A
referendum is to soon take place in the southern Sudan as
to whether the south will secede and form an independent
nation or whether it will remain part of, what is now, the
largest nation-state in Africa.� This referendum is the
result of peace talks that brought the North/South civil
war in the Sudan to an end.� The implications of this referendum
have many people sitting on the edge of their chairs.
Like all African countries, the borders of the Sudan were
not the creation of the Sudanese people but instead the
result of European�and in this case, British�colonialism.�
The borders of the Sudan brought together two very different
regions, the north which was largely Arab and Muslim and
the south which was largely non-Arab, Christian as well
as animist.� As a side note, Darfur, the region in the western
Sudan that has been the site of another violent war, has
always been mainly Muslim but in that case non-Arab.
Northern Sudan has attempted to dominate the south since
independence leading to two separate civil wars.� The first
civil war, led in the south by a formation known as the
Anyanya, fought during the 1960s until a peace agreement
was reached with the national government in Khartoum.� This
broke down when Sudanese President Jaafar Numieri, in a
desperate attempt to hold onto power, attempted to institute
sharia law nationally, thereby violating the peace accord.�
The second civil war�which commenced in 1983�was led, in
the south, by the Sudanese People�s Liberation Movement/Sudanese
People�s Liberation Army, which fought a protracted war
until a peace agreement was reached in 2005.
Reports indicate that the SPLM has signaled that it will
campaign in favor of secession, and the national government�based
in Khartoum�is threatening that they may not recognize the
results of the referendum if it leads to secession.� A failure
to recognize the results of the referendum if the south
votes for independence, will certainly lead to a return
to war.
There have been forces which for years have been attempting
to tear the Sudan apart.� In the south are found oil reserves,
thus making that region important for the both the Khartoum
government as well as for various multi-national oil companies.�
There have been right-wing Christian organizations that
for years have been trying to promote the secession of southern
Sudan as part of their vision of a contemporary crusade
against Islam.� For these reasons many people are highly
skeptical of a separatist impulse.
At the same time, there is no question but that the southern
Sudan has been the object of oppression since independence.�
Various Khartoum governments have paid little attention
to making the Sudanese state truly representative.� Not
only have the governments in Khartoum been dominated by
Arabs from the north of the Sudan, but they have actually
been dominated by a small number of Arab tribes in the north.�
On those grounds alone the people of the south should have
the unimpeded right to self-determination and this should
be respected by the Khartoum government and the international
community.
All that said, what does this mean for Africa?� The decision
in the early 1960s by African leaders to leave the colonial
borders intact has resulted in on-going troubles.� Whether
one looks at the Biafra war in Nigeria, Eritrea�s decades
long struggle for independence from Ethiopia, or the simmering
struggle in the Cameroon (specifically, south Cameroon),�
the former colonial borders have united peoples and divided
peoples in a haphazard manner, often leading to civil war.�
Thus, the challenge on the one hand is to recognize the
chaos that has resulted from this hodgepodge at precisely
the moment when Africa needs to unite.� In other words,
the battles for multi-ethnic democracy�for lack of a better
term�must happen simultaneously with the battles to unite
the continent.
What
does this mean for the Sudan?� The struggle of the peoples
of the southern Sudan is not akin to the struggle of the
Confederate States of America for �independence.�� It is
not, in other words, a reactionary demand of a wealthy,
oppressive elite.� The struggle of the people of the southern
Sudan has historically been against the regional oppression
that they have felt at the hands of the various Khartoum
regimes.� The short-sightedness of the various Khartoum
regimes have brought the Sudan to the point where it may
not be able to hold together.� But any unity of the Sudan,
which I believe is preferable, cannot be the unity of a
dog owner and a dog tied together by a leash.� It must be
a unity that is democratically constructed particularly
given the years of domination from the north to which the
people of the south Sudan have been subjected.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member,
Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar with the Institute for Policy Studies, the immediate past
president of
TransAfricaForum and co-author of, Solidarity
Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path toward
Social Justice (University of California Press), which examines
the crisis of organized labor in the USA. Click here to contact Mr. Fletcher.
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