against countries in the region, many of whom were America's allies. The US was also alarmed at Sudan's ties with international Islamist terrorist organisations, and its support for Iraq during the first Gulf War. Apprehension reached its height in the wake of Sudanese Government alleged complicity in the attempted assassination of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in Addis Ababa in June 1995.11 In response, Clinton supported the efforts of Egypt and Ethiopia to gain UN support for an embargo against Sudan, and in 1997 issued a Presidential Executive Order imposing unilateral sanctions against the country. The US also provided US$20 million worth of military equipment to Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Uganda to defend themselves against Sudanese Islamist aggression. Tension increased further when the US accused Sudan – almost certainly erroneously – of manufacturing chemical weapons, and on thebasis of evidence that has never been produced, bombed a pharmaceutical plant in Khartoum in August 1998.

            There is thus good reason to accept the widely held perception in the region that US policy under Clinton favoured overthrowing the Islamist regime in Khartoum, and the motives driving this policy were based more on security than humanitarian concerns. But since US foreign policy is invariably dressed in high moral garb, the American engagement in Sudan was given a humanitarian rationale. Simultaneously, the US developed close ties with the GoS in the field of intelligence in order to gain information on Islamist groups, particularly Al Qaida led by Osama bin Laden who had lived in Sudan for five years as a guest of the Islamist government. By all accounts, the GoS met the expectations of the US in the supply of intelligence information.

            Gaining intelligence information, defeating Islamist terrorism, ensuring the security of its allies in the region, on the one hand and, on the other, a growing perception that America's own security was linked to the outcome of conflicts like that in Sudan, all led the US to play a leading role in the Sudan peace process. The more US interests and prestige were at stake in the process, the more important it became to ensure the continuing viability of the two parties – the SPLM/A and the GoS – whether or not that was in the interests of the Sudanese people, or would produce a sustainable peace. Effectively this put the US in the curious position of providing critical support to the Islamist government in Khartoum, at a time when it was leading an international crusade against political Islam. As American engagement in Sudan intensified, the participation of countries from the region, apart from Kenya, in the peace process declined, and broader geopolitical and security issues came to the fore.

            There is reason to believe that Sudan's petroleum reserves figured in US Government calculations, given the desire of American oil companies to regain a position in that country, Washington's standing policy designed to diversify energy supplies, and the Bush Administration's perception that links energy supplies with the security of the United States.12 Moreover, the fact that there are strong links between Bush and other key members of his government with the oil industry means that concerns over oil straddle domestic political concerns and national security interests. While American domestic considerations figured before 9/11, there is little doubt that security interests in Sudan predominated after that pivotal date.

            Nonetheless, because of its involvement in Iraq, the US has not taken an overwhelmingly dominant position in the Sudan peace process. Instead it has worked through the auspices of IGAD, and has allowed itself to be influenced by its Troika partners. As a result, in marked contrast to US engagement in Somalia, Afghanistan and Iraq, Washington has faced little international opposition to its policies in Sudan. Indeed, not only have the GoS and SPLM/A both welcomed American engagement in the peace process, but so have the other major groups in Sudan and the countries of the region.

            While a measured US interest in Sudan has ensured a more balanced approach to the peace process, it has not generated support for dealing with the social and political inequities that caused the civil war in the south and Darfur. US support for democracy in Sudan has been ritualistic, and takes the form of support for the so-called Washington consensus restricted to multi-partyism and an open economy.13 At no time has the US shown sympathy, much less support, for a democratic transformation in Sudan. In fact. past American involvement in Sudan includes extended support for the military dictatorship of Jafar Nimeiri and his Islamist allies (including the party of Hassan Al-Turabi), and a contentious relationship with the elected government of Sadig Al-Mahdi; few tears were shed in Washington when the latter government was overthrown by the military in 1989.

            Having considered the commitment of IGAD mediators and the Troika to democracy in the peace process, and made clear the vital role the US has played in the latter and crucial stages of that process, and how its growing interests in security both shaped that process and reduced the significance of concerns of democracy and justice, it is now necessary to examine the outcomes of the peace process. Two outcomes will be considered below: (1) the protocols produced by the IGAD negotiations, (2) the security regime and security instruments established. The objective is to examine the protocols with respect to the key concerns of this paper, namely their commitment to a sustainable peace, democratic governance and social equity Our discussion will end with an examination of how the GoS and SPLM/A are positioning themselves in the wake of a peace process whose outcome is at best tenuous, where they, not the Sudanese people, will hold virtually all power.

            Protocols & agreements: Statism vs. Liberation

            Under the Power Sharing Protocol. the President of Sudan will be from the regime's National Congress Party, (NCP) currently Omar Al-Bashir, and the first vice-president will be the leader of the SPLM, that is, of course, Dr. John Garang.14 The same Dr. John Garang will head the government of the South and in addition, will be commander-in-chief of the SPLA, the principal army in southern Sudan throughout the interim period. Some critics see this as a formula designed by the GoS to let Garang and his supporters grab the lion's share of power and thus precipitate tribal conflict in the South. The GoS argues that giving power to Garang will bolster his authority and reduce the threat of fragmentation, and also make clear to Southerners that real, and not symbolic, power has passed to them. Whatever may be the case, the result is the same: a rhetorical commitment to democracy and empowerment of the masses when, in fact, precisely the opposite is being institutionalised.

            Further evidence of the trend towards centralised power can be seen in the distribution of seats in the National Assembly: the National Congress Party will get 52% of the seats, SPLM 28%, other northern parties 14%, and other southern parties 6%. The ‘other northern parties’ won more than 75% of the votes in the last democratic election of 1986, when the NCP (then the National Islamic Front) won 15% of the vote, and the other 10% was distributed among a number of small parties, mostly from the south. The SPLM did not participate in the elections. There is reason to believe that the historically dominant parties of the north – the Umma Party and Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) – have lost support, and regional-based parties may have gained strength. But there is absolutely no reason to assume that the NCP and the SPLM come anywhere near representing 80% of the Sudanese people.

            According to the Power Sharing Protocol, the Interim National Constitution and the National Constitution can be changed with a vote of 75% of the two chambers of Parliament. With 80% of the seats in those chambers, the SPLM and the GoS have the power to make such changes as they wish. With respect to southern Sudan, the SPLM is to be granted 70% of the seats in the Transitional Assembly, and the Protocol further stipulates that the Constitution of Southern Sudan can be changed with a two-thirds vote of that Assembly. The SPLM is given a stranglehold over both the southern regional administration and the constitution that underpins that administration.

            According to the Protocol, ‘The President shall be elected in national elections, the timing of which shall be subject to the agreement of the two parties.’15 In other words, there is only a vague commitment to democratic elections, the decision will be made by the GoS and SPLM/A alone, and there is no clear statement about when elections will be held. The unstated SPLM/A preference is not to hold national elections during the entire interim period of six years, while the NCP recognised that this position is indefensible and advocated holding elections during the first year of a signed peace agreement. The NCP took this position because it is the best prepared organisationally and financially to contest such elections. Moreover, it knew its proposal would in any case be opposed by the SPLM/A, which would accordingly suffer embarrassment. The proposal did cause the SPLM/A embarrassment, but the GoS may have overestimated the desire of the international community for elections.

            There have been remarkably few statements by the US on the need for national elections, presumably because once the Americans jumped into bed with the NCP and the SPLM/A, they became concerned with the survival of their bedfellows. Elections could threaten both signatories of the peace agreement, and might bring parties into the government that are not committed to the peace process. Once more, the majority northern population who have never given their support to the NCP, and large sections of the South who may well support the SPLM/A when it comes to self-determination, but may not otherwise support this movement, have their rights circumscribed in order to reach a peace agreement which, in any case is deeply flawed.

            The SPLM/A vision of a New Sudan in which state and religion are separated, and followers of all religions enjoy political rights, attracted widespread support among Moslems in all parts of the country. From its inception, the NCP's legitimacy has been based on its commitment to Islam and the implementation of sharia, or more accurately, its own version of sharia. Clearly the two conflicting visions of Sudan are not easy to compromise, nor should they, because the former is consistent with democratic values, while the latter entails a rejection of these values. The compromise reached by the diplomats of IGAD stipulates that state and religion would be separated in the South, and citizens there would be permitted to practice, or not practice religion, as they see fit. On the other hand, the imposition of sharia in the North deprives Moslems in that region of the basic right to practise the religion of their choice according to their wishes, not as dictated by the NCP. The Troika states, which espouse separation of religion and state in their own countries, have endorsed the forceful implementation of sharia on Moslems in northern Sudan. Either due to a desire for a quick agreement, or the simplistic characterisation of Southerners – of whom only a minority are Christians – as the only victims of the war, the backers of the peace process have denied the Moslem majority of northern Sudan the basic right to decide whether they want the version of Islam which has been imposed on them. Ironically, while the United States professes to be leading a war against authoritarian Islamism, it is denying the right of moderate Moslems in Sudan – possibly a majority – to be rid of a sharia imposed on them by a government that came to power not through democratic elections, but by overthrowing a democratically elected government.

            Finally, the same cavalier attitude can be seen with respect to broader concerns of human rights. Various rights are ritualistically acknowledged in the Power Sharing Protocol, and it was agreed to establish a Human Rights Commission. Such formulae typically appear in all modern constitutions, irrespective of whether the state respects them or not. The failure of the Protocol to consider how the rights it so readily grants can be implemented. No details are provided on the mandate of the Human Rights Commission, when it is to be established, who is to serve on it, and whether there will be any role for civil society.

            It is not the intention here to carry out a critique of the Wealth Sharing Protocol, only to comment on the extent to which it speaks to issues of democracy, transparency and social equity. The prevailing practice of the GoS in keeping secret essential information regarding oil revenues has been reinforced in the Protocol.16 An academic analyst bewails what is meant by NGO oversight and concludes: ‘The parties act as if it were not the case that every single African country, except Botswana, has completely mismanaged natural resource wealth.’17 While the 1997 Khartoum Peace Agreement concluded with southern opponents of the SPLM/A granted the regional states possessing oil 40% of the resulting revenue, the IGAD agreement grants them only 2%.18 In tribally conscious southern Sudan it is noted that Riek Macher negotiated the first agreement which would have benefited his fellow Nuers, since most of the oil recovered thus far has been in their homeland, while John Garang, a Dinka, negotiated the second agreement. It can be argued that the GoS had no intention of carrying out the Khartoum Agreement. Nevertheless, the Wealth Sharing Protocol is striking both in its lack of concern for tribal sensitivities, and for what it says about federalism and the access of southern states to revenues. There is no doubt that the division of the oil windfall between two factions has angered other communities in the country, notably but not exclusively in the West, which feel marginalised and entitled to a share of the wealth.

            Much SPLM/A capital and many lives were expended to establish a military presence in the border territories of the Nuba Mountains, South Blue Nile, and Abyei.19 Critical to the SPLM/A's appeal to the people of these territories was its commitment to hold a referendum to determine their future status. In the case of the Nuba Mountains and South Blue Nile, the SPLM/A was not able to negotiate for a vote on self-determination. Moreover, during the first stage of the interim period until elections are held, both the governor and the legislators in these regions will come exclusively from the NCP and the SPLM. SPLM and NCP appointees will each hold the position of governor for eighteen months and the legislature will be made up of representatives of the NCP and SPLM – 55% for the former and 45% for the latter. After the first three years (although this period is not clearly stated) both the governorship and legislature will be elected. Provision is also made for these ‘marginalised territories’ to receive a increased share of national revenues. Continuing insecurity in South Blue Nile and lack of trust between the belligerents has not been overcome by two years of intensive negotiations, and the people of this region have had no opportunity to debate their future.

            Reaching an agreement on power sharing and the division of responsibilities no doubt is a considerable achievement. However, many Sudanese see it differently. In the first instance, it sanctions regimes in the North and South that do not hold power as a result of democratic elections. In the second instance, it empowers small groups from the North and South at the expense of marginalised groups elsewhere in the country. The decision by IGAD to divided a major natural resource (oil) between the two parties permitted to participate in the peace talks has cause anger in other parts of the country which feel as marginalised as the South. Indeed, as noted, the SLA has drawn attention to this iniquity which influenced its decision to launch an insurrection in western Sudan. In the East, disgruntled groups like the Beja Congress vow to continue their struggle and to make an alliance with the SLA. There is a real danger that the legacy of the Naivasha protocols will not be a sustainable peace, but the cause of deepening and widening conflict in Sudan.

            Security regime during the pre-interim period: A crucial indicator of success of the IGAD peace process to date, as well as a harbinger for the future, is the security regime that has been established in the south in the wake of the Machakos Protocol. This is the product of efforts by both IGAD and the US special envoy for peace, Senator John Danforth. A Cessation of Hostilities Agreement was reached by the GoS and SPLM/A,20 and Danforth's proposals led to the establishment of mechanisms to monitor security in the Nuba Mountains, and to ensure civilians elsewhere in the war-affected areas were not harmed by armed groups. The agreement led to the formation of the following bodies: the Verification Monitoring Team (VMT), the Joint Military Commission (JMC) for the Nuba Mountains, and the Civilian Protection Monitoring Team (CPMT).21 These are to remain in effect until the advent of a final peace agreement, a comprehensive ceasefire agreement, and the official commencement of the interim period. The security regime during the interim period is covered by the IGAD negotiated Security Arrangements Agreement.22 Thus an examination of these four agreements and the instruments that the first three gave rise to, speaks strongly to the objectives and values of those leading the peace process, as well as providing insight into the future direction of that process.

            Not surprisingly, such an examination reinforces many of the conclusions drawn above. That is, the security regime established lacks transparency, does not engage the Sudanese people, is captive to the interests of the GoS and SPLM/A and, most significantly, human rights have been interpreted very narrowly. Expediency, the lack of experience of the monitors, and the desire to protect well paid jobs has won out over a committed effort to provide a secure environment for southern Sudanese and the opportunity for them to rebuild their homeland. As a result, while conditions have improved since these various security agreements came into effect and international monitors took up positions in southern Sudan, the change is of a quantitative and not qualitative character, and many people, particularly the inhabitants of Upper Nile and South Blue Nile, still live under conditions of great insecurity.

            That fact that violence continues in Upper Nile is not surprising for a number of reasons. First, most of the SSDF components are made up of Nuers based in Upper Nile. The Nuers are among the most aggressive of the southern tribes and the most easily aroused against the Dinkas, who are held to dominate the SPLM/A. Lastly, and perhaps most significantly, Upper Nile encompasses the oil fields, which have become critical to the survival of the regime in Khartoum, and have been a bone of violent contention since they came on-stream.

            Asset stripping in Upper Nile has not stopped as a result of the Civilian Protection and Cessation of Hostilities Agreement. Theft of cattle figures prominently in the reports of CPMT,23 and there is little indication that investigation of these thefts have constrained the behaviour of the armed groups that carried them out. A history of cattle raiding, a regime of lawlessness, and the breakdown of traditional tribal values as a result of the war, to some extent explain this thievery. Theft of cattle, the principal source of wealth in Upper Nile, has long been a critical means for weakening enemies, and it is sanctioned both by the GoS and the SPLM/A. In addition, the GoS relies to a considerable extent on this practise to support its militia allies.

            The question that must be raised is how effective has this security regime been in responding to the continuing crisis in Upper Nile? To begin with virtually none of the CPMT monitors and the international staff of VMT had been in Sudan before taking up their positions, and few of them even began to appreciate the problem. Even less do they have a understanding of human rights principles and laws and their application, and there were given no instruction in these subjects. People with knowledge of the security problems in southern Sudan are either kept out of these organisations or marginalised within them, and this in turn encourages a narrow military perspective on what – in the case of CPMT – ought to be a strong focus on human rights. Having been assigned a virtually impossible task – monitoring human rights abuses in Sudan by people who know little about human rights and less about Sudan – the leadership has retreated into a world that focuses on logistics, control, procedures, mobility and attempting to create the appearance of competence in the face of its absence. This is best achieved by maintaining a distance from Sudanese civil society, international NGOs, the UN agencies, other monitoring agencies and the media. The inability of the managers to comprehend, much less carry out, their existing mandates means they interpret their mission as narrowly as possible. The best examples of this are CPMT's failure to deploy in Darfur despite numerous opportunities, and its weak presence in eastern Sudan. Managers either did not understand the issues at stake or clearly did not want to risk the wrath of the GoS in the former case, or the SPLM/A in the latter.24

            Like the protocols, the Security Arrangements Agreement suffers from a failure to recognise the existence of parties other than the GoS and the SPLM/A. Against all evidence to the contrary, the agreement states there are only two military forces on the ground in southern Sudan.25 From the inception of the conflict in 1983 (and arguably 1976 when Anyanya II first launched attacks against the GoS), the SPLM/A has never achieved undisputed control in the South. Besides Anyanya II, there has been a plethora of tribal militias opposed to the SPLM/A, particularly in Equatoria. Furthermore, in addition to the breakaway groups of Riek Macher and Lam Akol, there are also the South Sudan Liberation Movement in eastern Upper Nile, the large grouping of the South Sudan Defence Forces, numerous village based militias, and an almost indeterminate number of other factions, some of which emerged as a result of local conditions, and others created by the GoS (see Young, 2003). The SPLM/A has never controlled large areas of southern Sudan. For its part, without the support of its powerful southern allies, the GoS army would only control a small territory in the south, largely restricted to key towns.

            It is commonly argued that the other groups are ‘controlled’ either by the GoS or the SPLM/A. Under the Security Arrangements Agreement, it is assumed that the third largest armed group in the South – the SSDF – operates completely at the behest of the GoS army, and it is not even referred to by name in that document or in the Civilian Protection and Cessation of Hostilities Agreements. That disparate southern groups, particularly the Nuer who make up the majority of the SSDF, could be completely controlled by any other force is a joke to anyone familiar with these highly independent people. The ‘alliance’ between the GoS and the SSDF is officially based on the Khartoum Peace Agreement of 1997, but this agreement has been disowned by the government. As far as the SSDF is concerned, the continuing relationship between the two groups that have little in common (for example, the GoS naturally supports the unity of Sudan, while the SSDF has consistently favoured separation) is now based on three factors: (1) a sense of humiliation at being denied recognition; (2) tribal enmity, much of it directed against the Dinka and John Garang; (3) the receipt of material benefits and the sanctioning of asset stripping of civilians deemed to support the SPLM/A.26 None of these factors gives reason to expect a stable or enduring relationship between the GoS and the SSDF, much less to build the Security Arrangements Agreement around such a premise, as IGAD and the Troika have done.

            The major ally of the SPLM/A are the factions that make up the NDA. But again the notion that the SPLM/A controls, or even consistently exerts a dominant influence over the NDA, is erroneous. These northern groups gravitated to an alliance of convenience with the SPLM/A because of their shared opposition to the National Congress government. This coming together has never been anything more than a tactical alliance without any hope of achieving a shared longterm vision. Indeed, how could it be otherwise? The only group with any proven electoral constituency in the NDA is the DUP, which has more factions than can be counted, has a religious core around Osman Al-Mirghani, is committed to parliamentary politics, and is irrevocably opposed to southern separation. Meanwhile, the SPLM/A professes secularism, is opposed to the post-independence dominance of sectarian parties like the DUP, and Garang's words not withstanding, the SPLM/A's constituency supports a separate southern Sudan. Not surprisingly, the NDA has never functioned with any political coherence. As a military organisation it is overwhelmingly dominated by the SPLA, with the other groups largely reduced to providing a fig leaf of legitimacy. The only thing that has given the NDA credibility is the consistent support it has received from the Eritrean government, but that has been a mixed blessing since it has meant the organisation has sometimes been a hostage to the security interests of Asmara.

            The notion that the GoS and SPLM/A have reliable allies they control and have the authority to represent in the IGAD negotiations seems a clumsy attempt to justify the exclusion of groups that have every right to speak on their own behalf in negotiations that effect their interests. As with almost every component of the negotiations, the IGAD mediators and the Troika have chosen the undemocratic option of giving exclusive authority to two groups that have no democratic legitimacy – the GoS and the SPLM/A – to represent the interests of other groups, some of which – like the DUP – can actually claim democratic legitimacy. IGAD and the Troika have also established a security regime whose performance is weak, lacks experienced personnel, stresses narrow mandates, opposes transparency, and resists popular accountability. Against this background it is not surprising that while talking the language of peace, distrust between the belligerents is as high now as it was when negotiations commenced,.

            Talking peace and preparing for its breakdown: Neither the GoS or the SPLM/A entered the IGAD peace process willingly, nor have they been prepared to accept far-reaching compromises. Since neither party ‘won’ the war, neither is in a position to dictate the peace. Not only was neither party prepared to negotiate from a position of weakness, but the instability of conditions in Sudan, and broadly in the Horn of Africa, led each of them to conclude that if they could hang on a little longer their fortunes would change. Experience has largely reinforced this assessment, and it has underpinned their approach to negotiations. While appearing amenable to influence by outside forces, notably Ethiopia, Eritrea and Uganda in the mid-1990s, and the US-led Troika in recent years, both the SPLM/A and the NCP have learned that outside influences and powers rise and decline, and neither expects anything different from those presently directing the IGAD peace process. Indeed, both parties have almost certainly deconstructed the rhetoric of the IGAD mediation team and the US-led Troika, and found – just as this analysis has – objectives at variance with those of a sustainable peace, and a less than a firm commitment to the peace process.

            Maintaining hegemony in south and north Sudan respectively is the bottom line for the SPLM/A and the NCP. The IGAD mediators and the Troika have proved highly sympathetic to these objective. With the acceptance of the SPLM/A demands for a referendum on southern self-determination, the maintenance of its own standing army in the lead up to that vote, secularism in the South, and a 50% share of the oil wealth, it feels vindicated and reasonably secure. It is hard to imagine how Garang could have come out of the IGAD peace process with greater personal power. While formally committed to a New Sudan and the unity of the country, the SPLM/A can claim it is on the path to separation, a goal supported by the majority in the South.

            For its part, the NCP gained a guarantee from IGAD that sharia would be institutionalised throughout northern Sudan. Although the imperative of political survival has long overtaken its ideological commitments, this party still needs the fig leaf of retaining sharia to bolster its claim of defending Islam and justify its existence, when challenged by its hard core fundamentalist wing and other religious-based parties in the North, notably that of Turabi. Those among the leadership of the NCP who see the South as an obstacle to the Islamist agenda and hold that it should be abandoned, can be told that the IGAD peace process guarantees the existence of sharia in the north and fends off the threat of SPLM/A secularism. For others who are concerned with the right to self-determination granted to the South, the NCP government can point to the support given by IGAD and the Troika for national unity, and the opportunities provided in the interim six year period to dampen southern support for independence. Given the expectation that international concern with Sudan will decline over the long interim period, some in the NCP will be encouraged by the prospect that southerners, once more, can be turned against themselves.

            Conclusion

            Under the direction of the US-led Troika, IGAD has managed a peace process that is unlikely to lead to sustainable peace, and even less likely to result in Sudan's democratic transformation. By failing to address the power inequities that are at the core of Sudan's multiple crises, and failing to appreciate that conflict resolution in the periphery requires transformation at the centre, it ensures that civil strife which already has spread from southern Sudan to the West will spread to other parts of the country. In restricting ourselves to a consideration of the South, the weaknesses of the peace process can be said to begin with a lack of a commitment to democratic values, the failure to bring other political forces and civil society organisations into the process, the absence of transparency of the process itself, the endorsement of power sharing by two parties that have no democratic credentials, the weakness of the security instruments in the lead up to the comprehensive peace agreement, and the divergent objectives of the US, particularly with respect to security.

            Notes

            Footnotes

            1. Alejandro Bendana, ‘What King of Peace is Being Built? Critical Assessments from the South’,International Development Research Centre, Ottawa (January 2003), p. 8.

            2. IGAD is a regional body of countries made up of Eritrea, Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya, Djibouti,and nominally Somalia.

            3. Alejandro Bendana, IGAD is a regional body of countries made up of Eritrea, Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya, Djibouti,and nominally Somalia. p. 4.

            4. Ann Mosely Lesch, Sudan: Contested National Identities, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1998, pp. 172–180.

            5. It is striking that the three major non-government parties in the north – Umma Party,Democratic Unionist Party, and the Popular National Congress – have all issued statements in the first half of 2004 with similar messages: first, they call for a democratic transformation of Sudan, a project they see as being absent in the IGAD peace process; second, they appeal for inclusivity in the peace process, by which they mean their participation, and lastly, they broadly endorse the peace process. See ‘Statement of the Democratic Unionist Party – Sudan Issues of Peace and the Interim’ (no date provided), ‘Towards a National Peace Agreement And a Program For Democratic Transformation’, National Umma Party (9 April 2004), and H.E.M. Adan, Deputy Secretary-General Popular National Congress Party, ‘Press Statement’ (28 January 2004).

            6. Ann Mosely Lesch, Sudan: Contested National Identities, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1998, pp. 50–54.

            7. Protocol between the Government of Sudan (GOS) and the Sudan People's LiberationMovement/Army (SPLM/A) on the Resolution of Conflict in Southern Kordofan/Nuba Mountains and South Blue Nile, Naivasha, Kenya (26 May 2004).

            8. Protocol between the Government of Sudan and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army on the Resolution of the Abyei Conflict, Naivasha, Kenya (26 May 2004).

            9 Khalid Ali El Amin, ‘The Economics and Politics of Poverty Reproduction in Sudan 1990–2000’, University of Khartoum, Institute of Development Studies and Research, Khartoum (August 2003).

            10. See, John Danforth, Special Envoy for Peace, ‘Report to the President of the United States onthe Outlook for Peace in Sudan’ (26 April 2002).

            11. Middle East Times, Cairo (10 September 1995).

            12. Dick Cheney, US Vice President recommended in the Administration's National EnergyReport that, ‘the president make energy security a priority of our trade and foreign policy’. Lutz Kleveman, ‘The New ‘Great Game’, The Nation (16 February 2004).

            13. Rita Abrahamsen, Disciplining Democracy: Development Discourse and Good Governance in Africa, London: Zed Books, 2000), p. x.

            14. Protocol between the Government of Sudan (GOS) and the Sudan People's LiberationMovement (SPLM) on Power Sharing, Naivasha, Kenya (Wednesday, 26 May 2004).

            15. Protocol between the Government of Sudan (GOS) and the Sudan People's LiberationMovement (SPLM) on Power Sharing, Naivasha, Kenya (Wednesday, 26 May 2004).

            16. Agreement on Wealth Sharing During the Pre-Interim and the Interim Period, Government of the Republic of Sudan and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army, (Saturday 10 January 2004).

            17. Michael Kevane, ‘Commentary on Wealth-Sharing Agreement signed at Naivasha’,www.sudan.net

            18. Republic of the Sudan, ‘The Sudan Peace Agreement’, Khartoum (21 April 1997).

            19. Protocol between the Government of Sudan (GOS) and the Sudan People's LiberationMovement/Army (SPLM/A) on the Resolution of Conflict in Southern Kordofan/Nuba Mountains and South Blue Nile, Naivasha, Kenya (26 May 2004), and the Protocol between the Government of Sudan and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army on the Resolution of the Abyei Conflict, Naivasha, Kenya 26 May 2004).

            20. Memorandum of Understanding Between the Government of Sudan and the Sudan People'sLiberation Movement/Army on the Cessation of Hostilies, Naivasha (15 October 2002).

            21. For a more comprehensive analysis of the role of these security organs, see ‘Insecurity inSouth Sudan: A Challenge to the IGAD Peace Process’, www.iss.co.za.

            22. Agreement on Security Arrangements during the Interim Period, Naivasha 25 September2003).

            23. See CPMT reports on www.cpmtsudan.org

            24. See ‘Insecurity in South Sudan: A Challenge to the IGAD Peace Process’, www.iss.co.za

            25. See ‘South Sudan Defence Force: A Challenge to the IGAD Peace Process’, www.iss.co.za.

            26. See ‘South Sudan Defence Force: A Challenge to the IGAD Peace Process’, www.iss.co.za.

            Author and article information

            Journal
            crea20
            CREA
            Review of African Political Economy
            Review of African Political Economy
            0305-6244
            1740-1720
            March 2005
            : 32
            : 103
            : 99-113
            Affiliations
            Article
            10324644 Review of African Political Economy, Vol. 32, No. 103, March 2005, pp. 99–113
            10.1080/03056240500121008
            9b56e52b-3300-4a93-808d-ed91ee03d6f5

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            Sociology,Economic development,Political science,Labor & Demographic economics,Political economics,Africa

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