Sudan

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As the referendum approaches for Southern Sudan in January of next year to gain independence from Northern Sudan, our new Nursing & Midwifery College in Juba, awaits the results anxiously.  Our partner at the UNFPA in Sudan sends us these weekly media summaries as everyone prepares for the voting.

Referendum Watch

  • SSRC approves requests to monitor the referendum (Khartoum Monitor/SUNA)
  • Registered voters to be announced next week (The Citizen)
  • Sudan vote opponents spread confusion-poll chief (Reuters)
  • UN panel welcomes conclusion of voter registration for referendum (UN News)
  • Lawsuits to be filed before Constitutional Court on referendum malpractices (The Citizen; Al-Ahram Al-Youm)
  • Talks on post-referendum issues to resume Monday – AU (Radio Miraya; Al-Sahafa)
  • Southern Sudan party to campaign for independence-official (Reuters)
  • NCP assures its Southern members of their citizenship status (Sudantribune.com)
  • Misseriya agree to an “internal political solution” with Dinka Ngok on Abyei (Al-Ahram Al-Youm)
  • South Sudan accuses north of dropping 18 bombs (Reuters)
  • SPLA heavy military ware positions near Abyei (Akhbar Al-Youm)
  • 9,000 Dinka Ngok families return to Abyei (Al-Sahafa)

Other Highlights

  • Police seek source of video showing girl being flogged (Al-Ahdath)
  • Foreign organisations cause food gap in IDP camps of North Darfur (Al-Wifaq)
  • Opposition forces to hold conference in Khartoum late this month (Khartoum Monitor)
  • Zambia says Sudanese president should not fear arrest on its territory (Sudantribune.com)
  • Al-Mahdi any attempt to topple the government would open doors of hell (Al-Rai Al-Aam)
  • Sudanese army carry out more attacks against Minnawi in Darfur (Sudantribune.com)

Sudan vote opponents spread confusion-poll chief

Reuters Khartoum/Juba, 11/12/10 - Opponents of a referendum on independence for south Sudan are threatening lawsuits and spreading confusion to try to disrupt the vote, the chief official running the plebiscite said on Saturday.

The accusation came at a time of heightened tension around the poll, due next month. A southern official for the first time said her party would openly campaign for secession, bringing a warning from the north’s ruling party that it might refuse to recognise the result.

Mohammed Ibrahim Khalil, the head of the referendum’s organising commission, told Reuters he had been flooded with spurious complaints and threats of lawsuits, all apparently from the same group.

Southern leaders have accused the north’s ruling National Congress Party (NCP) of trying to find ways to disrupt the vote to keep control of the region’s oil reserves.

“We have received complaints in identical terms from different parties very clearly instigated by one main source, all of them groundless … The whole idea is to create confusion and give the idea that something serious is going wrong,” Khalil, a northerner, said. He declined to say who he thought was behind the campaign of disruption.

State-linked media reported earlier that a group called the Higher Council for Peace and Unity had filed a “constitutional case” against the commission and the south’s dominant Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM), saying they had violated the law governing the vote.

Senior SPLM member Yasir Arman dismissed the new case saying it was “baseless and politically motivated by the NCP”.

Separately, in the southern capital Juba, senior SPLM member Anne Itto said the party would campaign for southerners to vote for independence, abandoning a legal fiction that the movement was neutral.

“Since unity has not been made attractive, we are promoting what our people choose … If you have had your ears open, more than 90 percent of the people are already waving,” she said, referring to the open-hand symbol for separation printed on referendum forms.

Asked what she meant by waving, Itto answered “separation”.

Itto said she was speaking for the party’s dominant southern sector. Arman, from the northern sector, declined to comment.

Senior NCP official Rabie Abdelati accused Itto of breaking the terms of the peace deal by coming out for independence.

“They (the SPLM) are now working for secession regardless of the result of the referendum … The referendum will be nominal, illegal. I do not think that the NCP should recognise any process or any result that comes out of it,” he said, adding his party had nothing to do with the legal challenges.

South Sudan accuses north of dropping 18 bombs

Reuters Juba, 10/12/10 - South Sudan’s army accused the north on Friday of bombing its territory in the third reported air attack in a week, stoking tensions in the final countdown to a southern independence referendum.

No one was immediately available for comment from the northern army. The north has regularly dismissed southern accusations of air attacks.

“We can confirm that 18 bombs were dropped inside southern territory by northern forces. They hit southern villages,” said southern army (SPLA) spokesman Philip Aguer.

He said the attack took place in Western Bahr al-Ghazal sate, which borders north Sudan, on Wednesday.

Aguer said he had no reports of injuries but buildings were destroyed. “They are testing us to see what we will do but we will never retaliate, unless they come on the ground, then we will defend ourselves.”

U.N. ceasefire monitors had visited the sites of the previous reported bombings but investigations were still in progress, said U.N. spokesman Kouider Zerrouk.

The north has also accused the south of building up weapons and troops close to their ill-defined, shared border.

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As the referendum approaches for Southern Sudan in January of next year to gain independence from Northern Sudan, our new Nursing & Midwifery College in Juba, awaits the results anxiously.  Our partner at the UNFPA in Sudan sends us these weekly media summaries as everyone prepares for the voting.

UN Referendum Watch December 7th, 2010

  • Presidency to hold an important meeting today (Dailies)
  • Misseriya agree to one of Mbeki’s proposals on Abyei (Al-Sahafa)
  • SAF, SPLA sign framework agreement to secure oil fields (Dailies)
  • National companies excluded from referendum ballot printing (Al-Rai Al-Aam)
  • British firm to print Sudan referendum ballots (AFP)
  • Arab tribes in the South file suit against SSRC (Al-Intibaha)
  • SSRC request Justice Ministry to establish referendum courts (Al-Intibaha)
  • SPLM-DC accuses SPLM and the SSRC of hampering voter registration (Al-Ayyam)
  • Talks between Gen. Athor and GoSS (Al-Intibaha)
  • Goss President Kiir meets Menkerios and Margelov (Al-Sudani)
  • Neither the South nor the North prepared for the referendum result – UN (Al-Wifaq)
  • No elections in the north if the south secedes – Nafie (Al-Sahafa)
  • SPLM rules out hosting Darfur armed groups after the referendum (Al-Ayyam)
  • SPLM threatens to conduct a unilateral referendum on Abyei (Al-Tayyar)

Other Headlines

  • UN providing heavy arms to Darfur rebels – South Darfur Governor Kasha (al-Akhbar)
  • Presidential adviser criticizes South Sudan role in Darfur conflict (ST)
  • Security raided Interim Authority HQ in El Fasher, arrest Minnawi’s cadres (the Citizen)
  • Authorities stop Radio Dabanga broadcasts (Al-Ahram Al-Youm)

Presidency to hold an important meeting today

Dailies – The Presidency is to hold a meeting today to resolve pending CPA including Abyei territory based on proposals submitted by AUHIP Chair Thabo Mbeki. NCP Secretary Ibrahim Ghandour said the meeting would be attended by AUHIP as mediator.

GoSS Cabinet Minister Costa Manibi told reporters in Juba yesterday that the meeting would focus on outstanding issues including the border demarcation on the ground and Abyei. He said the meeting would be attended by GoSS Minister of Peace Pagan Amum and Minister of Regional Cooperation Deng Alor.

Al-Sudani reports that President Al-Bashir and his FVP Salva Kiir Mayardit embarked yesterday on a series of meetings on outstanding issues and the meetings would continue for a week or until the issues are resolved.

Meanwhile, sources said the NCP had rejected 5 of 6 proposals submitted by Mbeki, adding that Mbeki had modified the proposals by addition and omission and resubmitted them to the Presidency before leaving for Cote D’avoires but is likely to return today to take part in a decisive meeting of the Presidency.

Misseriya agree to one of Mbeki’s proposals on Abyei

Al-Sahafa Khartoum– Representatives of the Misseriya tribe said they had agreed to one of AUHLP Thabo Mbeki’s 6 proposals to the CPA partners on Abyei. Misseriya representatives speaking at a mass rally in Al-Mujlad yesterday, expressed confidence that the NCP would not let them down on Abyei, especially since their interests are in line with those of the NCP. The rally focused largely on how far the NCP was willing to guarantee the rights of the Misseriya in Abyei.

SAF, SPLA sign framework agreement to secure oil fields

Dailies – Federal Defence Minister Gen. Abdul Rahman Mohamed Hussein and SPLA Minister Nhial Deng Nhial signed yesterday a framework agreement in Falluj town in the Upper Nile to secure oil fields and installations south of 1956 border. The agreement is signed in presence of VP Ali Osman Taha and GoSS VP Riek Machar.

VP Taha, addressing the signing ceremony, said the two CPA partners’ agreement on oil security confirms the resolve of the Sudanese people to sustain peace based on the directives of President Al-Bashir and FVP Salva Kiir that there would be no return to war. “The protection will include oil fields, facilities, workers and companies,” he said.

Meanwhile, GoSS has confirmed its respect to all oil contracts signed before and after the CPA and stressed the need for mechanisms to resolve oil security-related problems.

According to the agreement, the JIUs will continue to secure oil fields in the South until 9 July 2011 based on the political directives to be agreed upon between the CPA parties after the

referendum result is announced.

The two parties agreed that the JDB would meet to discuss the immediate implementation of the agreement and that the federal government and GoSS would provide amenities needed for the implementation.

SUNA reported that VP Ali Osman Taha said that the two CPA partners, the NCP and the SPLM, agreed to secure oil fields to ensure flow of the oil during the CPA implementation.

Taha underlined that the flow of oil represents the basis of the Sudanese economy now and in the future, whatever be the outcome of the referendum.

The agreement stipulated that security of the petroleum south of the border of 1956 is the responsibility of the joint integrated forces, and the security forces (of the National Security Organ and south Sudan Police).

The two parties agreed on formation of mechanism to observe implementation of the security plan and to carry out immediate intervention to contain any emergency incident, provided that this mechanism is to be headed by the federal Minister of Interior and the Minister of Interior of the Government of South Sudan as the deputy chairman, the Director of the Security and Intelligence Organ as member, Deputy Chairman of the Security and Intelligence Organ as member, the Commander of the Joint Integrated Forces and his deputy as members.

Arab tribes in the South file suit against SSRC

Al-Intibaha – Arab tribes in the South have filed a suit with the Constitutional Court challenging the latter’s refusal to register them as voters for the upcoming referendum, hinting further undisclosed steps should the SSRC continue to deny them the right to register.

Advocate Ghazi Suleiman, who participated at a press conference convened by the group yesterday, criticized the SSRC for refusing to register the members of the Arab tribe of Manj County of north Upper Nile state.

SSRC request Justice Ministry to establish courts

Al-Intibaha – the SSRC has requested the Ministry of Justice to set up courts to dispose referendum-related objections. SSRC spokesperson George Makuer said committees had been formed to receive objections after the registration.

Makuer told reporters yesterday that 2,496,000 voters have registered in the South, 95,000 in the North and 40,000 abroad.

According to Al-Akhbar, the SSRC has sent a letter to the Ministry of Justice requesting formation of referendum courts to dispose registration-related objections.

SPLM-DC accuses SPLM and the SSRC of hampering voter registration
Al-Ayyam
Khartoum– The Sudan Peoples’ Liberation Movement – Democratic Change (SPLM-DC) is accusing the SSRC and the SPLM of violating the Referendum Law and attempting to weaken the voter registration process. SPLM-DC’s secretary for youths, Pasquale Otweil, noted that the SSRC has hampered voter registration in the north and south of the country through by engaging young “identifiers and monitors” while focusing also on tribal bias in order to “lay the grounds for rigging in the referendum in the same manner the April 2010 elections were rigged in southern Sudan.”

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For full PDF version of our report, please click on the link below:

RMF ANNUAL REPORT 2009/2010

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Our partner’s in the Juba College of Nursing and Midwifery Initiative in Juba, Southern Sudan, has published this monthly journal regarding health and capacity building issues for Southern Sudan.

As Southern Sudan prepares for the referendum election in January, we are keeping close track of the situation on the ground and the safety of our teachers and students at the College. The students have all returned to their home towns to register for this historic vote, and are scheduled to return in mid to late January if all proceeds smoothly.

Southern Sudan Medical Journal can be found here.


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Fascinating article link below on McClathchy.com about the upcoming referendum in January on whether Southern Sudan is able to split off of Northern Sudan as it’s own independant country.

The future capital, Juba, is where our College of Nursing & Midwifery has begun as part of our Healthcare Capacity Building efforts in Africa.  Our school is on a temporary break right now as our students are allowed to return home to register and vote in this historic election.

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2010/11/16/103825/worlds-newest-nation-would-start.html

Real Medicine Foundation, in collaboration with the Government of South Sudan, the UNFPA, the WHO, St. Mary’s Hospital, Isle of Wight, and the Japanese International Cooperation Agency (JICA), and in partnership with and with financial support from World Children’s Fund, is establishing the first College of Nursing and Midwifery. The consortium aims to provide a scalable working model for this college that will offer a 3 year diploma for Registered Nursing and Midwifery and may be extended to other strategic locations within the country.

Read more about Healthcare Sector Capacity Building – College of Nursing and Midwifery, Southern Sudan

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Continuing in our series of “getting to know you” interviews using the Proust interview from Vanity Fair.  Here is a recent interview with Judith Apondi of Sudan, one of of the new teachers at the Juba College of Nursing and Midwifery in Sudan.

Judith Margaret Apondo Apondi

What is your idea of perfect happiness?

My idea of perfect happiness is when I have a balanced life, one with work, leisure and challenges.

What is your favorite activity outside of work?

My favorite activity outside work is travelling, dancing and sitting with friends.

Who are your heroes?

Elizabeth Ngugi, a nurse who rose from a cleaner to a professor.

What is your favorite or most used website?

I do not have any. I look for what I want in any website.

What is your favorite movie?

I do not have a favorite movie. I just watch what I want and decide to enjoy it.

What is your greatest achievement?

My greatest achievement is the initiation and successful running of emergency courses for medical staff in my previous place of work.

What is your favorite music?

My favorite music is Lingala.

Who is your favorite author?

What talent would you most like to have?

I would like to have the ability to possess timeless love

Where would you most like to live?

I would like to live anywhere except and as long as there is no insecurity like war.

Folllow us on Twitter or Facebook

To contribute to this initiatives, please click Donate button or visit our website at realmedicinefoundation.org.

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by Jonathan White

As the referendum gets closer for Southern Sudan in January of next year to gain independence from Northern Sudan, our new Nursing & Midwifery College in Juba, awaits the results anxiously.  The College will be closed between November 15th and January 15th to allow students and staff to safely register to vote and return home to await the results of the election.

The Nursing & Midwifery students with the staff of College and RMF project manager

Our partner in this initiative at the UNFPA in Sudan sends us these weekly media summaries as everyone prepares for the voting:

Below are series of short articles written regarding Senator John Kerry’s involvement and the Obama administration’s stance on the upcoming elections.

CPA partners receive Obama’s road map
Al-Rai Al-Aam 8/11/10 – The Sudanese Government is currently studying phased proposals conveyed by Chairman of the Senate’s Foreign Relations Committee John Kerry to lift sanctions imposed on Sudan, to write off debts and to remove Sudan’s name from the terrorist list in exchange for NCP’s concession on the Abyei territory.

Sources said the Government told Kerry that it had agreed to the South’s self-determination in return for peace and is ready to accept the referendum result but it would not make concessions on Abyei.

AFP 7/11/10 reported that US Senator John Kerry said during a visit to Sudan on Sunday that he delivered a roadmap aimed at resolving disputes between the North and South before a January referendum that may partition the country.

“President (Barack) Obama asked me to come here with his special envoy General (Scott) Gration and White House security adviser Michelle Gavin to offer his own proposal,” said Kerry.

“President Obama offered a roadmap to solve Abyei and other issues,” he told reporters of the disputed oil-rich region straddling north and south.

Kerry, who provided no details on the Obama proposal, met presidential aide Nafie Ali Nafie in Khartoum before leaving the country.

Sudan Tribune website 7/11/10 reported Kerry as saying “Sudan can find itself off the list of states that sponsor terrorism as early as July 2011 should it facilitate the self-determination votes in Abyei and South Sudan and recognize their outcome”.
The “Politico” magazine quoted unnamed senior U.S. officials as saying that President Barack Obama attached several conditions to the offer including that Khartoum facilitates the conduct of a transparent and on-time referendum on the status of Southern Sudan and respecting its result.

Additionally, Khartoum must implement “all appropriate post-referendum agreements – related to border agreements, currency, citizenship and other matters,” to fulfill U.S. conditions to be considered for accelerated removal from the state terror sponsor list, the official said.

The administration proposal Kerry carried to Khartoum “decouples the state sponsor of terrorism issue from Darfur,” a second senior U.S. official said Sunday. “But doing this in no way undermines the importance of the resolution of humanitarian and political problems that have plagued Darfur for the last decade. The comprehensive sanctions that have been in place [on Sudan] since 2003 and 2004 remain in place until we see a resolution of the Darfur crisis.”

Obama’s offer moves up by at least six months the date by which Khartoum might come off the list. But the U.S. officials emphasized a final decision would still be contingent on Sudan halting all sponsorship of terrorism for at least six months before the July 2011 target date and pledging not to resume such assistance in the future.

“President Obama made clear in the proposal conveyed this weekend that if Sudan’s leaders take concrete steps to implement the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, including recognizing the results of the referendum in January, he is prepared to immediately take significant steps to begin to transform the bilateral relationship. This would be the beginning of a new roadmap for addressing key bilateral issues as post-referendum issues are resolved,” he added.

Obama’s carrots to Khartoum may include more than just getting of the terrorism list. On Saturday Kerry met with Sudanese minister of Finance and National Economy, Ali Mahmood Hassanein to discuss the country’s $35.7 billion debt and ways to get a relief.

Sudan state media said that the US Senator promised the establishment of a committee comprising the Sudanese and US sides to deliberate and arrive at a resolution to Sudan’s foreign debts.

A well-placed source in Khartoum told Sudan Tribune on Friday that Western diplomats in the capital believe that Kerry may also offer U.S. support for deferring the arrest warrant against Sudanese president Omer Al-Bashir through the UN Security Council for one year that can be renewed indefinitely.

But U.S. officials today emphasized that separate U.S. sanctions imposed over Darfur — which Obama extended for another year on Nov. 1 — would remain until Khartoum improved conditions in the region, where the United Nations estimates up to 300,000 people died following a revolt in 2003, they said.

“Those … sanctions remain in place and they are the ones that have a significant effect on Sudan’s economy and on the government of Sudan itself,” said another official, who added that future steps such as debt relief and an exchange of ambassadors would all depend upon progress in Darfur.

Real Medicine Foundation, in collaboration with the Government of South Sudan, the UNFPA, the WHO, St. Mary’s Hospital, Isle of Wight, and the Japanese International Cooperation Agency (JICA), and in partnership with and with financial support from World Children’s Fund, is establishing the first College of Nursing and Midwifery. The consortium aims to provide a scalable working model for this college that will offer a 3 year diploma for Registered Nursing and Midwifery and may be extended to other strategic locations within the country.

Read more about Healthcare Sector Capacity Building – College of Nursing and Midwifery, Southern Sudan

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Continuing in our series of “getting to know you” interviews using the Proust interview from Vanity Fair.  Here is a recent interview with John Omony Siblio of Sudan, one of our new Nursing Students at the Juba College of Nursing and Midwifery in Sudan.

John Omwony Silbio

What is your idea of perfect happiness?

My idea of perfect happiness is when I attained a Higher Education Certificate with a good job where I am highly paid which will assist me in getting all my basic needs> I would also like to have a good marriage partner.

What is your favorite activity outside of work?

My favorite activity outside work is watching television especially international games such as the Premier league and the champions League plus other sports.

Who are your heroes?

My heroes are; The Late President Dr. John Garang, Dr. Lam Akol, Dr. Salva Kiir, Kwame Nkuruma, Dr. Riak Majar, Samson Kwaje.

What is your favorite or most used website?

My favorite website is www.yahoo.org and www.google.org for international news and research

What is your favorite movie?

I love Nigerian movies

What is your greatest achievement?

I have not yet achieved it but it is to get a degree in Nursing

What is your favorite music?

I like slow Music especially pop music and reggae especially by Lucky Dube

Who is your favorite author?

My favorite author is Chinua Achebe.

What talent would you most like to have?

I would like to be a counselor

Where would you most like to live?

I would like to live in my motherland Southern Sudan depending on where the government will post me to work after finishing my studies.

Folllow us on Twitter or Facebook

To contribute to this initiatives, please click Donate button or visit our website at realmedicinefoundation.org.


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As the referendum approaches for Southern Sudan in January of next year to gain independence from Northern Sudan, our new Nursing & Midwifery College in Juba, awaits the results anxiously.  Our partner at the UNFPA in Sudan sends us these weekly media summaries as everyone prepares for the voting.

Media Monitoring Report October 11th

United Nations Mission in Sudan/ Public Information Office

Referendum Monitor

  • UN Panel arrives in Sudan to monitor referendum (Al-Sahafa)
  • Government delegation rejects new proposal by Gration on Abyei (Al-Sahafa)
  • Assembly Speakers says Abyei referendum depends on an agreement (Al-Sahafa)
  • SPLA orders moving of artillery to Abyei (Al-Rai Al-Aam)
  • Minister says authorities in the South destroyed border equipment (Juba Post)
  • NCP condemns harassment of unity rally by secession supporters (ST)
  • General Athor declares ceasefire (Al-Ayyam)
  • No National unity without southern unity – Lam Akol (Khartoum Monitor)
  • NCP says displeased by the UNSC visit (Al-Sudani)
  • We will recognize Israel if it recognizes us – GoSS official (Al-Rai Al-Aam)
  • Afro-Arab summit to send five leaders to defuse NCP, SPLM tension (Al-Ahdath)
  • “I will remain in the North after secession” – SPLM Atem Garang (Al-Sahafa)

Highlights

UN Panel arrives in Sudan to monitor referendum

Al-Sahafa 11/10/10 – A UN Panel, formed by UNSG Ban Ki-moon to Monitor Sudan’s vote, arrived yesterday in Khartoum, headed by former Tanzanian President Benjamin Mkapato,  to hold meetings with officials and to familiarize themselves with the technical preparations for upcoming referendum.  Sudan Foreign Ministry spokesperson Muawia Khalid said the Panel would begin its meetings with the Foreign Minister Ali Karti and would head for Juba on a seven-day visit for meetings with GoSS officials.

Sudan Tribune website 10/10/10 reported that a UN panel, recently appointed to monitor southern Sudan referendum, arrived in Khartoum on Sunday in a four-day visit to Sudan.  Chaired by former Tanzanian president Benjamin Mkapato, the three-member panel is expected to hold talks with Sudanese government officials in Khartoum, Juba and Abyei.  The panel will seek to strengthen confidence between the two peace partners in the referendum process and encouraging them to resolve disputes or divergences related to the vote process.

“I am looking forward to this visit and the opportunity to meet with all the people who can help ensure that these referenda in Southern Sudan and the Abyei Area are successful,” Mkapato said. “There are many challenges ahead of us in the next few months but we are determined to do our utmost to help the people of Sudan.”

The other members are António Monteiro, former Minister of Foreign Affairs of Portugal, and Bhojraj Pokharel, former Chairman of the Election Commission of Nepal.  According to SUNA 10/10/10, Mkapato hoped that his team would be able to play its role and to realize its objective of monitoring the referendum neutrally and with full honesty and independence. Meanwhile, SRSG and Head of UNMIS Haile Menkerios has welcomed the arrival of the international monitoring delegation.

The representative of the Foreign Ministry, Ambassador Hassan Al-Amin, also welcomed the international team for monitoring the referendum, affirming the government commitment to the Referendum Act.  SUNA learned that the delegation would hold meetings with officials of the Commission for the Referendum and a number of other government officials.

Government delegation rejects new proposal by Gration on Abyei

Al-Sahafa 11/10/10 – the delegation of the Sudanese Government for talks on Abyei in Addis Ababa rejected a new proposal tabled by US envoy Scott Gration to annex the Abyei territory to the South by a presidential decree to be issued by President Al-Bashir.

The newspaper has learned that Gration made the proposal and requested head of AUHIP Thabo Mbeki and Ethiopian Prime Minister Melez Zenawi to convince President Al-Bashir to accept the suggestion. Gration proposal is intended to overcome the Abyei referendum hurdle.  Similarly, sources said the NCP also presented new proposals which were rejected by the SPLM. The NCP proposed that a presidential decree should be issued to annex the northern part of the territory to the North and the southern part to the South.

Reportedly, the SPLM delegation to Abyei talks in Addis Ababa decided to declare the failure of the talks and return home but Gration requested a chance for another attempt.  According to Sudan Tribune website 10/10/10, mediators in Addis Ababa have tabled new proposals for Sudan’s ruling National Congress Party (NCP) and Sudan People Liberation Movement (SPLM) to break the deadlock over the disputed border region of Abyei.

The U.S. sponsored talks on Abyei started since early October but both sides have stuck to their positions primarily due to pressure from the Misseriya and Dinka Ngok tribes who are the main inhabitants of Abyei.

The government sponsored Sudanese Media Centre (SMC) website reported that the two proposals include one that provide for the immediate subordination of Abyei to South Sudan and grant the Misseriya grazing rights. The other states that Abyei is to be divided into two zones, north and south.  Sources told SMC that the NCP delegation flatly rejected the first proposal and that discussions on the second one are underway. The sources denied any withdrawal by the SPLM delegation from the talks adding that both sides formed specialized committees to discuss all the outstanding issues.

Assembly Speakers says Abyei referendum depends on an agreement

Al-Sahafa 10/10/10 – National Assembly Speaker Ahmed Ibrahim Al-Tahir, at press conference yesterday, accused the SPLM of seek to reignite war between the North and the South, warning that “there will be no permanent peace under threat of war”. He said the conduct of the referendum in Abyei depends on reaching an agreement”. Al-Tahir said the SPLM has discontinued all contacts with the NCP and all its leaders are in the South.

According to The Citizen 11/10/10, Al-Tahir has threatened to impede Abyei referendum if the SPLM insisted on its position on the Misseriya vote at the referendum, voicing his rejection of the amendment of the referendum law by adding 40 seats for southerners, a step that he described as unconstitutional and a reaction by SPLM to the domination of the National Congress Party of the National Assembly.  Al-Tahir accused SPLM of violating the Abyei Protocol and the PCA ruling that granted the Misseriya the right to vote. “The referendum will not be held without the Misseriya whatever the case,” he said.

SPLA orders moving of artillery to Abyei

Al-Rai Al-Aam 11/10/10 – The SPLA has reportedly begun deploying troops at the border between the North and the South and also directed its cadres to leave the North for the South.  A source revealed to the newspaper yesterday that the artillery unit in Yei received orders from the SPLA last week to move to the border areas with the North particularly the Abyei territory, adding  the SPLA moved 20 armoured vehicles from “Bania” area in eastern Equatoria towards Abyei.

The Misseriya also accused the SPLA of deploying 700 troops at Abu Ghazala area and at Abu Kharit north of Abyei.  According to the sources, the SPLM also directed its southern cadres in the North to travel to the South. SPLA soldiers hailing from the Nuba and the Blue Nile areas have also been instructed to report to their military units.

Minister says authorities in the South destroyed border equipment

Juba Post 11/10/10 – Foreign Minister Ali Ahmed Karti has accused the authorities in southern Sudan of destroying all equipments meant for demarcating the North-South border.  Karti made the remarks while addressing a visiting UN Security Council delegation in Khartoum. He said the border demarcation team deployed the equipments at the North-South border but they were dismantled.

Karti claimed that the equipments were deployed on the ground along the border but they were unfortunately destroyed by the county commissioners along the border lines who happen to be representatives of the SPLM. He said both the SPLM and the NCP reached an agreement on 80% of the border line and were pushing for negotiations to settle the remaining 20%m, but the incident that saw the destruction of the border demarcation equipments has made it difficult to practically demarcate the line.

General Athor declares ceasefire

Al-Ayyam 11/10/10 –The defected SPLA general, George Athor, said that he had accepted the amnesty decreed by GoSS President Salva Kiir Mayardit.

In an interview to Radio Miraya, Athor declared a unilateral ceasefire and cessation of hostilities, affirming that negotiation between him and the Government of Southern Sudan would start soon.

According to Sudan Tribune website 10/10/10, Gen. George Athor Deng, a former chief of staff to the southern army, who rebelled against the southern government, after losing a bid to become governor of Jonglei state, has welcomed Wednesday’s presidential amnesty directed at him and other rebels.  Speaking to United Nations Mission in Sudan (UNMIS) sponsored Miraya FM on Sunday; Gen. Athor said he will respect President Salva Kiir Mayardit’s call for peaceful return and reintegration of his forces into the south’s army, the Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA).  Gen. Athor contested for Jonglei state gubernatorial post but lost to incumbent governor Kuol Manyang Juuk of the Sudan People Liberation Movement (SPLM)- the political wing of the SPLA.

Athor alleged that the SPLM, which has governed the southern region since a 2005 peace deal rigged April’s elections against him and chose to start an armed uprising in protest.  Since his forces first attacked Dollib Hills in Upper Nile state in May 2010, which the SPLA blame on Athor forces, the regional army made several attempts to demolish his forces but in vain.

The government of southern Sudan (GoSS) initially rejected peace talks proposed by UNMIS and turned down several efforts by local community leaders for peaceful resolution.  Last week, President Kiir released a decree pardoning Gen. Athor, Gen. Gabriel Tenginyang and others who rebelled against his government to rejoin after disarming their forces. Details from Athor’s acceptance are still sketchy.

The amnesty was welcomed on Saturday by John Kong Nyuon, a security adviser to the president of the government of southern Sudan.  On Wednesday, Salva Kiir Mayardit, president of the government of southern Sudan and a commander in chief and the Sudan People’s Liberation Army issued an executive order pardoning the four military officers, Lieutenant General George Athor Deng, Major General Gabriel Tanginye, Robert Gwang and Colonel Gatluak Gai.  The executive order urged the officers to immediately join ranks and files of the SPLA forces and assured them they would be able to move freely in the region without any fear.

The pardon will not come into effect unless the officers lay down their arms without condition and return to rank and files of the regional army. Speaking to Sudan Tribune on Saturday, Nyuon commended the decision of the president and urged the officers to return.  The decision taken by the president is excellent, wise and unifying decision,” said Nyuon.

The BBC noted that the report coincided with the visit of the United Nations Security Council and that the move could be seen as a way to show visiting diplomats the south’s seriousness to provide security ahead of the January’s referendum on southern independence.

Kiir issued the order following a meeting between the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM and representatives from other political parties to prepare for South-South dialogue conference, scheduled to take place on 13 October 2010.The agenda of the conference is believed to include discussion about ways to reach consensus on the conduct of the referendum on self-determination for the people of the region. It will also touch on post-referendum governance.

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