Omar Al-Bashir President of Sudan |
The journey is not yet finished (104)
(Part one hundred and four, Depok, West Java, Indonesia,
19 September 2014, 17:51 pm)
After the loss of an independent South Sudan broke away
from Khartoum, political issues and conflict in Sudan is still unfinished.
Sudan’s NCP slams calls for truce and transitional
government
Sudanese presidential aide,× Ghandour, has reiterated his
government rejection for any discussions outside× Sudan and slammed call for
cessation of hostilities and the formation of a transitional government.
Ghandour made his statements in the Nile River town of
Atbarah where is held the state convention of the ruling National Congress
Party (NCP) on Thursday. His remarks came the same day where the head of the
African Union High Level Implementation Panel (AUHIP) was briefing the United
Nations Security Council (UNSC) on his efforts to hold a comprehensive and
inclusive process for peace and democratic reforms in Sudan.
There will be "no negotiations, or discussions
outside of Khartoum," he told the NCP members when he spoke about the
ongoing efforts to include rebel and opposition groups in the national
dialogue.
The NCP deputy leader went to consider such step as
"defective" and detracts from the efforts to hold a national dialogue
between the× Sudanese stakeholders based on the initiative launched by president
Omer al-Bashir.
"How we can go abroad to negotiate while it is our
president who launched the call for dialogue?".
Sudan Map |
Ghandour further renewed his government commitment to
provide guarantees for rebel leaders who wants to participate in the internal
political process.
The African Union Peace and Security Council (AUPSC) in a
roadmap it endorsed on 12 September said that talks on a cessation of
hostilities followed immediately by negotiations on the security arrangements
on× Darfur and the Two Areas should take place separately but it did not
specify the venue of the talks.
The African body which is expected to be followed by the
UNSC proposed to hold discussions on a framework agreement on the national
dialogue process at the AU headquarters in Addis Ababa.
Sudanese officials welcomed the plan as it puts aside
rebels’ demand for a humanitarian cessation of hostilities before direct talks
on security arrangements and issues related to the conflict areas.
The Sudan Liberation Movement – Abdel Wahid al-Nur
(SLM-AW) further demands to provides security to civilians and to disarm
government militias before to participate in any discussion on security
arrangements.
On the other hand, the opposition umbrella of the
National Consensus Forces (NCF) also demands to ensure political and press
freedoms and to entrust a national cabinet with the implementation of the
outcome of the dialogue process including peace agreements and democratic
reforms.
Ghandour called on the armed and political opposition to
join the dialogue process saying “if you want dialogue we are ready”. “Come to×
Khartoum under any name for negotiations," he added speaking to the
rebels, stressing that no disagreement on the titles.
NCP officials confirmed that the government will not
recognise the alliance of the Sudanese Revolutionary Front (SRF), which gathers
three rebel movements in× Darfur and the Sudan People’s Liberation
Movement-North (SPLM-N).
NO FOR HUMANITARIAN TRUCE OR TRANSITIONAL CABINET
The presidential assistant renewed his government refusal
for a cessation of hostilities and considered it as an attempt to continue war.
Khartoum at different times said that a truce will allow rebels only to prepare
for a new wars.
He emphasised that what his government proposes is the
best solution to end war through a permanent ceasefire.
Ghandour also rejected the opposition demand for a
transitional government that leads to dismantle the NCP regime through the
national dialogue.
“Seemingly some have gotten used to transitional periods
and they want to keep the country in a continuous transition,” he said.
He further said that the dialogue process is part of
reforms the NCP wants to implement in× Sudan adding “it is not a tactic as it
is seen by some but we want through it to reach a consensus on religion,
economy, citizenship and politics”.
Ghandour told the NCP members that× Sudanese had never
diverged on their identity adding that some try to blackmailing through the
division of the people of× Sudan to Arabs and× Africans. He added that the
dialogue process aims to unify political forces, the× Sudanese society and to
maintain its cohesion.
He further spoke about the reforms within the ruling
party saying its leadership must be the example for the others, stressing on
the need to renew the leadership position at the NCP different levels and the
state governments.
The SRF rebels did not yet comment on the decision of the
AUPSC 456th meeting. However they issued a statement welcoming the release of Merriam
al-Mahdi and Ibrahim al-Sheikh.(ST)
Sudan Jet Fighter |
History of Sudan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article covers the history of the territory which is
today part of the Republic of Sudan. The term "Sudan" derives from
the Arabic bilād as-sūdān "land of the black peoples",[1][2] and is
used more loosely of West and Central Africa in general, especially the Sahel
region.
The modern Republic of Sudan was formed in 1956 and
inherited its boundaries from Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, established 1899. For times
predating 1899, usage of the term "Sudan" for the territory of the
Republic of Sudan is somewhat anachronistic, and may also refer to the more
diffuse concept of the Sudan region.
The early history of what is now northern Sudan, along
the Nile River, known as the Kingdom of Kush, is intertwined with the history
of ancient Egypt, with which it was united politically over several periods. By
virtue of its proximity to Egypt, the Sudan participated in the wider history
of the Near East inasmuch as it was Christianized by the 6th century, and
Islamized in the 7th. As a result of Christianization, the Old Nubian language
stands as the oldest recorded Nilo-Saharan language (earliest records dating to
the 9th century).
Since its independence in 1956, the history of Sudan has
been plagued by internal conflict, viz. the First Sudanese Civil War
(1955-1972), the Second Sudanese Civil War (1983-2005), culminating in the
secession of South Sudan on 9 July 2011, and the War in Darfur (2003-2010).
Sudanese Girl |
By the seventh millennium BC, people of a Neolithic
culture had settled into a sedentary way of life there in fortified mud-brick
villages, where they supplemented hunting and fishing on the Nile with grain
gathering and cattle herding.[3] During the fifth millennium BC migrations from
the drying Sahara brought neolithic people into the Nile Valley along with
agriculture. The population that resulted from this cultural and genetic mixing
developed social hierarchy over the next centuries become the Kingdom of Kush
(with the capital at Kerma) at 1700 BC. Anthropological and archaeological
research indicate that during the predynastic period Nubia and Nagadan Upper
Egypt were ethnically, and culturally nearly identical, and thus,
simultaneously evolved systems of pharaonic kingship by 3300 BC.[4] Together
with other countries on Red Sea, Sudan is considered the most likely location
of the land known to the ancient Egyptians as Punt (or "Ta Netjeru",
meaning "God's Land"), whose first mention dates to the 25th century
BC.[5]
Khartoum City |
Antiquity[edit]
Kingdom of Kush[edit]
Main article: Kingdom of Kush
Sudan combines the lands of several ancient kingdoms.
Northern Sudan's earliest historical record comes from
Egyptian sources, which described the land upstream from the First Cataract,
called Kush, as "wretched." The Kush kingdom is older than Ancient Egypt
For more than two thousand years the Old Kingdom (c.2700-2180 BC), had a
dominating and significant influence over its southern neighbour, and even
afterward, the legacy of Egyptian cultural and religious introductions remained
important.[3]
Over the centuries, trade developed. Egyptian caravans
carried grain to Kush and returned to Aswan with ivory, incense, hides, and
carnelian (a stone prized both as jewelry and for arrowheads) for shipment
downriver. Egyptian governors particularly valued gold in Nubia and soldiers in
the pharaoh's army. Egyptian military expeditions penetrated Kush periodically
during the Old Kingdom. Yet there was no attempt to establish a permanent
presence in the area until the Middle Kingdom (c.2100-1720 BC), when Egypt constructed
a network of forts along the Nile as far south as Samnah, in southern Egypt, to
guard the flow of gold from mines in Wawat.[3]
Aerial view of the Nubian pyramids at Meroe (2001).
Around 1720 BC, Semitic Canaanite nomads called Hyksos
took over Egypt, ended the Middle Kingdom, severed links with Kush, and
destroyed the forts along the Nile River. To fill the vacuum left by the
Egyptian withdrawal, a culturally distinct indigenous Kushite kingdom emerged
at Karmah, near present-day Dunqulah. After Egyptian power revived during the
New Kingdom (c.1570-1100 BC), the pharaoh Ahmose I incorporated Kush as an
Egyptian ruled province governed by a viceroy. Although Egypt's administrative
control of Kush extended only down to the fourth cataract, Egyptian sources
list tributary districts reaching to the Red Sea and upstream to the confluence
of the Blue Nile and White Nile rivers. Egyptian authorities ensured the
loyalty of local chiefs by drafting their children to serve as pages at the
pharaoh's court. Egypt also expected tribute in gold and slaves from local
Kushite chiefs.[3]
Once Egypt had established political and military mastery
over Kush, officials, priests merchants and artisans settled in the region. The
Egyptian language became widely used in everyday activities. Many rich Kushites
took to worshipping Egyptian gods and built temples for them. The temples
remained centers of official religious worship until the coming of Christianity
to the region during the 6th century AD. When Egyptian influence declined or
succumbed to foreign domination, the Kushite elite regarded themselves as
central powers and believed themselves as idols of Egyptian culture and
religion.[3]
By the 11th century BC, the authority of the New Kingdom
dynasties had diminished, allowing divided rule in Egypt, and ending Egyptian
control of Kush. With the withdrawal of the Egyptians, there ceased to be any
written record or information from Kush about the region's activities over the
next three hundred years. In the early 8th century BC, however, Kush emerged as
an independent kingdom ruled from Napata by an aggressive line of monarchs who
slowly extended their influence into Egypt. Around 750 BC, a Kushite king
called Kashta conquered Upper Egypt and became ruler of Thebes until
approximately 740 BC. His successor, Piankhy, subdued the delta, and conquered
Egypt, thus initiating the Twenty-fifth Dynasty, and founded a line of kings
who ruled Kush and Thebes for about a hundred years. The dynasty's interference
with the Assyrian sphere of influence in the Near East caused a confrontation
between Egypt and the powerful Assyrian Empire, which controlled a vast empire
comprising much of the Middle East, Asia Minor, Caucasus and East Mediterranean
from their Mesopotamian homeland. Taharqa (688-663 BC), the last Kushite
pharaoh, was defeated and driven out of the Near East by the Assyrian Emperor
Sennacherib. Sennacherib's successor Esarhaddon went further, launching a full
scale invasion of Egypt in 674 BC, defeating Taharqa and quickly conquering the
land. Taharqa fled back to Nubia, and native Egyptian princes were installed by
the Assyrians as vassals of Esarhaddon. However, Taharqa was able to return some
years later and wrest back control of a part of Egypt as far as Thebes from the
Egyptian vassal princes of Assyria. Esarhaddon died in his capital Nineveh
while preparing to return to Egypt and once more eject the Kushites.[6] His
successor, Ashurbanipal, sent a general with a small army which again defeated
and ejected Taharqa from Egypt. Taharqa died in Nubia two years later. His
successor, Tanutamun, attempted to regain Egypt. He successfully defeated Necho
I, the puppet ruler installed by Ashurbanipal, taking Thebes in the process.
The Assyrians then sent a powerful army southwards. Tantamani was heavily
routed, and the Assyrian army sacked Thebes to such an extent it never truly
recovered. A native ruler, Psammetichus I was placed on the throne, as a vassal
of Ashurbanipal, thus ending the Kushite/Nubian Empire.
Sudan Peoples |
Marwi[edit]
Main article: Meroë
Egypt's succeeding dynasty failed to reassert full
control over Kush. Around 590 BC, however, an Egyptian army sacked Napata,
compelling the Kushite court to move to a more secure location further south at
Meroe near the Sixth Cataract. For several centuries thereafter, the Meroitic
kingdom developed independently of Egyptian influence and domination, which
passed successively under Persian, Greek, and, finally, Roman domination.
During the height of its power in the 2nd and 3rd centuries BC, Meroe extended
over a region from the third cataract in the north to Soba, near present-day
Khartoum, in the south. An Egyptian influenced pharaonic tradition persisted
among a line of rulers at Meroe, who raised stelae to record the achievements
of their reigns and erected pyramids to contain their tombs. These objects and
the ruins of palaces, temples, and baths at Meroe attest to a centralized
political system that employed artisans' skills and commanded the labour of a
large work force. A well-managed irrigation system allowed the area to support
a higher population density than was possible during later periods. By the 1st
century BC, the use of hieroglyphs gave way to a Meroitic script that adapted
the Egyptian writing system to an indigenous, Nubian-related language spoken by
the region's people. Meroe's succession system was not necessarily hereditary;
the matriarchal royal family member deemed most worthy often became king. The
queen mother's role in the selection process was crucial to a smooth
succession. The crown appears to have passed from brother to brother (or
sister) and only when no siblings remained from father to son.
Although Napata remained Meroe's religious center,
northern Kush eventually fell into disorder as it came under pressure from the
Blemmyes, predatory nomads from east of the Nile. However, the Nile continued
to give the region access to the Mediterranean world. Additionally, Meroe
maintained contact with Arab and Indian traders along the Red Sea coast and
incorporated Greek Hellenistic and Indian Hindu cultural influences into its
daily life. Inconclusive evidence suggests that metallurgical technology may
have been transmitted westward across the savanna belt to West Africa from
Meroe's iron smelteries.
Relations between Meroe and Egypt were not always
peaceful. As a response to Meroe's incursions into Upper Egypt, a Roman army
moved south and razed Napata in 23 BC. The Roman commander quickly abandoned
the area, however, deeming it too poor to warrant colonization.
In the 2nd century AD, the Nobatae occupied the Nile's
west bank in northern Kush. They are believed to have been one of several
well-armed bands of horse- and camel-borne warriors who sold their vagility to
the Meroitic Population for protection; eventually they intermarried and
established themselves among the Meroitic people as a military aristocracy.
Until nearly the 5th century, Rome subsidized the Nobatae and used Meroe as a
buffer between Egypt and the Blemmyes. Meanwhile, the old Meroitic kingdom
contracted because of the expansion of the powerful Ethiopic Kingdom of Aksum
to the east. By AD 350, King Ezana of Axum had captured and destroyed Meroe
city, ending the kingdom's independent existence, and conquering its territory
into modern-day northern Sudan.
Medieval history[edit]
Christian Nubia[edit]
See also: Makuria, Nobadia and Alwa
Christian Nubia in the three states period. Makuria would
later absorb Nobatia. Note that the border between Alodia and Makuria is
unclear, but it was somewhere between the 5th and 6th Cataracts.
By the 6th century, three states had emerged as the
political and cultural heirs of the Meroitic kingdom. Nobatia in the north, had
its capital at Faras, in what is now Egypt; the central kingdom, Muqurra, was
centered at Dunqulah, the old city on the Nile about 150 kilometers south of
modern Dunqulah; and Alwa, in the heartland of old Meroe in the south, had its
capital at Sawba. In all three kingdoms, warrior aristocracies ruled Meroitic
populations from royal courts where functionaries bore Greek titles in
emulation of the Byzantine court.
The earliest references to Nubia's successor kingdoms are
contained in accounts by Greek and Egyptian Coptic authors of the conversion of
Nubian kings to Christianity in the 6th century AD. According to tradition, a
missionary sent by Byzantine empress Theodora arrived in Nobatia and started
preaching the gospel about 540 AD. It is possible that the conversion process began
earlier, however, under the aegis of Coptic missionaries from Egypt. The Nubian
kings accepted the Monophysite Christianity practiced in Egypt and acknowledged
the spiritual authority of the Egyptian Coptic patriarch of Alexandria over the
Nubian church. A hierarchy of bishops named by the Coptic patriarch of
Alexandria and consecrated in Egypt directed the church's activities and
wielded considerable secular power. The church sanctioned a sacerdotal
kingship, confirming the royal line's legitimacy. In turn the monarch protected
the church's interests. The queen mother's role in the succession process
paralleled that of Meroe's matriarchal tradition. Because women transmitted the
right to succession, a renowned warrior not of royal birth might be nominated
to become king through marriage to a woman in line of succession.
The emergence of Christianity reopened channels to
Mediterranean civilization and renewed Nubia's cultural and ideological ties to
Egypt. The church encouraged literacy in Nubia through its Egyptian-trained
clergy and in its monastic and cathedral schools. The use of Greek in liturgy
eventually gave way to the Nubian language, which was written using an
indigenous alphabet that combined elements of the old Meroitic and Coptic
scripts. Egyptian Coptic, however, often still appeared in ecclesiastical and
secular circles. Additionally, early inscriptions have indicated a continuing
knowledge of colloquial Greek in Nubia as late as the 12th century AD. After
the 7th century AD, Semitic Arabic gained importance in the Nubian kingdoms,
especially as a medium for commerce.
The Christian Nubian kingdoms, which survived for many
centuries, achieved their peak of prosperity and military power in the 9th and
10th centuries AD. However, Muslim Arab invaders, who in 640 had conquered
Egypt, posed a threat to the Christian Nubian kingdoms. Nobatia and Muqurra
merged into the kingdom of Dunqulah sometime before 700. Although the Arabs
soon abandoned attempts to reduce Nubia by force, Arab Muslim domination of
Egypt and persecution of native Egyptian Christians often made it difficult to
communicate with the Coptic patriarch or to obtain Egyptian-trained clergy. As
a result, the Nubian church became isolated from the rest of the Christian
world.
Sudan Troops |
Islamization of Sudan[edit]
Main article: Islamization of Sudan
The kingdoms of the Funj, Shilluk, Tegali, and Fur c.1800
Islam came to Egypt in the 640s, and pressed southward;
around 651 the governor of Egypt raided as far south as Dongola. The Muslims or
the Arabs met with stiff resistance. They ceased their offensive and a treaty
known as the baqt was signed between the Arabs and Makuria. This treaty held
for some seven hundred years. The area between the Nile and the Red Sea was a
source of gold and emeralds, and Arab miners gradually moved in. Around the
970s an Arabic envoy Ibn Sulaym went to Dongola and wrote an account
afterwards; it is now our most important source for this period. Despite the
baqt northern Sudan became steadily Islamicized and Arabized; Makuria collapsed
in the 14th century with Alodia disappearing somewhat later.
Far less is known about the history of southern Sudan. It
seems as though it was home to a variety of semi-nomadic tribes. In the 16th
century one of these tribes, known as the Funj, moved north and united Nubia
forming the Kingdom of Sennar. The Funj sultans quickly converted to Islam and that
religion steadily became more entrenched. At the same time, the Darfur
Sultanate arose in the west. Between them, the Taqali established a state in
the Nuba Hills.
The economy of Sudan was feudally based, with a large
number of slaves supporting the ruling Funj class. They traded across the
region, and brought much wealth to their kingdom.[7]
19th century[edit]
Turkish Sudan[edit]
Main article: History of Sudan (1821–1885)
In 1820–21, an Ottoman force conquered and unified the
northern portion of the country. The new government was known as the Turkiyah
or Turkish regime. They were looking to open new markets and sources of natural
resources. Historically, the pestilential swamps of the Sudd discouraged
expansion into the deeper south of the country. Although Egypt claimed all of
the present Sudan during most of the 19th century, and established a province
Equatoria in southern Sudan to further this aim, it was unable to establish
effective control over the area. In the later years of the Turkiyah, British
missionaries traveled from modern-day Kenya into the Sudan to convert the local
tribes to Christianity.
A typical slave merchant of Khartoum, 1875
Mahdism and condominium[edit]
Main article: History of Mahdist Sudan
In 1881, a religious leader named Muhammad Ahmad
proclaimed himself the Mahdi ("guided one") and began a war to unify
the tribes in western and central Sudan. His followers took the name “Ansars”
("followers") which they continue to use today, in association with
the single largest political grouping, the Umma Party (once led by a descendant
of the Mahdi, Sadiq al Mahdi). Taking advantage of conditions resulting from
Ottoman-Egyptian exploitation and maladministration, the Mahdi led a
nationalist revolt culminating in the fall of Khartoum on 26 January 1885. The
interim governor-general of the Sudan, the British Major-General Charles George
Gordon, and many of the fifty thousand inhabitants of Khartoum were massacred.
The Mahdi died in June 1885. He was followed by Abdallahi
ibn Muhammad, known as the Khalifa, who began an expansion of Sudan's area into
Ethiopia.Following his victories in eastern Ethiopia, he sent an army to invade
Egypt, where it was defeated by the British at Toshky. The British become aware
of the weakness of the Sudan.
An Anglo-Egyptian force under Lord Kitchener in 1898 was
sent to Sudan. Sudan was proclaimed a condominium in 1899 under
British-Egyptian administration. The Governor-General of the Sudan, for
example, was appointed by "Khedival Decree", rather than simply by
the British Crown, but while maintaining the appearance of joint
administration, the British Empire formulated policies, and supplied most of
the top administrators.
See also: Battle of Omdurman and Battle of Umm Diwaykarat
British control (1896-1955)[edit]
Main articles: History of Anglo-Egyptian Sudan and Anglo
Egyptian Darfur Expedition
In 1896, a Belgian expedition claimed portions of
southern Sudan that became known as the Lado Enclave. The Lado Enclave was
officially part of the Belgian Congo. An 1896 agreement between the United
Kingdom and Belgium saw the enclave turned over to the British after the death
of King Léopold II in December 1909.
At the same time the French claimed several areas: Bahr
el Ghazal, and the Western Upper Nile up to Fashoda. By 1896 they had a firm
administrative hold on these areas and they planned on annexing them to French
West Africa. An international conflict known as the Fashoda incident developed
between France and the United Kingdom over these areas. In 1899, France agreed
to cede the area to the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan.
From 1898, the United Kingdom and Egypt administered all
of present day Sudan as the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, but northern and southern
Sudan were administered as separate provinces of the condominium. In the very
early 1920s, the British passed the Closed Districts Ordinances which
stipulated that passports were required for travel between the two zones, and
permits were required to conduct business from one zone into the other, and
totally separate administrations prevailed.
Sudan Army |
In the south, English, Dinka, Bari, Nuer, Latuko,
Shilluk, Azande and Pari (Lafon) were official languages, while in the north,
Arabic and English were used as official languages. Islam was discouraged by
the British in the south, where Christian missionaries were permitted to work.
Condominium governors of south Sudan attended colonial conferences in East
Africa, not in Khartoum, and the British hoped to add south Sudan to their East
African colonies.
Most of the British focus was on developing the economy
and infrastructure of the north. Southern political arrangements were left
largely as they had been prior to the arrival of the British. Until the 1920s,
the British had limited authority in the south.
In order to establish their authority in the north, the
British promoted the power of Sayyid Ali al-Mirghani, head of the Khatmiyya
sect and Sayyid Abd al-Rahman al-Mahdi, head of the Ansar sect. The Ansar sect
essentially became the Umma party, and Khatmiyya became the Democratic Unionist
Party.
In 1943, the British began preparing the north for
self-government, establishing a North Sudan Advisory Council to advise on the
governance of the six North Sudanese provinces: Khartoum, Kordofan, Darfur, and
Eastern, Northern, and Blue Nile provinces. Then, in 1946, the British
administration reversed its policy and decided to integrate north and south
Sudan under one government. The South Sudanese authorities were informed at the
Juba Conference of 1947 that they would in future be governed by a common
administrative authority with the north. From 1948, 13 delegates, nominated by
the British authorities, represented the south on the Sudan Legislative
Assembly.
Many southerners felt betrayed by the British, because
they were largely excluded from the new government. The language of the new
government was Arabic, but the bureaucrats and politicians from southern Sudan
had, for the most part, been trained in English. Of the eight hundred new
governmental positions vacated by the British in 1953, only four were given to
southerners.
Also, the political structure in the south was not as
organized in the north, so political groupings and parties from the south were
not represented at the various conferences and talks that established the
modern state of Sudan. As a result, many southerners do not consider Sudan to
be a legitimate state.
Post-colonial history (1956 to present)[edit]
Independence and the First Civil War[edit]
Main articles: History of Sudan (1956–1969) and First
Sudanese Civil War
In February 1953, the United Kingdom and Egypt concluded
an agreement providing for Sudanese self-government and self-determination. The
transitional period toward independence began with the inauguration of the
first parliament in 1954. On 18 August 1955 a revolt in the army in Torit
Southern Sudan broke out,[8](reference link broken) which although quickly
suppressed, led to a low level guerrilla insurgency by former Southern rebels,
and marked the beginning of the First Sudanese Civil War.[9] On 15 December
1955 the Premier of Sudan Ismail al-Azhari announced that Sudan would
unilaterally declare independence in four days time.[10] On 19 December 1955
the Sudanese parliament, unilaterally and unanimously, declared Sudan's
independence.[11] The British and Egyptian Governments recognized the
independence of Sudan on 1 January 1956. The United States was among the first
foreign powers to recognize the new state. However, the Arab-led Khartoum
government reneged on promises to southerners to create a federal system, which
led to a mutiny by southern army officers that sparked seventeen years of civil
war (1955–1972). In the early period of the war, hundreds of northern
bureaucrats, teachers, and other officials, serving in the south were
massacred.
The National Unionist Party (NUP), under Prime Minister
Ismail al-Azhari, dominated the first cabinet, which was soon replaced by a
coalition of conservative political forces. In 1958, following a period of
economic difficulties and political maneuvering that paralyzed public
administration, Chief of Staff Major General Ibrahim Abboud overthrew the
parliamentary regime in a bloodless coup d'état.
Gen. Abboud did not carry out his promises to return
Sudan to civilian government, however, and popular resentment against army rule
led to a wave of riots and strikes in late October 1964 that forced the
military to relinquish power.
The Abboud regime was followed by a provisional
government until parliamentary elections in April 1965 led to a coalition
government of the Umma and National Unionist Parties under Prime Minister Muhammad
Ahmad Mahjoub. Between 1966 and 1969, Sudan had a series of governments that
proved unable either to agree on a permanent constitution or to cope with
problems of factionalism, economic stagnation, and ethnic dissidence. The
succession of early post-independence governments were dominated by Arab
Muslims who viewed Sudan as a Muslim Arab state. Indeed, the Umma/NUP proposed
1968 constitution was arguably Sudan’s first Islamic-oriented constitution.
The Nimeiry Era[edit]
Main article: History of Sudan (1969–1985)
Dissatisfaction culminated in a second coup d'état on May
25, 1969. The coup leader, Col. Gaafar Nimeiry, became prime minister, and the
new regime abolished parliament and outlawed all political parties.
Disputes between Marxist and non-Marxist elements within
the ruling military coalition resulted in a briefly successful coup in July
1971, led by the Sudanese Communist Party. Several days later, anti-communist
military elements restored Nimeiry to power.
In 1972, the Addis Ababa Agreement led to a cessation of
the north-south civil war and a degree of self-rule. This led to ten years
hiatus in the civil war.
Until the early 1970s, Sudan's agricultural output was
mostly dedicated to internal consumption. In 1972, the Sudanese government
became more pro-Western, and made plans to export food and cash crops. However,
commodity prices declined throughout the 1970s causing economic problems for
Sudan. At the same time, debt servicing costs, from the money spent mechanizing
agriculture, rose. In 1978, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) negotiated a
Structural Adjustment Program with the government. This further promoted the
mechanized export agriculture sector. This caused great economic problems for
the pastoralists of Sudan (See Nuba Peoples).
In 1976, the Ansars mounted a bloody but unsuccessful
coup attempt. In July 1977, President Nimeiry met with Ansar leader Sadiq
al-Mahdi, opening the way for reconciliation. Hundreds of political prisoners
were released, and in August a general amnesty was announced for all opponents
of Nimeiry’s government.
Arms suppliers[edit]
Sudan relied on a variety of countries for its arms
supplies. Since independence the army had been trained and supplied by the
British, but relations were cut off after the Arab-Israel Six-Day War in 1967.
At this time relations with the USA and West Germany were also cut off.
From 1968 to 1972, the Soviet Union and eastern bloc
nations sold large numbers of weapons and provided technical assistance and
training to Sudan. At this time the army grew from a strength of 18,000 to
roughly 50,000 men. Large numbers of tanks, aircraft, and artillery were
acquired at this time, and they dominated the army until the late 1980s.
Relations cooled between the two sides after the coup in
1972, and the Khartoum government sought to diversify its suppliers. The USSR
continued to supply weapons until 1977, when their support of Marxist elements
in Ethiopia angered the Sudanese sufficiently to cancel their deals. China was
the main supplier in the late 1970s.
Egypt was the most important military partner in the
1970s, providing missiles, personnel carriers, and other military hardware.
Western countries began supplying Sudan again in the mid
1970s. The United States began selling Sudan a great deal of equipment around
1976, hoping to counteract Soviet support of Marxist Ethiopians and Libyans.
Military sales peaked in 1982 at US$101 million. After the start of the second
civil war, American assistance dropped, and was eventually all but cancelled in
1987. [1]
Second Civil War[edit]
Main articles: History of Sudan (1986–present) and Second
Sudanese Civil War
In 1983, the civil war in the south was reignited
following the government's Islamicization policy which would have instituted
Islamic law, among other things. After several years of fighting, the
government compromised with southern groups.
On April 6, 1985, a group of military officers, led by
Lieutenant General Abd ar Rahman Siwar adh Dhahab, overthrew Nimeiri, who took
refuge in Egypt. Three days later, Dhahab authorized the creation of a
fifteen-man Transitional Military Council (TMC) to rule Sudan.
In June 1986, Sadiq al Mahdi formed a coalition
government with Umma Party, the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), the National
Islamic Front (NIF), and four southern parties. Unfortunately, however, Sadiq
proved to be a weak leader and incapable of governing Sudan. Party
factionalism, corruption, personal rivalries, scandals, and political
instability characterized the Sadiq regime. After less than a year in office,
Sadiq al Mahdi dismissed the government because it had failed to draft a new
penal code to replace the sharia, reach an agreement with the IMF, end the
civil war in the south, or devise a scheme to attract remittances from Sudanese
expatriates. To retain the support of the DUP and the southern political
parties, Sadiq formed another ineffective coalition government.
In 1989, it appeared the war would end, but a coup d'état
brought a military junta into power which was not interested in compromise. The
leader of the junta, Omar al-Bashir, consolidated his power over the next few
years, declaring himself president.
The civil war has displaced more than 4 million
southerners. Some fled into southern cities, such as Juba; others trekked as
far north as Khartoum and even into Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, Egypt, and other
neighboring countries. These people were unable to grow food or earn money to
feed themselves, and malnutrition and starvation became widespread. The lack of
investment in the south resulted as well in what international humanitarian
organizations call a “lost generation” who lack educational opportunities, access
to basic health care services, and little prospects for productive employment
in the small and weak economies of the south or the north.
JEM rebels in Darfur
In early 2003 a new rebellion of Sudan Liberation
Movement/Army (SLM/A) and Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) groups in the
western region of Darfur began. The rebels accused the central government of
neglecting the Darfur region, although there is uncertainty regarding the
objectives of the rebels and whether they merely seek an improved position for
Darfur within Sudan or outright secession. Both the government and the rebels
have been accused of atrocities in this war, although most of the blame has
fallen on Arab militias (Janjaweed) allied with the government. The rebels have
alleged that these militias have been engaging in ethnic cleansing in Darfur,
and the fighting has displaced hundreds of thousands of people, many of them
seeking refuge in neighboring Chad. There are various estimates on the number
of human casualties, ranging from under twenty thousand to several hundred
thousand dead, from either direct combat or starvation and disease inflicted by
the conflict.
In 2004 Chad brokered negotiations in N'Djamena, leading
to the April 8 Humanitarian Ceasefire Agreement between the Sudanese
government, the JEM, and the SLA. However, the conflict continued despite the
ceasefire, and the African Union (AU) formed a Ceasefire Commission (CFC) to
monitor its observance. In August 2004, the African Union sent 150 Rwandan
troops in to protect the ceasefire monitors. It, however, soon became apparent
that 150 troops would not be enough, so they were joined by 150 Nigerian
troops.
On September 18, 2004 United Nations Security Council
issued Resolution 1564 declaring that the government of Sudan had not met its
commitments, expressing concern at helicopter attacks and assaults by the
Janjaweed militia against villages in Darfur. It welcomed the intention of the
African Union to enhance its monitoring mission in Darfur and urged all member
states to support such efforts. During 2005 the African Union Mission in Sudan
force was increased to about 7,000.
The Chadian-Sudanese conflict officially started on
December 23, 2005, when the government of Chad declared a state of war with
Sudan and called for the citizens of Chad to mobilize themselves against Rally
for Democracy and Liberty (RDL) militants (Chadian rebels backed by the
Sudanese government) and Sudanese militiamen who attacked villages and towns in
eastern Chad, stealing cattle, murdering citizens, and burning houses.
Peace talks between the southern rebels and the
government made substantial progress in 2003 and early 2004, although
skirmishes in parts of the south have reportedly continued. The two sides have
agreed that, following a final peace treaty, southern Sudan will enjoy autonomy
for six years, and after the expiration of that period, the people of southern
Sudan will be able to vote in a referendum on independence. Furthermore, oil
revenues will be divided equally between the government and rebels during the
six-year interim period. The ability or willingness of the government to
fulfill these promises has been questioned by some observers, however, and the
status of three central and eastern provinces was a point of contention in the
negotiations. Some observers wondered whether hard line elements in the north
would allow the treaty to proceed.
A final peace treaty was signed on 9 January 2005 in
Nairobi. The terms of the peace treaty are as follows:
The south will have autonomy for six years, followed by a
referendum on secession.
Both sides of the conflict will merge their armed forces
into a 39,000-strong force after six years, if the secession referendum should
turn out negative.
Income from oilfields is to be shared evenly between
north and south.
Jobs are to be split according to varying ratios (central
administration: 70 to 30, Abyei/Blue Nile State/Nuba mountains: 55 to 45, both
in favour of the government).
Islamic law is to remain in the north, while continued
use of the sharia in the south is to be decided by the elected assembly.
Recent history (2006 to present)[edit]
Further information: History of Sudan (1986–present)
On 31 August 2006, the United Nations Security Council
approved Resolution 1706 to send a new peacekeeping force of 17,300 to Darfur.
In the following months, however, UNMIS was not able to deploy to Darfur due to
the Government of the Sudan’s steadfast opposition to a peacekeeping operation
undertaken solely by the United Nations. The UN then embarked on an
alternative, innovative approach to try to begin stabilize the region through
the phased strengthening of AMIS, before transfer of authority to a joint
African Union/United Nations peacekeeping operation. Following prolonged and
intensive negotiations with the Government of the Sudan and significant
international pressure, the Government of the Sudan finally accepted the
peacekeeping operation in Darfur.
In 2009 the International Criminal Court issued an arrest
warrant for al-Bashir, accusing him of crimes against humanity and war crimes.
In 2009 and 2010 a series of conflicts between rival
nomadic tribes in South Kordofan caused a large number of casualties and
displaced thousands.
An agreement for the restoration of harmony between Chad
and Sudan, signed January 15, 2010, marked the end of a five-year war between
them.[12]
The Sudanese government and the JEM signed a ceasefire
agreement ending the Darfur conflict in February, 2010.
In January 2011 referendum on independence for Southern
Sudan was held, and the South voted overwhelmingly to secede later that year as
the Republic of South Sudan, with its capital at Juba and Kiir Mayardit as its
first president. Al-Bashir announced that he accepted the result, but violence
soon erupted in the disputed region of Abyei, claimed by both the North and the
South.
On June 6, 2011 armed conflict broke out in South
Kordofan between the forces of Northern and Southern Sudan, ahead of the scheduled
independence of the South on July 9. This followed an agreement for both sides
to withdraw from Abyei. On June, 20 of the parties agreed to demilitarize the
contested area of Abyei where Ethiopian peacekeepers will be deployed.[13]
On July 9, 2011 South Sudan became an independent
country.[14] (Continoe)
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