Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Study shows ICC to be European driven. Intra-Arab fighting has killed more people in Darfur, Sudan over last 3 years than any other source of violence

THE number of confirmed violent fatalities, according to UNAMID figures, in Darfur during June was 221. Of the 221 deaths, nearly 140 were due to inter-tribal fighting between the Rizeigat and Misseriya tribes. Further details below, followed by news from Sudan Radio Service (SRS) and The New York Times, plus news of a recent 345-page study by Dr David Hoile regarding The International Criminal Court (ICC) sub-titled 'Study shows the International Criminal Court to be European-driven, Africa-focused and irretrievably flawed'.

Lethal Violence in Darfur: June
From Alex de Waal's blog Making Sense of Sudan
By Alex de Waal - Tuesday, 13 July 2010:
The number of confirmed violent fatalities, according to UNAMID figures, in Darfur during June was 221. Though a marked decline on the nearly 600 deaths during May, this is still well above the average for the last two and a half years. The major cause of fatalities was intra-Arab fighting in West Darfur state, which accounted for 139 fatalities. Fifty two combatants were confirmed killed, 51 government soldiers and one from the rebel side, implying a probable undercount of rebel fatalities. Twenty civilians died in violence, in all instances classified by UNAMID as criminal attacks, as well as two tribesmen, two soldiers and three rebel fighters who were victims of crime. Three UNAMID personnel were killed.

These figures show that the intensity of fighting between JEM and the Government has subsided.

The data show that the epicenter of Arab-Arab fighting has shifted from South Darfur to West Darfur. Whereas the South Darfur violence was mostly among the Baggara, this violence is between Baggara and Abbala. It is interesting that although intra-Arab fighting has killed more people in Darfur over the last three years than any other source of violence, it is still below the international radar screen, and does not figure high on the agenda for the peace talks.
Over 200 deaths due to armed conflict in Darfur in June
From Sudan Tribune - Monday, 12 July 2010 - excerpt:
(KHARTOUM) - Over two hundred people were killed in Darfur in June as a result of armed conflict and criminality according to a report by the joint African Union / United Nations (UNAMID) peacekeeping force in Darfur.

Of the 221 deaths, nearly 140 were due to inter-tribal fighting between the Rizeigat and Misseriya tribes.

No fighting was reported after the two tribes signed a peace accord on 28 June.
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From SRS - Sudan Radio Service:

From The New York Times -

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From The Africa Research Centre
By Dr David Hoile - 31 May 2010
Study shows the International Criminal Court to be European-driven, Africa-focused and irretrievably flawed

A new 345-page study of the International Criminal Court, The International Criminal Court: Europe’s Guantánamo Bay?, published by the Africa Research Centre to coincide with the ICC’s first ever review conference (in Kampala, Uganda, 31 May - 8 June 2010), has found the ICC to be manifestly unfit for purpose. The study demonstrates that the ICC’s claims to international jurisdiction and judicial independence are institutionally flawed and that the Court’s approach has been marred by blatant double-standards and serious judicial irregularities. The Hague-based ICC is increasingly being seen as the European equivalent of the US tribunal at Guantánamo Bay, which similarly claims international jurisdiction.

While the ICC presents itself as an international court this is quite simply not the case. Its members represent just over one quarter of the world’s population: China, Russia, the United States, India, Pakistan and Indonesia are just some of the many countries that have remained outside of the Court’s jurisdiction.

The truth is also that the ICC is as independent as the United Nations Security Council and the Court’s European Union funding lets it be. Far from being an independent and impartial court, the ICC’s own statute grants special “prosecutorial” rights of referral and deferral to the Security Council, or more specifically its five permanent members. Political interference in the legal process was thus made part of the Court’s founding terms of reference.

The Court is also umbilically tied to the European Union which provides over 60 percent of its funding. The English expression, “He who pays the piper calls the tune”, could not be more accurate. The ICC has ignored all European or Western human rights abuses in conflicts such as those in Afghanistan and Iraq or human rights abuses by Western client states. Instead, the Europeans have chosen to focus the Court exclusively on Africa. Despite over 8,000 complaints about alleged crimes in at least 139 countries, the ICC has started investigations into just five countries, all of them African. Given Africa’s previous traumatic experience with the very same colonial powers that now in effect direct the ICC, this must create an alarming déjà vu for those who live on the continent. The EU is additionally guilty of economic blackmail in tying aid for developing countries to ICC membership.

The Court’s proceedings have often been questionable where not farcical. Its judges – some of whom have never been lawyers, let alone judges – are the result of vote-trading amongst member states. The Court has produced witnesses who recanted their testimony the moment they got into the witness box, admitting that they were coached by non-governmental organisations as to what false statements to make. There have been prosecutorial decisions which should have ended any fair trial because they compromised the integrity of any subsequent process. The ICC’s first trial stalled because of judicial decisions to add new charges half-way through proceedings. Simply put, the Court has been making things up as it goes along.

The ICC claims to be “economical”, yet it has cost half a billion Euros to put on one deeply flawed trial, which subsequently ground to a halt for months. The ICC claims to be victim-centred yet Human Rights Watch has publicly criticised the ICC’s ambivalence towards victim communities. The ICC claims to bring “swift justice” but it has taken several years to bring the first accused to trial for allegedly using child soldiers. The Nuremberg trials, which addressed infinitely more serious charges, were over within a year. The ICC claims to be fighting impunity, yet it has afforded de facto immunity and impunity to several serial abusers of human rights who happen to be friends of the European Union and United States.

The study’s author, Dr David Hoile, has noted:

“Africa fought long and hard for its independence. It must reject this new “legal” colonialism. The ICC’s double-standards and autistic legal blundering in Africa has derailed delicate peace processes – thereby prolonging devastating civil wars. There is a clear lesson for countries in Africa and elsewhere: do not join the ICC and do not refer your country to the ICC. It is the equivalent of inviting a cancer into your system. The ICC does not have Africa’s welfare at heart, only the furtherance of Western, and especially European, foreign policy and its own bureaucratic imperative – to exist, to employ more Europeans and North Americans and where possible to continue to increase its budget.”

About the Author Dr David Hoile is an African scholar and public affairs consultant specialising in African affairs. He is the author of Darfur: The Road to Peace (2008), Images of Sudan: Case Studies in Propaganda and Misinformation (2003), Farce Majeure: The Clinton Administration’s Sudan Policy 1993-2000 (2000), Mozambique, Resistance and Freedom: A Case for Reassessment (1994), and Mozambique: A Nation in Crisis (1989). He is also the editor of The Search for Peace in the Sudan: A Chronology of the Sudanese Peace Process 1989-2001 (2002). Dr Hoile has been a Research Professor at the Sudan University of Science and Technology and a Visiting Professor at the University of Khartoum.

The author can be contacted either by telephone on + 44 207 872 5434 or by email at drdavidhoile@yahoo.co.uk
FOR THE RECORD, here is a snapshot of Google's 3-page newsreel (in sequential order) as at 13 July 2010 c. 23:18 hrs GMT UK:

US urges Sudan cooperation on Bashir arrest warrant

Reuters Africa - ‎1 hour ago‎

ICC prosecutor lauds new charges against al-Bashir

The Associated Press - Jenny Barchfield - ‎1 hour ago‎

U.S. Holocaust Museum hails Al-Bashir genocide warrant

Ha'aretz - ‎2 hours ago‎

PROMISES, PROMISES: US fails to punish Sudan

The Associated Press - Desmond Butler - ‎2 hours ago‎

US urges Sudan cooperation on Bashir arrest warrant

Reuters Africa - ‎52 minutes ago‎

Sudan rejects Bashir genocide warrant

News24 - ‎11 hours ago‎

Sudan. Beshir now wanted for genocide

Ottawa Citizen - ‎14 hours ago‎

Q+A-Sudan's Bashir faces Darfur genocide charges

Reuters Africa - Andrew Heavens - ‎14 hours ago‎

U.S. Holocaust Museum hails Al-Bashir genocide warrant

Ha'aretz - ‎2 hours ago‎
By DPA

International Criminal Court charges Sudan's Omar Hassan al-Bashir with genocide

Washington Post - Colum Lynch, Rebecca Hamilton - ‎20 hours ago‎

Former War Crimes Prosecutor Expects Enforcement of Sudan Arrest Warrants

Voice of America - Peter Clottey - ‎21 hours ago‎

ICC prosecutor lauds new charges against al-Bashir

The Associated Press - Jenny Barchfield - ‎1 hour ago‎

International Court Adds Genocide to Charges Against Sudan Leader

New York Times - Marlise Simons - ‎21 hours ago‎

International Criminal Court charges Sudan president with genocide

Times of India - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

Omar al-Bashir

The Economist (blog) - ‎3 hours ago‎

Sudan leader charged with genocide

Financial Times - William Wallis - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

US says Sudan's president should go to Hague

AFP - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

Hizbullah Declares Solidarity with Sudan

Naharnet - ‎1 hour ago‎

US Holocaust Museum praises genocide charges

Jewish Telegraphic Agency - ‎4 hours ago‎

ICC prosecutor: genocide charge to pressure Bashir

Reuters Africa - ‎5 hours ago‎

ICC puts Sudan peace talks in jeopardy

National - ‎1 hour ago‎

ICC Issues Second Arrest Warrant for Sudan's al-Bashir

Voice of America - Selah Hennessy - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

ICC Adds Genocide Charge Against Sudan's Al-Bashir

BusinessWeek - Maram Mazen, Antony Sguazzin - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

ICC prosecutor lauds new charges against al-Bashir

The Associated Press - ‎8 hours ago‎

US calls on Sudan to cooperate with international court

Monsters and Critics.com - ‎3 hours ago‎

CNN International - David McKenzie - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

Genocide charge for Bashir

The Australian - ‎7 hours ago‎

Sudan president charged with genocide by international court

The Underground - ‎5 hours ago‎

ICC adds genocide to charges against Sudan's president

AFP - Mariette le Roux - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

International Criminal Court Indicts Sudan's Bashir For Genocide

AHN | All Headline News - ‎9 hours ago‎

Sudan: Darfur chants victory over Bashir genocide charges

Afrik-news - Konye Obaji - ‎12 hours ago‎

Sudan slams ICC over Bashir charges

Press TV - ‎13 hours ago‎

ICC issues a second arrest warrant against Sudan President

Alsumaria - ‎12 hours ago‎

Second arrest warrant against Sudan's el Bashir

Afrique en Ligue - ‎15 hours ago‎

Bashir charged as rebels hail Darfur victory

Independent Online - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

ICC judges endorse genocide charges against Sudanese president

Sudan Tribune - ‎18 hours ago‎

Rights groups hail Beshir genocide charge, urge arrest

Manila Bulletin - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

WORLD BRIEFS

Newsday (subscription) - ‎18 hours ago‎

Sudan's President Omar Al Bashir Charged With Genocide

IndyPosted - Rudi Stettner - ‎20 hours ago‎

UN chief "deeply concerned" with nature of ICC charges against Sudan's al-Bashir

People's Daily Online - ‎21 hours ago‎

ICC charges Sudan's Bashir of Genocide

TamilNet - ‎21 hours ago‎

Int'l Court charges Sudan president with genocide

KWCH - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

Washington Urges Khartoum To Co-operate With ICC

RTT News - ‎35 minutes ago‎

Sudan: ICC Warrant for Al-Bashir on Genocide

Reuters AlertNet - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

ANCA Welcomes Charges of Genocide Against Sudan's President

Asbarez Armenian News - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎
AXcess News - Bob Turner - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

ICC Charges Sudanese President Omar Al-Bashir With Genocide

RTT News - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

FACTBOX-Omar Bashir indicted for genocide

Reuters Africa - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

What Changes with the Bashir Genocide Warrant and What Stays the Same

UN Dispatch - ‎6 hours ago‎

ICC issues second arrest warrant for Sudanese President

Yemen News Agency - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

Aljazeera.net - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

Second arrest warrant issued against Sudanese president for genocide

Island Crisis (blog) - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

AU chief in high-level talks with el Bashir before arrest order

Afrique en Ligue - ‎15 hours ago‎

Sudanese president charged with genocide

Daily Caller - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

Obama's 'peace partner' embraces author of Darfur genocide

American Thinker (blog) - Leo Rennert - ‎9 hours ago‎

Darfur Genocide Ruling Brings Old ICC Controversies Back Into the Spotlight

AOL News - ‎14 hours ago‎

Bashir should surrender voluntarily, say ICC judges

Afrique en Ligue - ‎15 hours ago‎

Omar el Bashir faces more charges

Primedia Broadcasting - Eyewitness News - Jean-Jacques Cornish - ‎12 hours ago‎

Rights groups hail al-Beshir genocide charge, urge arrest

Canada.com - ‎9 hours ago‎

Rights Groups Respond to new 'Genocide' Arrest Warrant for President Bashir

PR Web (press release) - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎
.
Kazakhstan News - ‎16 hours ago‎

Sudanese president calls for national unity

Yemen News Agency - ‎Jul 11, 2010‎

Omar Al-Bashir wanted for international justice once again

ecPulse - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

Darfur genocide charges for Sudan's President

Independent - Mike Corder - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

ICC issues genocide warrant against Bashir

Radio Netherlands - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

ICC issues genocide arrest warrant against Omar Al-Bashir

Hague Justice Portal - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

ICC adds genocide to charges against Sudan's president

Inquirer.net - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

Sudanese leader charged with genocide

Herald Sun - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

Int'l Court charges Sudan president with genocide

The Associated Press - Mike Corder - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

Darfur warrant for Sudan's Bashir: ICC adds genocide

BBC News - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎
The Guardian - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎
International court issues warrant for Sudan leader
Denver Post - ‎15 hours ago‎

The Net Closes on Sudan's Isolated Leader

The Epoch Times - Stephen Jones - ‎18 hours ago‎...

Washington Times - Ashish Kumar Sen - ‎20 hours ago‎

Sudan gov't rejects ICC decision to add genocide charge against Bashir

People's Daily Online - ‎21 hours ago‎

International Criminal Court charges Sudan's al-Bashir with genocide

World War 4 Report - ‎21 hours ago‎

ICC Charges Sudanese President with Genocide

Scoop.co.nz (press release) - ‎22 hours ago‎
ICC charges Sudan's al-Bashir with genocide
Monsters and Critics.com - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

ICC judges issue second warrant: Sudanese president wanted for genocide

Radio Dabanga - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

Moose Jaw Times-Herald - ‎8 hours ago‎
ICC issues Arrest Warrant against Bashir for Genocide
Merinews - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎
ICC warrant for Bashir on genocide rap
Gulf Times - ‎Jul 12, 2010‎

Saturday, July 10, 2010

News round-up: North, South Sudan Launch Post-Referendum Negotiations - Mbeki's Statement

HISTORIC NEWS. Today (Saturday, 10 July) Northern and southern Sudanese leaders began talks on a strategy to ensure a smooth transition should a referendum next year result in the war-scarred south gaining its independence.

Talks between Sudan's President Omar Al-Bashir's National Congress Party (NCP) and the former southern rebel Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) were focused on planning a peaceful transition for January's referendum.

The SPLM, which controls the semi-autonomous government in south Sudan, is campaigning for secession while Bashir's NCP has pledged to work for unity but promised a fair referendum.

They told reporters at the launch they would consider four options suggested by an African Union panel led by former South African president Thabo Mbeki.

In one option "we considered the possibility of the creation of two independent countries which negotiate a framework of cooperation, which extends to the establishment of shared governance institutions in a confederal arrangement," said Mbeki, who spoke at the launch in Khartoum.

Another option was for two separate countries with shared "soft borders that permit freedom of movement for both people and goods," said Mbeki.

The other two options, he added, were for total separation - - with citizens needing visas to cross the border -- and for continued north-south unity, if southerners chose that option in the referendum.

"These (the four options) will be part of the issues to be discussed by both parties," Sayed el-Khatib, a senior member of north Sudan's National Congress Party, (NCP) told reporters.

The parties said they would spend the next months working out how they would share out oil and other assets, as well as the burden of Sudan's national debt, after the vote.

Discussions are due to continue July 19.

Note that the negotiations between the NCP and the SPLM reviewed several strategic issues, including the security arrangements, the most complicated of all.

Sudan now has three armies -- the Sudanese Armed Forces of the north, the Sudan People Liberation Army of south Sudan and the Joint Integrated Units which are composed of elements from north and south Sudan armies.

The Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), inked between north and south Sudan in 2005, stipulates that the joint integrated units should constitute a nucleus of post referendum army of Sudan and accept the result of the referendum, otherwise they would be dissolved.

Other issues touched upon during the session included the file of oil revenues sharing, in which the two sides should agree on the distribution of the oil revenues, presently and in the future, the Nile water issue, and issues concerning assets of the state and the currency and the banking system.

Note that the contested oil-rich region of Abyei will hold a separate referendum to decide whether it wants to join the north or the south of Sudan. The Abyei referendum is expected to be conducted simultaneously with south Sudan referendum, slated for January 2011.

Sudan produces 500,000 barrels of oil per day and has reserves estimated at six billion barrels, most of it on the border between north and south.

SOURCE: Reports from Reuters, AFP, Xinhua News Agency, reprinted below.

Ali Osman Taha and Thabo Mbeki

Photo: Sudan's Second Vice President Ali Osman Taha (L) and former South African president Thabo Mbeki (Source: AFP report, 10 July 2010: Sudan ruling parties seek post-referendum 'roadmap')

Pagan Amum

Photo: The secretary general of the former rebel Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM), Pagan Amum. (Source: AFP report, 10 July 2010: Sudan ruling parties seek post-referendum 'roadmap')

Nafie Ali Nafie greets Pagan Amum

Photo: Nafie Ali Nafie (R) greets Pagan Amum. (Source: AFP report, 10 July 2010: Sudan ruling parties seek post-referendum 'roadmap')

Rally in Juba, southern Sudan

Photo: Supporters of south Sudan independence rally in Juba. (Source: AFP report, 10 July 2010: Sudan ruling parties seek post-referendum 'roadmap')

Sudan to mull north-south confederation after vote
From Reuters by Andrew Heavens (Editing by Matthew Jones) - Saturday, 10 July 2010; 1:08pm GMT:
(KHARTOUM) - Northern and southern Sudanese leaders on Saturday said they would consider forming a confederation or a common market if southerners chose to declare independence in an upcoming referendum.

Citizens of the country's oil-producing south are six months away from a vote on whether to stay part of Sudan or split away as an independent state -- a plebiscite promised in a 2005 accord that ended decades of north-south civil war.

Leaders from the country's dominant northern and southern parties on Saturday started formal negotiations on how they would divide oil revenues and other issues after the referendum.

They told reporters at the launch they would consider four options suggested by an African Union panel led by former South African president Thabo Mbeki.

In one option "we considered the possibility of the creation of two independent countries which negotiate a framework of cooperation, which extends to the establishment of shared governance institutions in a confederal arrangement," said Mbeki, who spoke at the launch in Khartoum.

Another option was for two separate countries with shared "soft borders that permit freedom of movement for both people and goods," said Mbeki.

The other two options, he added, were for total separation - - with citizens needing visas to cross the border -- and for continued north-south unity, if southerners chose that option in the referendum.

"These (the four options) will be part of the issues to be discussed by both parties," Sayed el-Khatib, a senior member of north Sudan's National Congress Party, (NCP) told reporters.

Pagan Amum, the secretary general of the south's dominant Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM), said the referendum would allow the south to "reset" its troubled relationship with the north, whether southerners chose unity or separation.

"If the choice is separation, then we will be ensuring that there will be good cooperation between the two independent states. It could take the form of a confederation. It could take the form of a common market," he said.

The parties said they would spend the next months working out how they would share out oil and other assets, as well as the burden of Sudan's national debt, after the vote.

Also on the agenda was the citizenship of their populations -- campaign group Refugees International last month warned southerners in the north and northerners in the south might be left stateless and vulnerable to attacks after a split.

Many commentators say southerners, embittered by decades of civil war, are likely to vote for separation in the referendum, due in January 2011. Sudan's president Omar Hassan al-Bashir, the head of the NCP, has promised to campaign for unity.

Most of Sudan's proven oil reserves are south of the border. Khartoum currently gets half the revenues from southern oil, under the terms of the 2005 deal. The south would have to reach some sort of accommodation with Khartoum, even after a split, as the only pipelines run through the north to the Red Sea.
Sudan ruling parties seek post-referendum 'roadmap'
From AFP by Guillaume Lavallee – Saturday, 10 July 2010:
(KHARTOUM) - North and south Sudan leaders began talks on Saturday on a strategy to ensure a smooth transition should a referendum next year result in the war-scarred south gaining its independence.

Talks between President Omar el-Beshir's National Congress Party (NCP) and the former southern rebel Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) were focused on planning a peaceful transition for January's referendum.

"Today we are together to launch negotiations of post-referendum arrangements to clearly establish a vision that after the referendum life shall continue," said SPLM negotiator Pagan Amum.

"These negotiations are an opportunity for us to strengthen our relations because in the past they have been bitter," he said at a formal ceremony to launch the talks. Discussions are due to continue July 19.

The SPLM, which controls the semi-autonomous government in south Sudan, is campaigning for secession while Beshir's NCP has pledged to work for unity but promised a fair referendum.

Amum said both sides wanted to ensure a "smooth transition" for the referendum which was part of a 2005 peace deal that ended a two-decade civil war between the Muslim north and Christian and animist south.

Failing to conduct the vote according to the terms of the 2005 treaty would "run the risk of slipping our country back in conflict, a scenario none of us want to see our country returning to," he warned.

The NCP said it wanted to ensure the crucial vote would not be followed by conflict in a country and region prone to war.

"We are hoping that the negotiation will lead to sustainable peace not in Sudan only but over all the region," NCP negotiator Idriss Mohammed Abdel Qadir said at the ceremony.

The NCP and SPLM have set up a joint committee to discuss outstanding issues and plan a trouble-free transition after the vote.

Over the next few months they are expected to negotiate four key issues: sharing oil resources, citizenship, security and respect of international agreements, with the next meeting due July 19.

"We are confident that we can reach a framework agreement on post-referendum arrangement," Amum said.

"If the choice is separation then we will be ensuring that there will be good cooperation between the two independent states, it could take the form of a confederation or a common market," he told reporters.

Former South African president Thabo Mbeki, who chairs an African Union committee on Sudan, said one of the possibilities under consideration was a "confederal arrangement."

"We considered the possibility of the creation of two independent countries which negotiate a framework of cooperation, which extends to the establishment of shared governance institutions in a confederal arrangement" he said at the ceremony.

"The responsibility to determine what will then happen to the entirety of the Sudanese people, whether as one nation or two, falls upon the leaders of the NCP and SPLM," he said.

Of the four issues facing talks, the question of sharing oil revenues is the most sensitive and has been a major source of tension in the run-up to the referendum.

Sudan produces 500,000 barrels of oil per day and has reserves estimated at six billion barrels, most of it on the border between north and south.

Oil accounts for 98 percent of revenues of the government of the semi-autonomous south and about 60 percent of revenues for the north.

The contested oil-rich region of Abyei will hold a separate referendum to decide whether it wants to join the north or the south of Sudan.

Southern politicians have accused Khartoum of increasing its military presence on its side of the border, which the north denies.

"There is a clear and present need for the negotiators to address what will happen to the oil, whatever the result of the referendum," said Rosie Sharpe of Global Witness.
Roundup: Sudan gov't partners begin negotiations on post referendum arrangements
From Xinhua News Agency (via newsystocks.com) - Saturday, 10 July 2010:
(KHARTOUM) - Sudan government's two major partners, the National Congress Party (NPC) and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM), on Saturday started a new round of negotiations on post referendum arrangements.

SPLM Secretary General Pagan Amum who spoke at the opening session of the negotiations Saturday promised that the SPLM would negotiate with the NCP on the base of keenness and goodwill to ensure reaching an agreement on the issues concerning the post referendum phase after the key referendum early next year on southern independence.

"Today, the SPLM stands here to offer a promise to the people of Sudan, whether they are southerners or northerners, from western Sudan or eastern Sudan, that we shall negotiate in good faith with the national congress party and try to reach an agreement on all the post referendum issues," he said.

He further warned against escalation of differences between the NCP and the SPLM on the Abyei referendum, which is expected to be conducted simultaneously with south Sudan referendum, slated for January 2011.

"Even though the recent unfolding events have shown that the Abyei referendum is at risk, we in the SPLM want to categorically reiterate that the Abyei referendum is intertwined with the referendum for the people of southern Sudan," he said.

"Failure to conduct it concurrently with the referendum for the people of southern Sudan, as stipulated in the CPA, renders risk of slipping our country back to the conflict, a scenario none of us want to see," he added.

Iddris Mohamed Abdel-Ghader, a leading NCP member, on his part, expressed the NCP's desire and continuing endeavor to make unity attractive with the stress on the southerners' right to freely choose between unity and separation.

"Sudan's unity is still our priority and at the same time we stress on the southerners' right to decide their destiny according to the international principles and standards," he said.

Chairman of African Union (AU) Wisemen Panel Thabo Mbeki, who presented himself in the conference, disclosed four suggestions by the AU on the future of the relation between north and south Sudan after the referendum.

"In our option one, we visualize the situation which will divide the country into two independent countries with no durable links," he said.

"In our option two, we visualize the situation in which there would be two independent states existing within a broader negotiated framework of cooperation, making for soft borders that permit movement for both people and goods," he added.

As for the third option, he said, "we consider the possibility of the creation of two independent states who can negotiate to the extent of the establishment of shared government institutions in a confederal arrangement."

"And finally, we visualize the possibility of Sudan remaining one country with the federal arrangements between the north and the south," he said.

The negotiations between the NCP and the SPLM reviewed several strategic issues, including the security arrangements, the most complicated of all.

Sudan now has three armies -- the Sudanese Armed Forces of the north, the Sudan People Liberation Army of south Sudan and the Joint Integrated Units which are composed of elements from north and south Sudan armies.

The Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), inked between north and south Sudan in 2005, stipulates that the joint integrated units should constitute a nucleus of post referendum army of Sudan and accept the result of the referendum, otherwise they would be dissolved.

Other issues touched upon during the session included the file of oil revenues sharing, in which the two sides should agree on the distribution of the oil revenues, presently and in the future, the Nile water issue, and issues concerning assets of the state and the currency and the banking system.
RELATED REPORTS

Sudan faces split into two one-party states
From Reuters (via Zimbabwe Independent)
Friday, 09 July 2010. Excerpt:
AN internationally brokered peace deal that was supposed to transform Sudan into a unified democracy could be about to split Africa’s largest country into two one-party states. [...] “Sudan is now better classified as a two-party state where democracy takes a back seat to the authoritarian regimes that control their respective regions. Opposition parties throughout the entire country now hold less than 5% of the seats in the National Assembly,” academic Marc Gustafson wrote in an analysis of the results on the blog Making Sense of Sudan. If all goes as expected in the referendum, that two-party state would become two one-party states.
South Sudan Referendum Taskforce begins to strategize on its responsibilities
From Sudan Tribune by James Gatdet Dak (JUBA)
Thursday, 08 July 2010. Excerpt:
THE high level politically empowered Southern Sudan Referendum Taskforce (SSRT) under the chairmanship of the Vice President, Dr. Riek Machar Teny, met on Wednesday to strategize on its role and work on the budget.

The Referendum Taskforce, which is based in Southern Sudan, is different from the recently formed technical Southern Sudan Referendum Commission (SSRC) which is headquartered in Khartoum with branches in Juba and states.

The role of the Taskforce is to give political guidance and mobilize the population to register and vote, among others, including maintenance of security in the region to achieve conduct of a free and fair referendum. This is in carrying out the government’s obligation as the custodian authority under which territory or jurisdiction the plebiscite will take place.

South Sudanese rally for independence

AFP - ‎09 July 2010‎
JUBA, Sudan - Hundreds of supporters of south Sudan independence
rallied in Juba on Friday, six months ahead of a crucial referendum
that could lead to the ...

6 months until South Sudan votes to secede

The Associated Press - ‎09 July 2010‎
JUBA, Sudan — Hundreds of people wearing bright orange shirts
gathered in the capital of Southern Sudan on Friday
to mark the six-month countdown until the ...

Abyei killings 'intended to upset Sudan referendum'

AngolaPress - ‎09 July 2010‎
JUBA, - Some 50000 fled their homes in Abyei two years ago
Recent killings in Sudan's Abyei region are intended to
affect next year's referendum on ...

Police kill man carrying 300 bomb detonators



The Standard - Cyrus Ombati - 10 July 2010
Another officer said they suspect the detonators were to either be
used locally or in Southern Sudan where their demand is high. ...
- - -
STATEMENT OF THE CHAIRPERSON OF THE AUHIP, THABO MBEKI, AT THE LAUNCH OF THE SUDAN POST-REFERENDUM NEGOTIATIONS: KHARTOUM, JULY 10, 2010.


Click here to visit Alex de Waal's blog, Making Sense of Sudan, and read Thabo Mbeki’s Statement at the Launch of the Post-Referendum Negotiations.
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Quote of the Day

Here is a copy of a comment posted at above mentioned blog post re “Pres. Mbeki’s Statement at the Launch of the Post-Referendum Negotiations”:
Comment by Ibrahim Adam:
July 10th, 2010 at 10:27 am

Right man.

Right time.

Right place.

No bombast.

No axe to grind.

No threats or finger-wagging.

How refreshing.

I love Thabo.

We Sudanese are very, very lucky to have the huge well of wisdom, humility, sincerity, sobriety, and smartness that is the Honorable Thabo Mbeki.

Give thanks.

Ibrahim Adam
El Fasher
North Darfur
Sudan
Amen.