Category Archives: Sudan

People of South Sudan – Your Opinions on the Transitional Constitution

From: Yona F Maro

Attention People of South Sudan!
The Southern Sudan Legislative Assembly Wants To Hear Your Opinions on the Transitional Constitution.

The Southern Sudan Legislative Assembly (SSLA) would like to invite civil society, interest groups, political parties and anyone with public interest in the South Sudan Transitional Constitution to submit comments and questions to a meeting of the constitutional review clusters. This is a unique opportunity for you to express your opinions about the South Sudan Transitional Constitution directly to your elected representatives. Two sessions will be held:

Parliamentary Cluster on Bill of Rights on Monday, 6 June 2011; 10:00 AM
• Human Rights
• Rights of South Sudanese citizens
• Rights of Women and Children
• Religious Freedom
• Freedom of Expression

Parliamentary Cluster on the Executive and Legislature on Tuesday, 7 June 2011; 10:00 AM
• Establishment of National Government
• Powers of the President
• Powers of the Legislature

What: SSLA Public Forums on Transitional Constitution
When: Monday, 6 June 2011 and Tuesday, 7 June 2011
Where: Nyakuron Cultural Center- Meeting Room
Time: 10:00 AM – 1:00 PM

* All media are welcome

For more information, contact:

International Republican Institute (IRI)
+249(0)909094953

Kenya, Sudan, Uganda: SOUTH SUDAN AND LUOS

From: Paul Nyandoto

Papa Likondi,

I have never seen an animal who write and read and uses internet and has even gone and opened an e-mail account as you have did. men you have made it very high, you are even better than the animals mentioned in George Orwell`s book ( the animal farm). But this thing you are now talking about luos. Does it concern only luos or it affects also Bantus. Because in Africa there had been allot of Bantu movements even from South Africa up to Nairobi long time ago. Do not forget that it was the Masais who are nilotics who gave nairobi such a beautiful name, since a lot of Bantus were being done by Arabs and never thought of any nomenclature. I would advice luos to remain in Kenya, Acholis to remain in Uganda, the southern Sudan luos or nilotic brothers to remain there and the nilotic in Democratic republic of Congo, Ruanda, Tanzania also to stay put, such that they can make the greater luo empire. I definitely think that from that empire Africa can also have a proud history, since we are already tired of the old history like slaves, slavery, slave trade, colonialism, corruption, tribalism, thieves, cannibalism: MEN it is just dirty past, nothing to make Africans be proud of the continent, because even Gold or oil in Africa is just benefiting non Africans. An African man hardly make enough to buy diamond for his loved one at a time when Africa is the largest diamond producer..

Paul Nyandoto

– – – – – – – – – – –

>>> Papa Likondi >>>

We are aware that the Luos ran away from South Sudan when there was war at the beginning of the 18th Century. Now that the war is over and they have been given freedom by the North, I think they should start packing their belongings and go rebuild their country.
The Land they occupy now, around Lake Victoria belongs to the Banyore who were squeezed in some rocky place in Western Kenya. We are willing to occupy our ancestral land Kisumu City any time they leave which any case should not be later than 14rh February 2012.

THE AFRICAN UNION APPLAUDS THE SUCCESS OF THE REFERENDUM IN SOUTHERN SUDAN

fromYona F Maro

PRESS RELEASE

Addis Ababa, 8 February 2011:

The Chairperson of the African Union Commission, Jean Ping, congratulates the people of Sudan and their leaders on the occasion of the official announcement by the South Sudan Referendum Commission, on 7 February 2011, of the results of the Referendum on self?determination in Southern Sudan.

The Chairperson, recalling the solemn declaration on the Sudan adopted by the AU Summit of January 2011, expresses his conviction that with the completion of this referendum, Sudan has decisively overcome its tragic history of division and its exceptional legacy inherited from its past. In recognition of the Sudan’s unique political circumstances, Africa recognized the right of self?determination for the people of southern Sudan, and supported the free and fair exercise of this right. Indeed, the AU will be keen, at the end of the interim period, on 9 July 2011, to welcome into its ranks the 54th member state of the Union.

The Chairperson applauds the leadership and unswerving commitment to peace of President Omar Hassan al Bashir and First Vice President Salva Kiir Mayardit that have made possible this triumph. He further expresses his gratitude to the Southern Sudan Referendum Commission, its Chairman Professor Mohamed Ibrahim Khalil and Deputy Chairman Justice Chan Madut, for the extraordinary efforts they deployed to ensure a successful outcome of the referendum, which was held in a timely, credible and peaceful manner.

The Chairperson welcomes the immediate acceptance of the results of the referendum by the Government of Sudan and its readiness to proceed expeditiously to conclude all necessary steps to ensure the speedy and peaceable establishment of the independent state of Southern Sudan.

The Chairperson is confident that the Sudanese parties will successfully conclude all outstanding matters necessary for the completion of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement and will soon agree on all post?referendum issues necessary for the establishment of two viable and mutually supportive states. In this regard, he reiterates his unwavering support to the work of the African Union High?Level Implementation Panel led by former President Thabo Mbeki, for its facilitation of the negotiations between the Parties.

Sudan: Second MM report on Sudan Referendum

From: Yona Maro

Dear all

Please find attached the second MM report of referendum in Sudan, Media Coverage: Findings and Conclusions. Period 16 December 2010– 15 January 2011.

This report contains the main findings concerning media coverage of the referendum campaign, of the silence period as well as of the voting days. This is the second report to be produced on media monitoring activities conducted by SMEC1. Monthly reports will be published in February and March with a final report in April 2011.

Feel free to use it as it suits you in your media and for your information.

– – – – – – – – – – – – –

Page 3
Sudan Media and Elections Consortium – Media MonitoringTABLE OF CONTENTSFOREWORD1EXECUTIVE SUMMARY2II. MEDIA AND 2011 REFERENDUM4A. SUDAN MEDIA SECTOR:AN OVERVIEW OF THE MAIN ISSUES AND CHALLENGES4B. MEDIA BACKGROUND TO2011 REFERENDUM5II. MONITORING MEDIA COVERAGE OF REFERENDUM: MAIN FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS81. GENERAL MEDIA OFFER92. REFERENDUMCOVERAGE ON TELEVISION AND RADIO123. REFERENDUMCOVERAGE IN THE PRINT MEDIA164. THE REFERENDUM MORATORIUM AND VOTING DAYS PERIODS20ANNEX I – LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS21
——————-

MM_Report_2_26jan.pdf
739K

Read or d/l document

Sudan: Vs: Bashir backs south’s independence :-)

From: Paul Nyandoto

Basir was drunk when he mentioned that. If not then he is afraid of ICC (Hagua) thing or he is now scared by the wave of change taking place in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya etc. It looks that all his fellow dictators friends in Northern African arabic states are going to be kicked off. The man is just too scared, where will he run to incase the same danger starts in Sudan and ICC is also behind him?.

Paul Nyandoto

– – – – – – – – – – – – –

sent by “Chakubuta Mulengwa”

By Africa correspondent Ginny Stein, wires

Sudan president Omar al-Bashir has pledged his support for a new southern state in his first public statement since the south of the country voted overwhelmingly to split from the north.

While the poll is yet to be officially declared, provisional results have shown almost 99 per cent of southerners voted to secede.

Many feared the north would not let the oil-producing south go without a fight.

President al-Bashir said he accepted secession has become a reality, and that rather than being sad about the outcome, he would go to the south to join in the celebrations.

“Secession has become a reality and it has been accepted,” he said.

“Ninety-nine percent of southerners have chosen secession. But we’re not going to mourn. I repeat what I have said before: We will go to the south to celebrate with them.

“Secession is not the end of history. It is a new beginning,”

Initial results are now due to be announced in Khartoum at the end of this month.

Mr Bashir, who led a war against the south for a decade-and-a-half before signing the peace deal, had already told senior southern officials that he would respect the vote’s outcome, during a rare visit to regional capital Juba shortly before the referendum.

Sudan: Information to Southern Sudan Referendum Voters

Folks,

The purpose for the Referendum is so that Peace and Liberty can finally be found by the Southern Sudan after 40 years of War between the North and South of Sudan.

Therefore SEPARATION which is the Secession, is paramount. The symbol of an OPEN PALM means separating for PEACE. That is what the Southern Sudan MUST VOTE FOR.

Quote….A. {Darfur is a region in western Sudan whose population is predominantly Muslims. The neglected region has been steeped in civil war since rebels belonging mostly to African ethnic groups took up arms against the Sudanese government in 2003}.

Quote….B. {They have also yet to find common ground on the disputed oil district of Abyei which had supposed to be holding a simultaneous vote on its own future that has been delayed by disagreements over who should have a ballot.

Saraya said that the North now needs to adopt a “new way of thinking” that will help it face the new post-secession challenges “to maintain stability, and to develop radical solutions to the problems that will likely get more complex”.

He criticized Bashir’s speech last week that pledged to transform constitution in North Sudan to a fully Islamic one after the South secedes.

“Not included in this new way of thinking is for the Sudanese president to stand in the midst of the current crisis to announce a few days ago that the constitution would be amended and that the Sharia’a [law] will be the source of legislation in the event of secession of the south”.

“This means that the Sudanese president continues to believe that the Caliphate state in the Sudan is more important than unity, and that with the secession of the south he got rid of the force which hindered the establishment of a religious state in the Sudan. Not only does [this speech] makes unity hopeless but pushes southerners further toward secession, and deepens the rifts between the two countries after the referendum”. Saraya said that Bashir’s defense of the video showing a Sudanese woman being lashed further encourages division and weakens Sudan’s international standing}.

Watch the video carefully and pass on the information.

The voting card MUST NOT BE FOLDED top/bottom, but MUST be CAREFULLY FOLDED sideways ….. so that the ink from the THUMB does not rub against THE UNWANTED BOX or the ink should not touch each other in the two CIRCLES……THUS disqualifying the vote.

Watch the video attached here under and circulate the message to reach voters as far and wide, so people make informed choices.

Thanks,

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

– – – – – – – – – – –

Extremely Very Important, Play the Video…….
Click the link here down…..
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/2010/12/sudan-referendum-2.html

Caught on camera: Woman whipped in public
Australia 7 News – Tue Dec 14, 5:20 pm ET
http://news.yahoo.com/video/tech-15749651/23517984;_ylt=Ar7iYkg2EOnoELXez4UPPMP_SpZ4

SUDAN: Land Grabbing in Sudan
Ndesanjo Macha
Contributor profile · 3400 posts · joined 19 April 2005

Henry’s data visualization of land grabbing in Sudan: “I read an article this morning about “land grabbing” in Africa by foreign countries. When I read the amount of land being acquired by foreign investors in Sudan, I thought to my self, “that is horrible”. Then I took a closer look at the numbers. It really doesn’t seem to be that much.”……”They are few but are BUSY doing MultiNational Business getting wealthier from [PROPERTY THEFT], stealing from the poor…Shame aint it not?”….”Thurst For Blood Money”..

Global Voices Online » Technology – Tue Dec 28, 12:34 pm EST

WORLD — December 30, 2010 at 9:00 AM EDT
In Sudan, a Smudge Could Affect Outcome of Vote
By: Larisa Epatko

As Sudan prepares for a vote in January on whether the south will split from the north, one of the African nation’s challenges is how to inform an electorate with a high illiteracy rate on how to vote.

An estimated 4 million southern Sudanese have registered to vote in the Jan. 9 referendum on southern secession, in a country that has an adult illiteracy rate of 85 percent, said NewsHour special correspondent Jeffrey Kaye. He recently returned from a reporting trip to southern Sudan.

Coming up with appropriate symbols to represent unity or separation took some time. After rejecting symbols such as corn, animals and Arab garb, the final ballot now displays two hands clasped to signify unity and a hand held palm out to represent southern secession, said Kaye.

Even how the ballot is creased has become fodder for conspiracy theorists, he said. If the ballot is folded a certain way, the finger print indicating the voter’s choice could smear onto the opposite side, potentially disqualifying the vote. So education on the referendum now includes how to fold your ballot.

Uganda & Sudan: Arm militia to contain LRA in Western Equatoria…..(Engineered and Framed Lie)

These Army militia of Uganda is Museveni’s strategy to disorganize South Sudan elections.
 
Museveni has all along been the problem in the Lake Victoria and River Nile Region.

He represents the West Special Interest/Super Rich, who are after Africa’s Gold and Diamond mines and Fishing. They have sponsored Museveni to do their dirty jobs, including wiping out Luo Tribesmen, taking them to CONCENTRATION CAMPS so he can do EXPANSIONISM on behalf of these Western Investors-Cum-Invaders in Africa. 

China and Libya and Al-Bashir are his New Found Partners/Comrades in League. 

It is therefore a PLAIN TRUTH, that these BIG PLANS from MUSEVENI’s Militia Arrow Boys are what sent Moi and others to meet urgently with  Museveni. And knowing that his boys have been reinforced with SOMALIA’s Al-Qaeda and Al-Shabaab through Kenya, is the reason Museveni jetted to Somali after meeting with Moi…….. Connect the DOTS ……People………
 
So when you hear these foreign NGOs attacking LRA, whereas Museveni is the problem of LRA of Kony, sending them to concentration camps, and stealing their land, just like they want to take away the land of Southern Sudan, know these NGOs have something cooking for their masters……….They are cooking hard to cook stuff….. they MUST be exposed……….These are the very problem going to attack Southern Sudan during the Referendum……they are pre-empting what they intend to do….they are the ones to WATCH…… 
 
These Super Rich people are in League with China, Libya, Al-Bashir, Moi, Kibaki  and  Museveni, AND have taken Lake Victoria Fisheries, Lake Victoria Mining, Osienala Project with Migingo, and are  working in COHORT. These are the reason they do not want South Sudan to succeed in  their  REFERENDUM.
 
Some of these NGOs activities on the ground could be factors that cause problems (Invasion of Africa; catalysts for their rich masters wanting to take Africa for free) in those conflict zones.  They need to be investigated and reported. The fake NGOs are conflict dudus working with corrupt African leaders that are instigating reasons for war in peaceful Africa…….
 
Africa Must be Free people……..Africans MUST wake up…….No more WAR…… we want PEACE, RESPECT, DIGNITY and LIBERTY….
 
Friends, Sympathizers, Leaders of the World, hear us. We must unite for Unity of purpose, and we need urgent help to block such wicked intentions of the likes of Museveni.  NGO money must not be used to destabilize peace in South Sudan or Africa. We must AVOID or BLOCK these kind of WICKED PLANNED AGENDA OF DOOM.  We must stop Museveni and Al-Bashir…..they are the problem of South Sudan. 

North Sudan Army are the ones who attacked South Sudan recently…..they and Museveni Arrow Boys are the ones to watch keenly and have independent International Armed Forces to supervise and instil peace in that region.
 

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

Sudan: Khartoum’s Army Bomb South, Targeting Darfur Rebels

from Judy Miriga

Khartoum — At least 8 people have been injured in an aerial bombardment by Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) hunting rebel forces from war torn region of Darfur in Aweil north county, Northern Bahr el Ghazal State, South Sudan.
Colonel Philip Aguer Panyang, official spokesperson for Sudan Peoples’ Liberation Army, on Saturday told Sudan Tribune from the regional capital of Juba that two military aircrafts belonging to the Khartoum-controlled SAF dropped bombs on southern territory in the state of Northern Bahr el Ghazal.

“I am told by our forces on the ground in Northern Bahr el Ghazal that the air attack occurred on Friday. No death causalities have been reported but there are reports that 8 civilians have sustained serious injuries. Some of these victims with light injuries are being nursed in the local clinic in Gok Machar but those with inflicted shrapnel injuries and are at critical conditions have been moved to Aweil civil hospital,” explained Panyang.

However, other southern officials have indicated that there may have been fatalities.

The senior military officer said the high military command in Juba contacted Khartoum yesterday night for explanation and were told that the bombing was part of government forces pursuing Darfur rebels the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM).

“We contacted central command of the Sudan Armed Forces yesterday night seeking explanation of why they bombarded our territory. The explanation they gave us in response was that they were pursuing rebel forces. They said it was not their intention to bomb our areas. They were only following routes of the Darfur rebels,” explained Panyang.

Sudan Armed Forces spokesperson Al-Sawarmi Khaled, accused the southern Sudan ruling party of supporting JEM saying the southern army (SPLA) evacuated wounded rebels to Juba and to Uganda.

Al-Sawarmi said SAF forces on Saturday attacked JEM rebels – who were trying to cross the 1956 border into south Sudan – in Meram, South Kordofan state.

The SAF spokesperson claimed the JEM fighters had withdrawn to South Sudan to receive help from the SPLA. He said the SPLA evacuated 67 injured rebels through Jaj airstrip in Bhar el-Ghazal to Juba and Uganda.

SAF spokesperson stressed this support is a clear violation of the military and security protocols of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), between the Khartoum government and the former rebel SPLM/A.

Helping JEM hinders government efforts to achieve peace in Darfur, Al-Sawarmi added.

Ahmed Hussein Adam, JEM spokesperson speaking to Sudan Tribune from Doha where he is taking part in discussions between the mediation and the rebel group over the resumption of peace, denied any presence of their fighters in southern Sudan. He further accused the Sudanese government of seeking pretext to delay the referendum on southern Sudan independence.

“These are baseless allegations. This is a conspiracy by the Sudanese government to impede the referendum process,” he said.

“But we say they have to hold the referendum on time,” he stressed.
The National Congress Party this week repeated accusation to the southern Sudan government of harboring JEM rebels, a matter that southern Sudan officials denied.
Colonel Deng Thiep Akok, a former commissioner of Aweil North who comes from the area also confirmed to Sudan Tribune from Juba occurrence of the incident and disputed claims that the bomb was meant for Darfur rebels.

“Sudan Armed Forces claimed that the bomb was meant for Darfur rebels who are alleged to have attacked Majaac on Monday. Majaac is a settlement under south Darfur territory. They claimed that Sudan Armed Forces attacked Majaac and looted everything before they retrieved towards Gokmachar in Northern Bahr el Ghazal. This is not correct. I come from the area and I am not aware of the presence of some Darfur rebels in the area. As far as I know the area, there are no rebels from Darfur operating in the area presently,” said Akok.

Akok said that the attack was part of a plan by Sudan’s ruling National Congress Party to sabotage voter registration processes for the south’s referendum, which is due to begin next Monday.

Officials from United Nations Mission in Sudan working in Aweil town, capital of Northern Bahr el Ghazal State, said a UN team was going to the area to assess the situation.

“We are told that the area of the attack could be between two states: Northern Bahr Gazal, which is part of South Sudan, and South Darfur, which is part of the north,” said the official from UNMIS who declined to be named.

The borders between north and south Sudan have not been demarcated despite the 2005 peace deal establishing mechanisms to do so.
In the run up to January’s referendum on southern independence some members of the NCP have said that the vote should be delayed until the border is finalised. The southern government has rejected this saying that border demarcation can be completed after the poll takes place.

There is concern as the vote approaches that rising tensions on the north-south border could trigger renewed conflict.

South Sudan fought a two-decade civil war against successive Khartoum governments in which 2 million people died and more than a million migrated north to escape the fighting.

The independence referendum will be the culmination of the 2005 peace deal that ended over 20 years of north-south conflict.

Sudan: UNAMID Chief Warns of North-South Affect Over Darfur, Demands Access to War Zones
14 November 2010

Khartoum — The recent flare-up of fighting between the Sudanese government and rebels in Darfur as well as tension along shared borders with south Sudan has exacerbated the security situation in Darfur, the head of the UN-AU peacekeeping mission in the region said on Sunday.

Ibrahim Gambari, who heads the hybrid peacekeeping mission known as UNAMID, told reporters in a press conference at Rotana Hotel in the capital Khartoum yesterday that he was “deeply concerned” about the renewal of violence in the region, urging the belligerent parties to immediately cease hostilities.

“I call upon all parties to refrain from further offensive military action and respect international humanitarian law,” Gambari said.

In the past weeks, Darfur region witnessed a spike in fighting between government forces on one side, and rebels from the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) and the Sudan Liberation Movement led by Abdel-Wahid Al-Nur on the other side.

The increase in violence comes as Sudan inches closer to holding a politically sensitive vote in January 2011 on the full independence of its semi-autonomous region of south Sudan from the north. The plebiscite is stipulated by a 2005 peace deal that ended Africa’s longest war between the Muslim-Arab north and the Christian-African south.

North and south Sudan have recently traded accusations of exhibiting an aggressive military posture along shared borders and supporting each others’ rebels.
On Thursday, South Sudan army the SPLA said that militias associated with north Sudan are acting in a provocative manner with the intent of breaching the permanent ceasefire between the two sides.

Similarly, north Sudan on Friday accused south Sudan army of aiding JEM rebels who clashed with government forces near Al-Meirem which abuts south Sudan’s state of Bahri al-Ghazal.

South Sudan said on Saturday that north Sudan army “accidently” dropped a bomb inside its territories as it was conducting an aerial bombardment against Darfur rebels.

Gambari voiced fears that “old alignment” between south Sudan leaders and Darfur rebels could be “rekindled” and result in further complication of the situation in Darfur.
The peacekeeping chief further warned that armed incidents along north-south borders shared borders could extend to affect Darfur.

“We are also concerned about the spillover effect of the north-south border and the armed incidents occurring there, particularly in the no man’s land between south of Sudan and south of Darfur,” he said.

However, he later said that his mission had devised “a contingency plan” to counter any violence resulting from tension between north and south Sudan.
“That’s why UNMIS and UNAMID have developed contingency plans,” he added.

Gambari also said that UNAMID needs to gain “unimpeded” access to all areas affected by recent fighting in order to assist the population there.
On Darfur peace process, Gamabari said that the UN-AU Chief Mediator for Darfur Djibril Bassole had held a “good” meeting with JEM leader Khalil Ibrahim, reiterating his calls on JEM and SLM-Nur to join Darfur peace talks in the Qatari capital of Doha.
Sudan Tribune took Gambari aside and asked him about the latest developments regarding the case of the six Darfur refugees who are under UNAMID custody and sought by the Sudanese government on accusations of instigating last July’s violent clashes in Kalma displacement camp between supporters and opponents of Darfur peace talks.

Gambari said that the situation in this particular case was “under control” and that UNAMID was working very closely with the Sudanese authorities in order to reach what he called “a win-win outcome.”
He elaborated that the ideal win-win outcome would be a one that respects the sovereignty of Sudan and assures the UN that the wanted IDPs would receive a proper trial observed by UNAMID, access to attorney and immunity from capital punishment.
Darfur region came to the fore of international agendas in 2003 when a harsh counterinsurgency campaign by Khartoum government against rebel groups created one of the worst humanitarian situations in recent history.
According to UN estimates, the conflict killed 300.000 people and displaced more than 2 million.

Sudan: Kibaki Invites Al-Bashir to Addis Talks on South Sudan Referendum

from Judy Miriga

Daily Nation

Sudan Tribune
Sudan: Kibaki Invites Al-Bashir to Addis Talks on South Sudan Referendum
Murithi Mutiga

13 November 2010

Nairobi — President Kibaki has invited Sudan president Omar al-Bashir to an extraordinary summit on the January 9 self-determination referendum.
The meeting will be held in Addis Ababa to avoid the controversy that surrounded Mr Bashir’s most recent visit to Nairobi during the promulgation of the new Constitution.

Unlike Kenya, Ethiopia is not a state party of the International Criminal Court and is not legally obliged to arrest Mr Bashir who has a warrant of arrest on his head for his suspected role in authorising the atrocities in the Darfur region.
Acting Foreign Affairs minister George Saitoti travelled to Khartoum on Wednesday where he handed the invitation to Sudan’s president.

Overshadow meeting
He also met Southern Sudan president Salva Kiir in Juba and held talks with Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi in Addis Ababa.

Acting Foreign Affairs PS Patrick Wamoto said the government had elected not to hold the summit in Kenya to prevent Mr Bashir’s presence overshadowing the meeting.

“We don’t want to take our eyes off the ball. This is a very crucial meeting and we want to extract a commitment from the main actors in Juba and Khartoum that they will respect the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) and that they will play their role in ensuring the referendum goes ahead peacefully,” he said.

Most analysts view the talks in Addis Ababa scheduled to take place within the next two weeks as the best chance to avert a return to war in Africa’s biggest country.

With less than two months to go before the referendum, the two parties are still well apart on a number of issues that were to be settled before the poll under the terms of the CPA.
These include border demarcation, sharing the country’s external debt and the fate of the oil-rich Abyei region.

Ernst Jan Hogendoorn of the International Crisis Group says that the pre-referendum issues can still be settled.

“It is not very surprising that there is still no agreement on these issues. There is a culture of brinkmanship in dealing with difficult political questions in Sudan so it is still quite possible that a deal can be struck.”

Mr Hogendoorn says the role of regional players such as Ethiopia, Uganda and Kenya will be decisive. But he says Khartoum also hopes to get concessions from the US government before the referendum.

“Clearly (Bashir’s) National Congress Party has a number of demands that it has made to the US. The most important thing is lifting of sanctions. They want agreement on how to deal with the country’s external debt including the possibility of cancellation of some of it. But there is also the question of the ICC indictment on Mr Bashir, which makes the whole process quite complicated.”

Mr Bashir has been indicted twice by the international criminal court for his government’s role in financing the Janjaweed militia which waged a campaign of mass displacements, killings and rapes in a large swathe of Sudanese territory in Darfur.

But the dilemma confronting actors in the region is that they have to deal with the Khartoum regime to ensure that the referendum takes place on time.

According to Mr Wamoto, invitations for the summit in Addis Ababa went out in President Kibaki’s name because Kenya chairs the subcommittee on Sudan in the Intergovernmental Authority for Development (Igad).

He said Kenya would have preferred that the meeting be held in Naivasha where the CPA was signed but the risk that Mr Bashir’s presence would provide the main focus of international attention during the meeting forced a rethink.

Kenya: Alarm as Land Militia ‘Re-Emerges’
Bernard Kwalia

12 November 2010

Nairobi — Security officers have been sent to Mt Elgon to hunt for more than 50 armed people believed to be members of the outlawed Sabaot Land Defence Force.
The armed gang was seen early this week in Cheptandan area, Chebyuk Settlement Scheme, a kilometre from the Bannantega military camp.
Residents said they were wearing jungle uniform similar to that of the Ugandan People’s Defence Force and were armed with guns.

Some residents who spoke to the Saturday Nation but declined to be named said the group warned that the so-called land defence force was alive and promised to bounce back in a big way.

“They moved from house to house, terrorising residents on Monday night before disappearing into Mt Elgon Forest,” a resident said.

The people demanded that security officers investigate the matter. They said some leaders were reviving the militia in the area to scuttle the resettlement programme and for political survival.

On Friday, Western provincial commissioner Samuel Kilele held a series of meetings with top Army officers, regular police, the General Service Unit and the Administration Police before going to Chebyuk to address the public.

Speaking on the phone, Mr Kilele denied claims that members of the militia were regrouping to cause trouble in the area again.

Two years ago, the militia was crushed by the Army after they caused the death of more than 1,000 people and displaced 50,000 others. The group’s commander Wycliffe Matakwei was killed while others were arrested and charged.

Recently, a Bungoma court acquitted brokers and others who had been accused of collecting money from the public, promising them land at the controversial scheme.

Some militiamen were not captured in a list of beneficiaries in Phase III of the settlement scheme during vetting as they were fighting. They have threatened to disrupt the programme unless they are considered.

Donors Fear Instability Over South Sudan

Concerns are growing that a secession by South Sudan could trigger turmoil and instability beyond Sudanese borders, and some members of the donor community would like for Southern Sudan to postpone or drop its bid for independence in the referendum next January.

Sudan: Don’t Break Away From Sudan, West Tells South –
comment:
(It is time for the South Sudan to achieve their Independence so they can manage their wealth free from interference and intimidation from Al-Bashir – I wonder what Kibaki is up to? I dont trust Kibaki and Moi and team anymore…Watch out !)
Michael Wakabi

22 March 2010

Nairobi — Donor circles want Southern Sudan to drop its bid for independence in the referendum next January, as concerns grow that a rushed secession could trigger turmoil and instability beyond Sudanese borders.

In 2005, President Omar al-Bashir’s National Congress Party and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement, led by the late Dr John Garang signed a Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) that ended 22 years of war between the North and South.

That CPA left the door open for the South to break away from the union if 60 per cent of voters decide so in the 2011 plebiscite.

Although the United States, which is considered to have a vested interest in the outcome of Sudan’s peace process says it “takes no position on what the outcome of that referendum should be,”

The EastAfrican has separately learned that key Western democracies and institutions, fearing that independence for the South in its present state could see the area slide into anarchy, have quietly urged President Salva Kiir’s government to go slow on secession.
“Independence for the South should be put off for a few more years primarily because of lack of capacity in the South to run a stable and secure state,” said a source privy to Western analysis of the evolving situation in Sudan.

He added: “There is no institutional infrastructure to support a state, so there is a high chance that the country will degenerate into a Somalia-like situation. This would open a ‘corridor of terror’ across the region that could be infiltrated by Al Qaeda and its associates to create instability that would run counter to Western interests.”

The West is spooked by the prospect of sudden independence for a fragile state — with a corrupt and fractious national leadership, a nearly non-existent civil service, a poorly established local police and professional military — immediately disintegrating into a civil war.

This could draw the international community into a costly intervention to rebuild a state that few countries want to underwrite in the current economic climate.

With new discoveries of oil in both Uganda and Sudan and the likelihood of further discoveries in the northeast of the Democratic Republic of Congo, peace in the region is essential to the exploitation of these resources.

Western strategists believe that even under the best of circumstances, the absence of institutional infrastructure in the South and independent communication links to the outside world mean Juba would remain hostage to Khartoum, making it difficult to get energy and other exports to outside markets.

Such a scenario would deny the infant state the resources to deliver to the population the promised benefits of independence, leading to high levels of discontent that could result in a breakdown of law and order, said one analyst.

Other fears revolve around the fact that the South is far from homogenous and united, with a real risk that it could spiral into uncontrolled violence as the different regions jostle over resources.

Apparently, the West would like to see some slack factored into the timeline for Juba’s independence ambitions, while the shaky alliance between the SPLM and al-Bashir — who has largely been “contained” by the ICC warrants against him — is propped up until such a time that institutional capacity and critical infrastructure have been developed in the South.
Apparently, Kenya and Uganda, which have separately announced plans to build key road and railway links to Juba, are partly implementing this strategy.

While it denies any direct interest in the outcome of the referendum, the United States says it is concerned about peace and stability in Southern Sudan and is working with both the SPLM and the NCP to “prepare for the 2011 referendum, and working with the parties to ensure that the process is fair and credible and that the will of the people, as expressed through the referendum, is respected peacefully.”

Lagging behind
Responding to enquiries by this newspaper, Joann M Lockard, public affairs officer at the US embassy in Kampala, said, “The United States is concerned about peace and stability in South Sudan. The parties in Sudan are behind in the implementation of the most contentious provisions of the CPA, which is why we have worked so hard in 2009 and will double our efforts in 2010 to implement the agreement before it expires in 2011.”
For their part, while officially professing the position of the Intergovernmental Authority on Drought and Development (Igad), which is to encourage the parties in Sudan to make unity as attractive as possible, Kenya and Uganda are pursuing a two-track strategy.

On one track, fearing to set a precedent that could lead to a ripple effect with sections of their own populations agitating for secession, Uganda and Kenya are not officially breaking ranks with proponents of a unified Sudan.
Uganda is still wary of what a split of Sudan would mean for its restive north, while Kenya has for years kept a wary eye on its northeastern regions bordering Somalia.
“In international law, it is very rare to find a country openly calling for the partition of another country because it sets a precedent that could come back to haunt them; in the case of Uganda, you must have heard Norbert Mao (chairman of Gulu District Local Council in northern Uganda) suggest that the north should break away from Uganda,” said Uganda’s Junior Minister for Foreign Affairs, Henry Okello Oryem.
According to independent sources however, Uganda and its EAC partners believe that despite the challenges the South faces, Juba is better off breaking away from its unproductive marriage with Khartoum.

Refugees International (Washington, DC)

Sudan: No Time for ‘Business as Usual’
25 March 2010

KEY CONSIDERATIONS FOR CONTINGENCY PLANS

Although operational agencies in Sudan are best placed to determine the specifics of what must be included in contingency plans, there are some key considerations that should be addressed.
* Clarify the roles of agencies with respect to internally displaced persons (IDPs). There is currently a geographic division of labor between UNHCR and the International Organization for Migration (IOM) which sometimes results in ad hoc support. It is unclear which organization would lead on humanitarian protection activities for new internal displacement. UNHCR should take on this role and be given the requisite resources.

Preposition emergency items to the extent possible. Some prepositioning occurs yearly in anticipation of the rainy season. Humanitarian organizations should take advantage of the 2010-2011 dry season (November to March) to increase prepositioning in the south and the transitional areas in anticipation of possible post-referendum conflict. Prepositioned items should include safe birthing and post-rape kits, which are lifesaving items for women, in addition to traditional food and non-food items. Donors must provide funding early enough to ensure this timeframe is met.

Reinforce OCHA staff in the south. OCHA staff has been significantly scaled back in south Sudan due to the shift towards recovery and development, and currently has no staff outside of Juba. There is widespread belief among the humanitarian community that the reduction in staff was premature. If conflict does increase, most organizations will look to OCHA to play its traditional coordination role. Recent small increases in staff in Juba have been helpful but do not make up for the lack of staff outside the capital.

Support gender-based violence (GBV) programming. Sexual violence was a very common phenomenon during the north-south war, particularly in the transitional areas. Women in Southern Kordofan expressed fears to RI that they would be vulnerable to such abuse if conflict broke out again. There is a major gap in GBV programming in the transitional areas and the south; few GBV survivors have received assistance and minimal work has been done on prevention. UNFPA has established some positive GBV work in Southern Kordofan, particularly on clinical management of rape with the Ministry of Health, but these efforts are limited by funding constraints and need to be extended within and beyond this state.

Continue returnee tracking and monitoring. Given the current political uncertainty, it is critical to maintain structures that track informal population movements and monitor the protection of returnees. These structures could also be used to track and monitor new displacement. Without sufficient data, assistance interventions often do not get organized, even for basic UN World Food Programme (WFP) food rations. NGOs that were monitoring protection of refugee returnees for UNHCR have had to stop since the end of 2009 due to the unavailability of funding and now plan only to resume limited operations.

Ensure flexible funding. A number of donors and UN staff expressed understandable reluctance to divert funding from current needs towards potential problems that may never arise. However, having money already in the pipeline that can be quickly reallocated is the ideal strategy. The UN Common Humanitarian Fund (CHF) in south Sudan currently maintains an emergency reserve of 10% and RI was told that consideration was being given to raising this to 20%. The 2010 forecast for CHF funding is $112 million, roughly the same as in 2009, which is inadequate. Donors should fund the CHF generously — and early — in order to take full advantage of the reserve. If the reserve amount is increased to 20%, donors should increase their overall CHF funding in order to avoid a de facto reduction to other humanitarian programs. The U.S. is not currently a CHF donor and so must commit to fully funding the Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA) requirements for south Sudan this year, notwithstanding the crises in Haiti and elsewhere, and be prepared for maximum speed and flexibility if reallocations need to be made.

BUILDING COMMUNITY RESILIENCE TO REDUCE POTENTIAL CONFLICT

Because nearby towns and villages are likely to be the first port of call for people fleeing any conflict in the future, it is essential to increase these communities’ access to basic services, as well as job and agricultural opportunities, in order to minimize the humanitarian fallout. Such reintegration support is especially needed for displaced people who are returning home and rebuilding their lives and will maximize a community’s ability to absorb newly displaced people. As competition over access to basic services is often a source of conflict, USAID’s new local conflict mitigation program in south Sudan is a positive step.
As with previous Refugees International field visits in 2008 and 2009, the first concern that communities reported was the lack of basic services – especially education, health services and water. Furthermore the lack of rain this year has hit local towns and villages as hard as returnees. The impact of drought has meant a much larger population struggling to access food, with WFP dramatically increasing its target beneficiary numbers in the south from 1.1 million to 4.3 million. In some areas of Southern Kordofan, local authorities told RI that the majority of returnees have gone back to where they had previously fled due to lack of basic services.

Most women told RI that their priority need was for trained midwives, as south Sudan’s maternal mortality rate is one of worst in the world (2,054:100,000). Donors should support programs that reduce maternal mortality, especially training of midwives and traditional birth attendants. With UNFPA assistance, the Ministry of Health has assessed the initial cost of reducing maternal mortality by 25% in the south at $107 million. Donors must also insist that all proposals encourage women’s participation and examine any new program’s impact on women. USAID should advance its work in this area by developing a Sudan-specific gender policy.
The USAID-funded BRIDGE project is aimed at building the capacity of state-level government agencies to provide services and should be supported by other donors. The project has made some good progress in the four states in which it is operating in the south, but it has been seriously delayed in the transitional areas by the NGO expulsions in March 2009.
Virtually all provision of transport to help displaced people return home has stopped. Funding ended for most IDP returns in 2008 and hardly any refugees have chosen to return so far in 2010. But IOM estimates that 161,500 internally displaced people and refugees returned to the south and Southern Kordofan spontaneously in 2009 and they project that this may increase in 2010 due to the elections and run up to the referendum. There is still insufficient funding directed to the reintegration of returnees, especially in livelihoods support, as international donor interest seems to have waned.

CONCLUSION: LOOKING BEYOND JANUARY 2011

If south Sudan opts for independence in 2011, as looks likely, there will be a considerable need for donor governments to support the Government of Southern Sudan to ensure that its structure and leadership are capable of successfully delivering services to its people and protecting them. Yet political sensitivities are preventing donors from clarifying what the post-2011 aid architecture will be and from engaging in a robust advanced planning process with implementing partners. This risks a situation where preparations are left to the last minute, when urgency will end up trumping the need for thorough coordination and consultation. The international witnesses to the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement between the north and south have already accepted in principle the option of southern independence. It is not unreasonable, therefore, that they should be planning to support its implementation, if the voters so decide.

Melanie Teff and Jennifer Smith traveled to south Sudan and Southern Kordofan in February to assess the humanitarian community’s ability to respond to potential conflict in the run-up to and aftermath of the 2011 referendum on independence.

press release

The next two years will be critical in determining Sudan’s future. The country faces national elections in April, the first multi-party elections in 24 years, and a referendum on southern independence in January 2011.

While the U.S. and others must do everything possible to ensure that the governments in north and south Sudan reach agreement on outstanding issues before the referendum, the humanitarian community must simultaneously prepare to respond if conflict erupts around the upcoming political events. Decades of responding to crises in Sudan has created a complacent “business as usual” attitude among some humanitarian agencies and donors that must be overcome.

UNCERTAINTY AND FEAR
Sudanese people in a number of locations in the south and Southern Kordofan shared with Refugees International (RI) their concerns over upcoming events. In Upper Nile, communities told RI that they were uneasy about the elections in case they led to violence, as competition between candidates and their supporters might spill over to politicize and exacerbate existing tensions between communities. In Southern Kordofan, communities expressed a direct fear to RI that, should the south secede, southern-aligned communities in the Nuba Mountains would be isolated and targeted by proxy groups armed by the north in an effort to remove them from their land.
Almost all of the community representatives that RI spoke with said that if conflict broke out they would be very reluctant to leave again or go far from home. Many people who had gone to Khartoum during the north-south war said they would not go north again. In Southern Kordofan, many people said they would flee to the surrounding mountains, and some said they were already preparing houses there.

RI heard a wide divergence of views on the likely humanitarian impact of the elections and referendum. While many international observers felt that the country would “muddle through” with only limited outbreaks of fighting in border and oil-rich areas, others felt that south Sudan was heading towards total collapse with an explosion of inter-ethnic tensions. A key concern was that a gradual ratcheting up of tensions rather than all-out war would mean no “CNN moment” to attract worldwide attention and funding.
Given the exceptional political events of the next two years and the unpredictability of the scenarios, it is critical that the humanitarian community quickly put comprehensive contingency plans in place, in case a return to major conflict occurs.

MAKE CONTINGENCY PLANNING COUNTRY-WIDE

As many international humanitarian workers argue, south Sudan is already in a state of emergency. Last year over 390,000 people were displaced and 2,500 killed according to the UN, and drought has caused major food insecurity. The emergency response architecture in the south largely remains following decades of conflict and humanitarian response (with the notable exception of the much scaled-back OCHA presence). This is a potential advantage in terms of capacity to manage future crises but it is also leading to a “business as usual” mentality among some humanitarian actors, who believe that if necessary the response system would kick in automatically. Politically, the next two years will be anything but business as usual and the cost of reacting at the last minute to potential conflict will be greater than that of preparing in advance.

For many humanitarian actors, contingency planning was seen as sensitive and controversial and some did not want it publicly known that they were creating such plans. Given its sensitive nature, contingency planning must be a system-wide effort led by the UN that includes NGOs, donors and Sudanese and south Sudanese government agencies, rather than a series of individual initiatives that could expose organizations to political risk. A whole-of-Sudan process is also critical to ensuring coordination takes place should the plans ultimately need to be implemented.

The Humanitarian Country Team (HCT) in south Sudan has just initiated a contingency planning process, with a senior UN staff member assigned to lead and coordinate among UN agencies and with external actors. However, while everyone is talking about scenarios and planning, there is no blueprint yet. This initiative must move quickly from theoretical discussions to putting concrete plans on paper, with the understanding that plans will be a work-in-progress that will need constant updating.

The contingency planning process is far less established in north Sudan than in the south. RI was told that individual plans existed for certain geographical areas in the north but there did not seem to be a strategy for developing a single contingency plan for the north. Even more concerning is the lack of coordination between the UN in north and south Sudan, which will be especially important for the transitional areas, where populations in former SPLM-controlled areas may face harassment or violence after separation. The vulnerability of the people will be compounded by the fact that access to the transitional areas is still difficult for international humanitarian staff. At the moment, it is unclear how contingency plans being developed in Southern Kordofan will fit into wider north/south planning.

International NGOs largely felt they did not have much capacity for contingency planning as they were already struggling to respond to existing humanitarian needs due to lack of resources. Furthermore, the current UN 2010 consolidated appeal for Sudan (US $1.9 billion) is only 23% funded so far. Meeting existing needs is critical as planning processes continue.

CONSULT WITH COMMUNITIES AND SUPPORT THEIR EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
RI found no evidence that communities were being directly consulted in the preliminary phase of the contingency planning processes. Some international organizations said that their field staff would simply know the issues in the community, making consultation unnecessary. There may also be a well-intended desire by some humanitarian agencies not to create panic. However, gaps in information on security issues can also create fear and panic.

NGOs are better structured than UN humanitarian agencies to run community consultation programs, especially in partnership with local networks, to share information and to help communities develop early warning systems and local self-protection strategies. This must involve the UN peacekeeping mission in Sudan (UNMIS) in the places they are deployed, but protection by UNMIS will not be the only strategy that communities will have to rely on. Such consultations should target a broad community audience beyond just traditional leaders, and should begin with flashpoint areas. A particular focus on involving women is critical. Donors must accept that consultations will be time consuming but are essential, and so will require specific additional funding. In areas where UNMIS is deployed, its substantive sections should be conducting community consultations on protection strategies.
In Southern Kordofan, RI was informed of a proposal for community-based early warning systems in which women would help set up local protection strategies. The system would be implemented by a consortium of UN, international and national organizations. Given the widespread community concerns about security and the uncertainty of upcoming events, such proposals warrant funding and senior UN institutional support.

During discussions with local government authorities in Juba, Upper Nile and Southern Kordofan, RI found that there was less reluctance to discuss these issues than expected. Officials were very open about their concerns over conflict erupting, and they were forthright in saying that they would need and expect the international community’s support. In fact, both communities and local officials said openly that they expected that the U.S. would send military protection forces to south Sudan in case of conflict with the north.
There is clearly room for more dialogue between local government officials and the humanitarian community on emergency preparedness, beyond closed-door discussions at senior levels. Donors should be willing to facilitate this openness through workshops at the national and state levels involving government officials, civil society representatives and the humanitarian community, aimed at ending the “taboo of silence.” The Government of Southern Sudan should be brought into the contingency planning processes and should also be assisted in reaching out to communities to discuss upcoming events.

Sudan: Libya Pressed to Block Bashir From Attending 3rd Africa-EU Summit – Report
12 November 2010

Khartoum — The European Union (EU) expressed its objections to Libya over the possible attendance of the Sudanese president Omer Hassan Al-Bashir at the 3rd Africa-EU Summit that will take place on November 29th, according to a newspaper report.
Bashir received the invitation to participate from his Libyan counterpart Muammar Al-Gaddafi last July who dispatched his personal envoy Mohamed Sayyala to Khartoum at the time.

An unnamed African diplomat told the Qatar-based Al-Sharq newspaper that the EU has expressed reservations over the attendance of the Sudanese leader who faces an arrest warrant issued by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for war crimes and genocide allegedly committed in Darfur.
The diplomat said that the EU alluded to Tripoli that Bashir’s attendance could impact their representation level at the summit. He added that the likely way out from this deadlock is to ask Sudan to send another official instead of Bashir to attend.
A similar incident occurred this year when Paris decided to change the venue of the France-EU summit after Egypt, the original host, insisted on inviting Bashir.
Both Egypt and Libya have strongly backed Bashir against the ICC indictment.

allAfrica.com

Sudan: Obama Issues Tough Conditions On Resumption of Relations
Fred Oluoch

22 October 2010

Nairobi — In a rare diplomatic concession, the Obama administration has offered to resume diplomatic relations with Sudan provided Khartoum meets some conditions.
Among the conditions include; the full implementation of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), the assurance that the referendum in the south will be held on January 9 as scheduled, the commitment to reach agreement on pending issues of CPA, and a comprehensive resolution for peace in Darfur.

These conditions were given by the US Assistant Secretary for African Affairs, Mr Johnny Carson at a major press conference on Sudan of Friday, that was also attended by President Obama’s Special Envoy to Sudan, Scott Gration.
Apart from the indictment of President Omar al-Bashir by the International Criminal Court (ICC), and the economic sanctions that US maintains against Sudan, Washing ton list Sudan as among the countries sponsoring terrorism.
A normalisation of relations would have to take into account all these, even though the Obama administration—through Mr Gration — has been deploying the policy of constructive engagement with Khartoum rather than wielding a big stick.
This approach has elicited numerous criticism from the Western civil society, who believe that Sudan should be treated as a pariah state.

The U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, Johnnie Carson, has laid down the conditions under which the Obama administation would renew diplomatic ties with Sudan.

The question is whether the US having failed over the years in Somalia will get it right this time in Sudan to help avert a relapse into war after the 2011 referendum?
Mr Gration was put to task at the conference to explain whether the current US diplomatic engagement is starting too late in the day to ensure a peaceful referendum.
He conceded that the US diplomatic efforts might appear rushed but maintained the US has always remained engaged with Sudan since the signing of the peace agreement in 2005, but which have been intensified with the advent of the Obama administration.
“Intensive consultations have been going on at high level but it is true that time is running out with only 79 days remaining. But is upon the NCP and the SPLM to make tough decisions that would ensure peace,” he said.

One of the major concern in Sudan is the issue of the oil-rich Abyei that is supposed to hold its own referendum the same day to decide whether they belong to the north or south. Khartoum had earlier suggested that the Abyei referendum be delayed but this suggestion has been strongly opposed by the south.
As it is, the Abyei Referendum Commissions is yet to be constituted, while at the same time, there is the dispute whether the Misseriya Arabs–who consider themselves northerners but water their cattle in the south for sic months in a year–are likely to take part in the referendum in the absence of a recognised north-south border.
Mr Carson insisted that the US position is that the referendum is held on time, peaceful and reflects the wishes of the southerners.

To ensure this, Mr Carson revealed that Washington has given high level attention to Sudan, adding that there is a meeting at the White House every week to discuss the developments. President Obama is also briefed on Sudan everyday.
To help galvanise international support for Sudan, President Obama has assembled a high-level team comprimising Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Vice-president Joe Biden to help in the task. So far, Norway has been helping with technical advise on oil revenue sharing, while the UK has been advising on debt relief and border demarcation.
The main objective of the intensified diplomatic efforts with respect to Sudan is that for the fist time, the US is keen to be pro-active and help prevent an outbreak of war rather than react later.
In the past one month, the US has expanded its diplomatic presence in all the provincial capitals in the south.
Secondly, the US has been in constant tough with the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (Igad)–that brokered the Sudanese peace deal–and other regional countries that have a stake in the referendum such as Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia and Egypt.
Mr Gration conceded that there is a great concern of what will happen to southerners in the north and northerners in the south, should the southerners vote for separation.
This is particularly so given the series of rhetoric regarding citizenship coming from both Juba and Khartoum.

“Again is tis upon the two parties to reach agreement on this issue. For the US, we are waiting to take them to account on their commitment to protect the rights of all citizens,” said Mr Gration.
On the other hand, Mr Carson argued that the US would like to see an independent south that lives in harmony with the north, because countries in the region have proven that Muslims and Christians can live in harmony, or countries that are predominantly Muslim have co-existed with neighbours that are predominantly Christian.
But the issue of normalisation of relations with Sudan remains a tall order. During the recent UN High Level Meeting on Sudan in New York, the Sudanese delegation carried with them three conditions that would enable Khartoum ensure a democratic and legitimate referendum.
They included; the US to lift economic sanctions against Sudan, the US to remove Sudan from the list of countries sponsoring terrorism and for Washington to help influence the deferment of the ICC warrant of arrest against President al-Bashir.

Sudan: AU-UN Talks On Sudan Begin in Ethiopia
6 November 2010

Addis Ababa — Officials from the United Nations (UN) and the African Union (UN) on Saturday commenced talks at AU headquarters in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa to discuss the upcoming referenda on south Sudan independence.
Sudan is only 66 days away from holding a crucial referendum vote on whether its semi-autonomous region of south Sudan should gain full independence from the north, a vote likely to split Africa’s largest country in two.

North and South Sudan are deadlocked over another referendum vote due to take place at the same time in January 2011 on the future of the oil-producing central area of Abyei. The previous round of Addis Ababa talks failed to yield a consensus on this issue.
The two plebiscites are the final phase of a 2005 peace deal that ended decades of civil war between north and south Sudan.
The AU commissioner for Peace and Security, Ramtane Lamamra, addressed the opening of the meeting and underlined the urgency of the tight timeframe.
“There are just 66 days to go before the referendum in southern Sudan, and nine days before the registration of the voters will begin. There is no time to waste,” he was quoted by AFP.
Sudan’s foreign minister Ali Karti is attending the meeting which is also devoted to discussing the situation in Somalia.
The chief of the UN’s peacekeeping operations, Alain Le Roy, said that the two sides needed to compromise on issues of dispute and urged the government to address the situation in the troubled region of Darfur.

“The government must commit to significant concession in the negotiation, and in the meantime implement measures inside Darfur including addressing the problem of informal militias, arbitrary arrests, excessive powers afforded under the emergency law,” Le Roy said.
Former South African president Thabo Mbeki is attending the talks. Mbeki is also the head of the AU Panel on Sudan.
A large AU-UN peacekeeping mission known as UNAMID is stationed in Darfur region , where a seven -year conflict between rebels and the Sudanese government brought the region’s name to the fore of international agendas.
The UN and the AU have the largest hybrid peacekeeping operation in the world stationed in Darfur region, known as UNAMID.

New rail line to link Uganda and Southern Sudan capital of juba is to commence soon

Reports Leo Odera Omolo

-The $3b investment will help open up regional markets
-It covers 725 kilometres
A German-based firm, Thysssen Krupp, is to head a multi-billion railway project that will link Gulu in northern Uganda with Juba, the capital of Southern Sudan, highlighting increasing investment appetite in the Great Lakes region.

The huge infrastructure investment, estimated to be between $2b and $3b, will cover laying the rail network, covering about 725 kilometres, helping open up regional markets for more cost-competitive import and export of commodities.The government owned NEWVISION online reported this morning.

“Constructing improved haulage links promotes economic upswing and lower prices for consumer goods and additional jobs are created,” Stefan Ettwig, the firm’s spokesman, said.

“Railways are needed for transporting the (region’s) abundant mineral resources.”

The announcement comes at a time when the Great Lakes region comprising 11 countries including Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania Rwanda, Burundi, Southern Sudan, and DR Congo are facing high transport costs due to an inefficient rail network.

Studies show that transport between Uganda and Kenya alone costs more than $0.13 per tonne/kilometre due to heavy reliance on trucking. This has skyrocketed the cost of doing business in the region.

ThyssenKrupp, the world steel maker, is involved via its Gleistechnik subsidiary, along with the US firm, Ayr Logistics, and the Russian engineering firm Mos Metrostroy.

An option for an extension of the line to Wau in southern Sudan and links to Kenyan and Ethiopian networks is under consideration.

The existing Uganda-Kenya railway network was sold to a consortium known as Rift Valley Railway, which has been embroiled in power struggle, which has stalled the desired rehabilitation and improvement of the railway system.

The shareholding is composed of Citadel Capital, Trans Century, Mirambo Holdings, Prime Fuels, Austrialia’s Babcock and Brown, plus a Ugandan investor.

Businesses are frustrated that while rail transport is cheaper than road, most cargo is being hauled on road, denying them the edge in a regional market that is becoming increasingly competitive.

The long chain of transportation makes Uganda vulnerable to any problems arising along the way, and immediately results into delays in supplies delivery, causing shortages and artificial price hikes

The Uganda-Sudan railway idea was conceived in 2004 after a feasibility study.

Ends

Kenya: Time for Peoples Constitution Rally-Kamukunji:W/A for Al Bashil,Museveni,Moi,Mwai

from Bunge La Mwanainchi.

Following the turn of events at Uhuru Park-The appearance and disappearance of one International Criminal – President Al Bashil of Northern Sudan, and the consecutive arrest of Bunge La Mwanainchi members whom were petitioning for his arrest.Violation of our integrity as a nation by inviting him in Kenya soil under the invitation of President Emillio Mwai Kibaki through his bloated cabinet must be challenged by all Kenyan citizens we feel our sovereignty as a nation is being violated right from the word go,The only remedy that can mend the situation is the resignation of President Emilio Mwai Kibaki.

Similarly the 1963 constitutional dispensation began on a wrong footing,which is being replicated in 2010.The invitation of following individuals to grace the event i.e President Omar Al Bashil wanted by ICC in Hague, President Museveni-Migingo Land slur to Kenyans,Mr. Wako impediment to reforms.Pattni involvement in 17 billion golden berg scandal,Moi-Presidency and mismanagement of the country for 24 years.Ruto the main campaigner against the new constitution.

Since President Kibaki,Prime minister,Vice President did not see the need to recognize / mention the input the role various leaders/organizations/Individuals played since 2005 CKRC played in achieving the new constitution its high time that their work will be recognized.

Members of Bunge La Mwanainchi yesterday noon, deliberated on the need to hold a People Rally in Kamukunji Grounds-Shauri Moyo opposite Majengo / Gikomba a date to be identified probably mid month-Sunday.

A team of 12 coordinators has been established, strategic meeting will be held Friday on 3rd-friday.

National Coordinator.
Bunge La Mwanainchi.
Patrick Kamotho

Kenya: Mars Group Kenya Update; WHO IS THIS MAN, OMAR AL BASHIR, THAT SOME KENYAN GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS ARE SO DESPERATELY DEFENDING?

From: Mars Group Kenya

On November 5th 2009, Kenya’s President Mwai Kibaki and Prime Minister Raila Odinga issued a statement which officially committed themselves and the Government of Kenya to cooperate with the International Criminal Court domestically and internationally. They categorically stated: “the Government remains committed to cooperate with ICC within the framework of the Rome Statute and the International Crimes Act.”

The extension by the Government of Kenya to invite Omar Al Bashir, an International Criminal Court indictee, renders the commitments by the two principals doubtful. To his credit the Prime Minister Raila Odinga has publicly disavowed knowledge of the Omar Al Bashir invitation, but senior members of his Government, and some from his own political party, are shamelessly justifying Omar Al Bashir’s presence at the Promulgation Ceremony for the Constitution of Kenya last Friday. President Kibaki has not only remained silent, he has left the country for a COMESA meeting in Swaziland.

Some African Heads of State are clearly sympathetic to Al Bashir, and are determined to try and shield him from justice at The Hague. But truth be told if their citizens knew what kind of person Omar Al Bashir is, and what he has been charged with, their citizens would not back them; just as Kenyan citizens have refused to support Kibaki’s invitation to Omar Al Bashir.

WHY OMAR AL BASHIR IS AN INTERNATIONAL FUGITIVE FROM JUSTICE

Put simply, Omar Al Bashir has been charged with a deliberate crime against his own citizens from the Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa groups.

The warrants of arrest for Al Bashir lists Ten Criminal Charges against him on the basis of his individual criminal responsibility under article 25(3)(a) of the Rome Statute as an indirect (co) perpetrator including:

Five counts of crimes against humanity: murder – article 7(1)(a); extermination – article 7(1)(b); forcible transfer – article 7(1)(d); torture – article 7(1)(f); and rape – article 7(1)(g);

Two counts of war crimes: intentionally directing attacks against a civilian population as such or against individual civilians not taking part in hostilities -article 8(2)(e)(i); and pillaging – article 8(2)(e)(v) Three counts of genocide: genocide by killing (article 6-a), genocide by causing serious bodily or mental harm (article 6-b) and genocide by deliberately inflicting on each target group conditions of life calculated to bring about the group’s physical destruction (article 6-c).

WHAT ARE OMAR AL BASHIR’S SPECIFIC CRIMES? To those few Kenyans who believe that Omar Al Bashir should have been allowed to come to Kenya we urge you to read more about Omar Al Bashir’s crimes: specifically genocide of 3 Sudanese communities here: http://blog.marsgroupkenya.org/?p=2382
www.marsgroupkenya.org

Watching Out For You.

Kenya & Sudan: Kibaki and Team Plan to Escape to Sudan in 2013

From: Dave Atandi

After kibaki and team successfully hosted Bashir in the country last friday, one is left to wonder what really the government stands to gain in return.

However undisclosed sources reliably mention that , this was a just part of the deal that: once the Hague issues warrants for the PEV suspects who are
in govt today then they always seek protection in the Sudanese republic without fear . ( Bashir will stand by them as they did on Friday)

Kibaki and team masterminded the PEV in 2007 and they are trying everything they can to ensure that impunity prevails always and they go scot free.

I believe , we Kenyans are brighter than the few selfish devils . lets stand and defeat ghosts of corruption, infairness and IMPUNITY.

In 2012 please vote wisely.

Concerned young Kenyan.

US envoy in Sudan in line to replace Ranneberger

Folks,

If report about him being weak to face Al-Bashir is true, and that they had clash before with Ambassador Rice when Gration proposed a plan that makes the January referendum a priority, deemphasises the ongoing crisis in Darfur, and is devoid of any additional pressures on the government in Khartoum”, making Amb. Rice furious, then how will he manage Kenya when Kenya is this much hot?

Amb. Rannerberger’s time is just rightly up, but I think we need a genuine person to replace Amb. Rannerberger who will be able to listen objectively and participate in facilitating sustainable Reform and go along with what the Public wants, with no sideshow deals with the corrupt Mafia connections of the past leadership.

However, if he is the one already pointed for the job, I wish him well and just ask that he catches up with the flow of the New Constitution in Kenya.

I therefore, wish Amb. Ranneberger all the best in his future appointments.

Cheers !

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

– – – – – – – – – – –

Report: US envoy in Sudan in line to replace Ranneberger
US Special Envoy for the Sudan, J. Scott Gration (left) with former Kenyan President Daniel arap Moi. Mr Gration may be nominated to replace Michael Ranneberger as US ambassador to Kenya, a Washington-based blogger reported on Friday. NATION | David Kanda.

By KEVIN J KELLEY, New York

President Barack Obama’s special envoy for Sudan may soon be
nominated to replace Michael Ranneberger as US ambassador to Kenya, a Washington-based blogger reported on Friday.

No formal offer has been made to the Sudan point-man, retired Major General Scott Gration, but “he has wanted to be envoy to Kenya for some time,” Josh Rogin reported in his blog, “The Cable.”

The son of missionary parents, Ambassador Gration grew up in Kenya and Democratic Republic of Congo and is fluent in Kiswahili.
Mr Rogin cited “multiple administration sources” as having provided this information. “The Cable,” published by the reputable Foreign Policy magazine, bills itself as “reporting inside the foreign policy machine.”

The blog cautions that Major General Gration may face “contentious” US Senate hearings if Mr Obama does tap him for the Sudan job.

The Obama administration had earlier planned to nominate Ambassador Gration for the Nairobi post during a US congressional recess with the aim of avoiding a lengthy confirmation debate, Mr Rogin wrote.

“But that plan was no longer operative and Gration would be nominated and confirmed through the usual process,” the blogger added, citing an unnamed Obama administration official as his source.

The Sudan envoy has become a target of criticism from some advocacy groups in Washington for allegedly taking a soft line toward the government of President Omar al-Bashir, who has been indicted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes in the Darfur region.

Major General Gration has also reportedly feuded with US Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice over his approach to the Bashir regime, particularly on the Darfur issue.

The latest such episode occurred last week at a White House meeting on Sudan, Mr Rogin reported.

Ambassador Rice “was said to be ‘furious’ when Gration proposed a plan that makes the January referendum a priority, deemphasises the ongoing crisis in Darfur, and is devoid of any additional pressures on the government in Khartoum.”

Mr Rogin added that “according to multiple sources briefed on the meeting, Gration’s plan was endorsed by almost all the other participants, including Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and will now go the president for his approval. Rice was invited to provide a written dissent.”

South Sudan is scheduled to vote in January on whether to secede.
Major General Gration will seek to retain his Sudan portfolio if he does win approval as the next US ambassador to Kenya, Mr Rogin also reported.

“If he is successful in keeping his role in Sudan policy, he would be hugely influential on three major Africa policy issues: Sudan, Kenya, and Somalia, which is largely managed from the embassy in Nairobi,” the blogger noted.

But the head of a leading activist group in Washington suggests it is unlikely that Major General Gration would be allowed to retain the Sudan position whilst in the US embassy in Nairobi.

“”The special envoy job [for Sudan] is a full-time job, as is being ambassador to Kenya during this crucial time,” John Norris, director of the Enough Project told Mr Rogin. “I can’t imagine they would place one person in charge of both.”

Ambassador Ranneberger took up the Nairobi posting four years ago. That is roughly the length of time that a US envoy remains in a particular country before being re-assigned.

Sudan is supporting LRA rebels fighting Ugandan government, claims captured rebel

THE SUDAN GOVERNMENT SUFFERED A MAJOR SETBACK WHEN A CAPTURED LRA REBEL CLAIMED THAT KHARTOUM IS SUPPORTING THEM WITH LOGISTICS AND TRAINING.
Reports Leo Odera Omolo in KIsumu City

Kulayigye listening to captured LRA boss Okello

Kulayigye listening to captured LRA boss Okello addressing journalists in Kampala yesterday

A captured LRA commander has told the Ugandan military officials that the Sudan government is support the rebel fighting to oust the elected Uganda government of President Yoweri Musevgeni, the semi-government-owned NEWVISION reported this morning.

THE Sudan government is in touch with the Lord’s Resistance Army command and has given the rebels fresh supplies of food and medicines, a captured commander has said.

The LRA political commissar, Okello ‘Mission’, told journalists in Kampala that he was part of the LRA team that trekked to the Darfur region in Sudan where they met officers of the Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) on October 4, 2009.

He said their delegation was led by Caesar Acellam and they met with the SAF brigade commander in Darfur, Col. Hamdou, and an un-named lieutenant colonel said to be the regional chief of intelligence.

He said Khartoum solicited for the meeting.

“The subject of the discussion was to resume the partnership with the government of Sudan,” Okello Mission said.
He first narrated that the SAF commanders told them they were welcome to Darfur as long as they disarmed.

When pressed, he said SAF promised to give the LRA a “safe corridor” to central Sudan, as well as food and medicines.

The Khartoum government has been denying reports that the LRA is in Darfur or that Sudan is still supporting the rebels.

“These claims are merely irresponsible accusations, disinformation and propaganda against Sudan,” the Sudanese embassy said in a statement last month.

“In his recent visits to South Sudan, President Omar el-Bashir made it very clear that Kony will not be given refuge inside the country. He vowed to arrest him if he entered Sudan territory and hand him over to Uganda,” it added.

Army spokesman Felix Kulayigye yesterday said the Government takes Okello’s statements seriously but they would be addressed at state level.

He said Okello confirmed earlier intelligence information that the LRA group met Khartoum officials in Darfur.

The LRA has been under military pressure from the joint operation by the armies of Uganda, Congo, Southern Sudan and the Central African Republic.

The combined air raids and infantry assault on the LRA bases in the densely populated Garamba forest in eastern Congo in December 2008 sent the rebels in disarray.

They have been oscillating between Congo, Southern Sudan and the Central African Republic. Many commanders were killed, captured, or surrendered.

Okello Mission, 30, was captured by UPDF soldiers at Ezo in Southern Sudan after a brief shoot-out in the evening of March 31. Okello was in a unit of 10 rebels, led by Felly Otimi, an escort to LRA leader Joseph Kony.

He graduated from Makerere University in 2004 with a bachelor’s degree in computer science and joined the LRA as a peace negotiator in 2006. A relative of Kony, he hails from Lalogi in Gulu district and holds a Democratic Party (DP) membership card.

He joined the Juba peace talks at the same time with Santa Okot, Peter Obina, Yusuf Adek and Quinto Kidega. He said he remained with the rebels to explain the draft final peace agreement to Kony.

Okello told journalists at the CMI headquarters in Kitante that he sacrificed himself for the sake of peace, adding that the Government was aware of his mission.

He said he volunteered to go to Kony after President Museveni raised concerns that people in the diaspora claiming to speak for LRA were out of touch with reality.

“I was arrested on March 31 when I was assigned to convey a message to the Government requesting for (the resumption of) peace talks,” he argued.

However, Kulayigye refuted the story, saying Okello would be charged with treason.

“The man faces prosecution since he joined the LRA voluntarily. He launched war on a legally elected government,” he remarked.

Okello described the multi-pronged attack by the regional armies on LRA as the day he thought he would die. “It was my first time to see air strikes. The whole sky was full of gunships.”

Asked about the Christmas massacres conducted by the LRA in Congo in the aftermath of the attacks, Okello said Kony was avenging the onslaught on them.

He described life in the bush as horrific. “I did not expect I would ever live such a life. It’s too painful. You walk from morning to sunset. You get problems like knee pain. We fed on wild fruits.”

Asked about the whereabouts of the LRA leader, Okello said Kony was in eastern Congo with his army commander, Okot Odhiambo. He estimates the number of fighters left at 200.

The army yesterday also paraded ‘Second Lieutenant’ Geoffrey Okello, ‘Sergeant’ Geoffrey Okonga and ‘Captain’ Jasper Moroto who surrendered on March 16 in DRC.

They reported to the UPDF with three guns and an abducted girl, Agnes Amune, who came back with two children.

Okonga is the son of Yusuf Adeke, a member of the LRA peace team who the army described as “a big LRA collaborator in the north”.

Okonga, 23, said he was taken to Garamba in April 2007 by his father, purportedly for a mental ailment which only Kony could treat.

He said he was supposed to come back to Uganda but his return was overtaken by the launch of Operation Lightning Thunder.

“The chairman (Kony) told me since they have launched an operation on him, I should stay and do duties he would assign me,” Okonga recalled.
He said he was trained to shoot a gun and later given a weapon which he said was to protect himself from enemies.

“I left because I didn’t go there for any job. I went to get healed,” he pleaded. Okonga, who had just finished his ‘O’ Level classes at Kitgum High School, said.All the LRA fighters go through rituals to protect them while fighting.

Ends

Kenya closes its borders temporarily with Uganda, Sudan and Ethiopia

SOLDIERS MOVED TO THE BORDERS AS KENYA TEMPORARILY CLOSES ITS FRONTIERS WITH UGANDA, SUDAN AND ETHIOPIA IN AN EFFORT TO MOP UP ILLEGAL GUNS.

Writes Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City

KENYAN Troops were at the weekend moved with their heavy artillery and guns to secure and seal the country’s international borders with Sudan and Ethiopia, ahead of the planned exercise to mop up illegal guns.

The measurers are temporary and aimed at preventing border crossings by the pastoralist communities, known to be crossing for the purpose of hiding their illegally acquired guns with their kins across the common border, each time there is such exercises launched by the government for the purpose of seizing illegal firearms.

The arrival of the officers has caused a lot of panic in the North Rift where cattle rustling has been the order of the day, a menace blamed on the existence of unlicensed firearms.

Hundred of troops were spotted taking positions at Suam forest area on the Kenya-Uganda border, while some trucks were seen in Kitale and Kapenguria towns, dropping off the soldiers.

It was also learnt that the Uganda Peoples Defense {UPDF} were also on high alert on the other side of the common border. The Ugandan soldiers are said to have received firm instruction from their superiors to seize Kenyans fleeing and sneaking into their country with guns.

“The soldiers have been stationed between a radius of 5 and 10 kilometers apart with express instructions to ruthlessly deal with illegal gun handlers.

“Our men are on high alert and have been instructed to disarm or arrest any person with illegal firearms,” an UPDF soldier said on the phone. The soldier, however, sought for his anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the press on security matters.

On the Kenyan side of the border, security forces scaled up security at Kabolet, Mt Elgon and Suam forests in North Rift, where rustlers plan and execute raids.

Regular police, Administration Police, and General Service Unit {GSU} personnel have been mobilized from various districts to back up the disarmament exercises expected to take weeks.

During a recent meeting between security agencies from Kenya and Uganda held in Kitale, the countries resolved to conduct joint disarmament to enhance development along the border.

Ugandan delegation, led by Brigadier Patrick Kankiribo, the commander of UPDF 3rd division, had complained of Kenya’s reluctance to retrieve guns from the Pokots and Turkanas pastoralist communities.

NakapirIpIri Resident District Commissioner, RDC Andrew Napaja told the Kitale meeting that over 27,000 guns have been recovered from communities living on Eastern part of Uganda.

At the same time, the Provincial Administration from Western Kenya and Easter Uganda met at another border town of Busia to lay plans and logistics for the operation. Upper Western Regional Commissioner Rashid Mohammed said the cooperation would ensure security and eliminate illegal trade.

“We will tighten our security surveillance to ensure the arms are not smuggled into the two countries unnoticed.”

Busia Uganda DC, Emily Aluku, who led her country’s delegation, said more similar meetings would enhance collaborations in investigations and arresting of suspects. The meeting comes barely weeks after a terror suspect arrested in Busia mysteriously disappeared from police custody.

In another important development, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, and Kenya’s Prime Minister Raila Amolo OIdinga, held a crucial meeting at the State House, Entebbe at the weekend.

The meeting between the two gave an impression that the row over the ownership of the controversial Migingo fishing islands would soon end in a happy note once the joint survey by Kenya and Uganda is completed.

During the talks between the two last Friday, they called for a speedy completion of the joint survey work, which has stalled off and on for sometime, since it was launched early last year.

President Museveni said his country had temporarily called off the exercise to consult with his government on certain descriptive details appearing on earlier documkents describing the location of the island.

The Prime Minister arrived in Uganda on Good Friday for a working Easter holiday, and went into a lengthy discussion with the Ugandan leader. The talks focused on cross border security and trade issues, ranging from the controversy over Migingo, to cattle rustling.

The two leaders also agreed to initiate joint sensitization exercises along the border to educate patrol communities on alternative economic activities. Cattle rustling, the leaders said, have impeded development among the community on both sides of the border. They said an agreement for either government to pursue and extradite rustlers, who have fled across the border, would bring the menaces to an end.

President Museveni, according to the government owned NEWVISION, had emphasized that through a joint initiative, Kenya and Uganda could end the cattle rustling menace along their common border, then jointly appeal to Sudan and Ethiopia to do the same.

Museveni said he was keen to see an end to the tribulation of fishermen struggling to earn a living out of the lake. “ I am determined to ensure Kenyans fish legally, even if they are on the Ugandan side of Lake Victoria, and that will be ensured once we finish this survey work.”

Ends

leooderaomolo@yahoo.com

UN body warns Africa of the impending conflicts over the scarce water resources

UNDP WARNS AFRICA ABOUT THE IMPENDING DANGER OF ARMED CONFLICTS IN SOME FLASHPOINT OF THE CONTINENT FOLLOWING SCARCITY OF WATER RESOURCES.

Environmental Features By Leo Odera Omolo.

A UN body has predicted that the main conflicts in Africa during the next 25 years will be over the scarcity of water, as countries are likely to wage war against each other for access to the scarce resources.

The United Nations Development Programe {UNDP} says in a study just released at the turn of the century that water wars are likely in areas where rivers and lakes are shared by more than one country.

The inter-play of climate change, indiscriminate destruction of forests, poor agriculture techniques, and runaway population growth has worked against the continent’s once abundant water resources.

Africa has 63 international river basins that collectively cover 64 per cent of its surface area. They contain over 90 per cent of its surface water resources.

Most of these rivers are shared by two to four countries. Some are shared by many more, like the Congo river{1} and the Niger river {10}, Lake Chad and Zambezi River {8}. There are also many smaller shared basins.

The problem is complicated by the fact that trans -boundary river system are endoergic, they do not terminate in the Ocean. Rather, they flow into low-lying inland areas. Endoergic system in drier environment are considered the socio-economic lifeline of communities living in low lying areas.

The United Nations Environmental Program {UNEP} cites the saline or alkaline basins of Lake Chad, Lake Natron, and Lake Turkana ,and the fresh water Okavango-Makgadikadi and Cuvelai basins, as water systems in danger of failing.

At the same time Lake Turkana in Northern Kenya will soon be the scene of a major conflict in the near future, environmentalists, have warned.

Ten years ago, the then Egyptian Foreign Ministe,r Boutros Boutros-Ghali had predicted that the next major world war in Africa would be over the scrambles for water.

Now water diplomacy is starting to take center-stage in African, and globally. Experts are tracing fights over water rights and shortage as the root cause of many civil conflicts on the continent over the past three decades.

The influential weekly, the EASTAFRICAN reported in its latest edition that “As Kenya and Ethiopia enter series of deals on electricity generation and supply, the livelihood of close to 200,000 people is threatened. These people have for centuries depended on a lake that is fed by rivers threatened by a giant hydroelectric power project in Ethiopia.

The Gilgel Gibe 111 hydroelectric dam, which at a cost of USD 1,7 billion, will be one of the largest in Africa, is already causing concern among environmentalists and the local communities living around the Lake Turkana in Northern Kenya.

Opponents of the project says it will destroy the livelihood of thousands of people, especially the nomadic Turkana and Rendile communities, as well as the smallest tribe in Kenya, the El-Molo, that depend entirely on the fish of Lake Turkana.

Situated on the Omo River Valley, the dam is expected to have a mammoth reservoir that will hold thousands of cubic meters of water. The environmentalists and locals believed this will interfere with the livelihood of these tribes.

The other flashpoints across Africa that the UNEP and UNDP have cited include the Nile, Niger, Volta and Zambezi basins.
The UNDP report says population growth and economic development will lead to nearly one in two people in Africa living in countries facing water scarcity, and water stress in 25 years. Water scarcity is defined as less than 1,000 cubic meters of water available per person per year, while water stress means less than 1,500cubic meters per year.

According to UNDP, by the year 2025, 12 more African countries will join the 13 that already suffer from water stress or water scarcity.

“Water disputes in Africa revolve around one or more of three issues; quantity, quality and timing. These play out differently on various scales, whether international, intra-nationality, regionally or indirectly, “says the UNDP funded study report titled “Hydro political Vulnerability and Reliance Along International water in Africa.”

The Nile Basin, which encompasses nine countries –including Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania, has been mentioned area potential source of conflict because of the high number of people who depend on it.

For example, if the combined population of just three countries –Ethiopia, Egypt, and Sudan- through which the Nile runs, rises as predicted from 150 million people today to 340 million in 2050, there will be intense pressure, which could easily spill over into war. This is according to the EASTAFRICAN weekly. Sudan, Ethiopia, and Eritrea are among the Nile Basin states that are most vulnerable to climate variation.

The amount of water left when the Nile water has also been drastically declining is also proof that the up take along its course is rising. In case water levels reduces drastically Egypt, being at the lower end of the Nile River will be most affected.

Ends

Are Kenyans safe in Sudan?

Three Kenyans murdered in cold blood in Juba.

From : Elijah Kombo

The back page of the DN, as well as the three major media houses reported three Kenyans murdered in cold blood in Juba. Nothing so far has been speculated and with due respect, we would like to know whether our brothers and sisters are safe. Approximately 70,000 Kenyans work and live in Sudan after the CPA. South Sudan is appropriate for Kenyans for simple reasons: free life with no restrictions. In North Sudan, for example, taking beer is forbidden, as well holding hands with opposite sex in public! That makes Foreigners in NS behave. A 300ml beer is worthy Usd 10 in Khartoum, and in an underground pub – while in SS paltry 5usd in a discotheque. The life of Kenyans cannot be dictated by the restrictions.

I have been privileged to work in both North and South Sudan for approximately two years. I will note here authoritatively that the Embassy in the North is actively involved in taking good care of Kenyans in North Sudan. All Kenyans are required to register. The Ambassadors has dedicated his services to Kenyans undeservedly. Ambassador Mutua (?-cant remember his name) hosts a Kenyan bonding party during public functions. A typical example is during one Madaraka day, he invited all Kenyans to his residence – receiving VIP reception to a party where foreign dignitaries including Sudanese government official were present. The Kenyan Embassy in NS knows where every Kenyan lives. Every Kenyans are mere brothers and sisters to the Sudanese, and the friendship is well recognised in government offices. Why this cant happen in South Sudan?

In the South – there is a slight difference. I found out that the Kenyan Consular is fully of laxity in handling affairs that concern their citizens. A large segment of Kenyans work in the South as compared in the North and there welfare is not assured. While the South is predominantly Christian, and yet represent the larger conflict between neighbouring countries – Kenyan receiving the larger portion.

The border at Nadapal is a show case of laxity from both governments. Hundreds of fire arms are traded through Nadapal to Lokichoggio. The conflict between the Torposas and Kenya Turkana(?) – is live. The No Man’s land is a fertile ground that can be used for other economic activities but both governments have ignored the fact that it represents a danger for peace and security. Buying a small gun at the border will only cost Usd 300 at the border. The Immigration officers are only vigilant to deter Ugandans crossing the border. Sudanese cross the border with impunity, in the name of doing business of buying from Lokichoggio and selling to Sudan. Hundreds of Sudanese posses Kenyan identity cards – and can pass the border without a hitch from the security apparatus. The Lokichoggio airport is one serious security zone. The airport lacks facilities to detect metals, and the officers use their bare hands to screen travelers!

As much as Kenyan are peace living citizens, we also have made through the local hurdles of poor governance and corruption. Those Kenyans working out there need a responsible government that will, not only facilitate safety, but also guarantee them the right to contribute to national issues such as security etc.

Will the Kenyan government official see the reality? Both Prof Saitoti and Kanjwang have tasted what it means traveling through or to Nadapal. The No-Man land basically belongs to Kenya, and we have the muscle to secure the place and guarantee security of all Kenyans living there. If ever you will trust having a minister like Kajwang, who even interviews a plumber for a work permit in Kenya, then you will understand what kind of responsible ministers we have. I have personally seen a Somali from Bosaso acquire an identity card in a matter of weeks – it only needs between Usd 400 to 800! And lots of these is happening under the watch of the embattled lawyer Hon Kajwang. And yet if you report – it becomes mere gutter press to the authorities.

Without further kwe kwe – i would conclude by highlighting the recent ‘arms deal’ to Rift Valley in preparation for 2012. A senior NGO official hinted at a security meeting that thousands of firms arms are being transported from Sudan and Somali to Rift Valley. I was one of those who challenged the validity and authority of his statement. That was in September this year. Later, it became clear that – yes, arms are being transported as revealed by the major media houses. The issues was down-played and we no longer hear of it anymore!

How secure are we at home? One Kenyan who works in South Sudan says that we are safe in Sudan than being in Kenya. Why? By virtue that in Sudan everyone owns a gun and therefore, one is assured of security. How about in Kenyan – a certain community is armed to the teeth? Then all security assurances are down-graded to level 3.

Kenyans have suffered a lot: in the hands of Ugandans during the PEV, and subsequent Migingo problems, in the hands of South Sudanese, and in hands of Somalia – in the name of peace deals.

We wait the report from the GOSS on why innocent Kenyans were murdered and their safety was not guaranteed afterall.

KEO