By
every
conceivable measure, South Sudan
is a nation in acute crisis.
According to the World Bank,
eighty percent
of the South Sudanese population
lives below the international
poverty line, only
one percent
of people have access to
electricity, and this month a UN
Security
Council delegation
warned
that another full-fledged civil
war could break out at any moment.
What
South Sudan has in abundance however are
guns, violence, and US
sanctions that are preventing the
government from helping its people.
South
Sudan
is the embodiment of so many ills
that affect the world –
colonialism, militarization, civil
war, climate change, famine, and
sexual violence. By the mid-20th
century, Sudan, encompassing what
is
now South Sudan and Sudan, began
to fill up with firearms. By 1966,
the country had received
30,000 G3 rifles
from West Germany. By the late
1970s/mid-eighties, with the
US-Soviet
proxy wars in full swing, US arms
transfers to Sudan were so large
($1.4 billion) that combined with
arms transfers from other
countries, the country was dubbed
"Africa’s
arms
dump."
Global
food
security was among the priority
issues
discussed last week
at the UN General Assembly in New
York and its adjacent meetings.
With the
prediction
that South Sudan will experience
famine unless billions of dollars
in
aid are not obtained immediately,
it is among the countries being
considered for urgent action.
But,
and this must be understood, the multiple
crises facing South Sudan
weren’t of its own making.
Located
along
the Nile River the land that is
now Sudan and South Sudan was
once part of the ancient Christian
Nubian kingdoms. It was renowned
for its
arts and culture,
had its own
written language, high
literacy rates,
and enjoyed
high levels of gender
equality.
Nubia
eventually
declined
and fell to successive conquerors.
Eventually,
revolted against Egypt.
However, only a decade later,
Britain, which was the ruling
power in
Egypt, retook Sudan and placed it
under joint Egyptian-British rule.
Sudan
finally
gained its independence in 1956.
But, independence did not
give way to peace. A civil war,
which was already underway between
the predominantly Muslim north and
majority Christian south, would
last until 72. During that time
both sides were handing
out arms to civilians,
including children, for
self-protection. By the end of a
second civil war
which lasted until 2005 and was
largely a continuation of the
first
civil war, an estimated
1.9–3.2 million small
arms circulating
among the population, an arms
culture that aspired to reach US
levels, was well established.
In
2011,
South Sudanese citizens
voted by 99% to secede
from the north and become their
own country. While optimism was
widespread and infectious, by the
end of 2013, yet another
civil war
had broken out in the fledgling
country after President Kiir
accused
Riek Machar, attempting a coup
d’état, leading to multiple sides
fighting to rule the country.
By
2016,
6 million people in South Sudan
were
facing starvation.
By 2017, the country’s
economy was in tatters
and
famine had been declared.
By 2018, around 400,000 people had
been
killed
and over 4 million
displaced.
Despite
the
formation of a
unity government
in 2020, inter-community violence
in South Sudan
has increased.
Human and civil rights
are barely existent and the
country has been declared one of
the
most dangerous places on
earth for aid workers.
A September 2022,
joint human rights
report documented
131 cases of rape and gang rape,
including of girls as young as
eight.
In
a
declared effort to "choke off war
funds," the US has
imposed sanctions
on the South Sudanese oil
industry.
Amnesty
International
and
Human Rights Watch
want an arms embargo, but US
sanctions include South Sudan’s
oil
industry.
Sanctions
on
South Sudan’s gas industry
prevent the country
from using its natural resources
(3.5 billion barrels of proven oil
reserves) to reduce its extreme
energy poverty. While one might
think
this is positive for the
environment, without the ability
to sell its
gas, there are no funds for the
development of renewable energy
systems.
The
African Energy Chamber
has urged
the US to remove its gas industry
sanctions. The Crisis Group has
stated that
sanctions
on South Sudan must be specific in
their targets and timeframes, and
have clear off-ramps.
Violent
conflict
isn’t the only factor putting
South Sudan in urgent danger
of famine. Climate change has
wreaked
havoc on crops in the
Horn of Africa
and the war in
Ukraine is compounding
the global food security crisis.
That said, as we rush to see that
the necessary aid funds are raised
to avoid all-out famine in time
and pray for peace in the war-torn
country, we must ensure that the
US, and other Western countries,
don’t exacerbate the already dire
situation and are held accountable
for the role they played in
creating the crisis.
This
commentary
is also posted on AntiWar.com
BC
Guest Commentator
Ariel
Gold stepped
into
her current role as the
executive director of the Fellowship
of
Reconciliation,
the U.S.’s oldest peace and
justice organization, on August 1,
2022. Prior to that, she was the
national co-director of the
anti-war
group CODEPINK,
where she specialized in campaigns
for Palestinian rights. She is a
member of Congregation
Tikkun
v’Or
in Ithaca, NY where she resides
and has been a longtime active
member
of Jewish
Voice for Peace.