ROAD of LIBERATION BY DR.JOHN GARANG>
Solution for today and vision for tomorrow
LATE DR.JOHN GARANG RECALLED BY THE SOUTHERNERS.
Late Garang remembers by his people of southern Sudan and their close ally nations around the world. Dr.Garang De Mabior remained history of peace and father of nation of Sudan. It is the end of Dr. John footsteps to death after he signed the peace of Sudan within three weeks of July/9/05-July/30/05.
The Legacy of Our late Leaders.
May 16,1983 was the time when the people of South Sudan redefined their socio-political & cultural destiny and in this day, it is worth mentioning that some comrades labored hard enough by sacrificing their payments, lives and many more to liberate the people of the Sudan in general and South Sudan in particular. With this event, to me only one thing comes to mind, the legacy of our departed leaders and their foot/fingerprints on the life and history of our struggle. All our great comrades and leaders have each left a foot or fingerprint on our life to admire but in this note, I will use the seven founding members of our liberation struggle as a sample to all comrades. In their sequence of the leadership order, I would like to outline their impacts on the system one after other:
1. Lt.Gen.Dr. John Garang De Mabior
(Late Chairman and C-in-C SPLM/A & Chairman of the Politico- Military High Command of the movement)
Garang Mabior is one of the charismatic leader that the South Sudan and/or Sudan in general ever had in history, he came up as a young officer in Anyanya I and got absorbed to the Sudanese Armed Forces with the rank of Captain, he left some impacts on the Sudanese Armed Forces such as Military Foundation-a transport company for the forces.
In May, Dr.Garang rebelled in Bor; his hometown along side with comrades from the Southern Battalion 104/105 that was commanded by the then Lt. Col. Kerubino Kuanyin; this moved formed the core of the Movement (now) Party SPLM. Some of his foot and fingerprints to the struggle is the formulation of the New Sudan vision that was found difficult to comprehend by his fellow Southerners, this vision is latter adopted by most political forces in the country as the new basis and definition for the unity of the country.
In one word Dr. Garang left us a formidable vision as Southerners and as Sudanese at large. (Sudan will never be the same and for the SPM/A to transform Sudan, it must get transformed first) This is a quote from his briefing speech in Kenyatta International Conference Centre, Nairobi.May 31st 2005 after the signing of the six protocols of peace in Naivasha.
2. Gen.Kerubino Kuanyin Bol
(Former Vice Chairman and Deputy C-in-C SPLM/A & Permanent member of the Politico-Military High Command of the Movement)
This caliber of the Sudanese Armed Forces officer is the first champion of the Bor mutiny that led to the birth of our movement -SPLM; He served as the movement’s Vice Chairman and Deputy Commander-in-Chief of its Army wing from July 1983-1988 when he was arrested for attempting to overthrow the Chairman of the movement. Gen.Kerubino is known for his Morale and determination and left this touch on the Jiech El-Shabi (People’s Army) the nickname usually used by SPLA soldiers to refer to themselves.
3.CDR.William Nyuon Bany
(Late Chief of Staff of SPLA & Permanent member of the Politico-Military High Command of the Movement)
This is the second champion of the mutiny of the Southern Forces in 1983; he deceived the enemy in Malakal to let him go and fight Lt.Col. Kerubino who just rebel in Bor a month early just to join the rebels and executed all the loyal soldiers to the government in Ayod. William was known for bravery and military professionalism and as a result during the factional fighting within the SPLM/A every faction would like to win his support. In his nearly last days William Nyuon lured Sudanese Colonel and his team of officers to Lafon where he has his base, captured them and switches side to SPLA. It is with this cunning talent that the Sudanese developed a curriculum in his name taught in military college-it is called William Nyuon’s theory. Nyuon (Kuenyang) his Bull name left this fingerprint of bravery and professionalism on the SPLA record of history.
4.Brig.Gen.Arok Thon Arok
(SPLA Deputy Chief of Staff for Political Mobilization & Permanent member of the Politico-Military High Command, Spokesman)
Arok Thon Arok was a shining star in the sky of SPLM/A for many talents some of which are intellectuals and others militarily and many more. It is worth mentioning that he left a great finger or footprint on the administrative machinery of the SPLA with special emphasis on the organizational leadership. This man was my personal icon in term of leadership qualities he demonstrated.
5. Mr. Majier Gai
(SPLM Secretary for Legal Affairs)
Although Majier spent most of his time in jail, he managed to leave remarkable footprint in the SPLM/A by putting in a legal touch when he developed the SPLM/A manifesto that was the legal framework of the movement until 1990s
6. Mr.Josepg Uduho
(SPLM Secretary for Political Affairs)
Joseph was one of the veteran fighters of the Anyanya I who managed to join hands with the younger generations for continuation of the struggle.
It is worth mentioning that he was known for his courage and determination which he left as footprint in our liberation struggle. This is what I can add as an appreciation to these extraordinary comrades who set our foundation or who gave up their tomorrow for our today, they deserved to be honoured as the laboured for it.
I asked every one of Sudanese from all walk of lives to give these leaders a room in their hearts, as they deserve that with all sincerity
Sept 15, 2005 — It is very difficult indeed as to where and
how to pay a tribute to a man who dedicated all his life to
the oppressed people of Sudan. In a recent press interview
just before his death, Dr John Garang de Mabior remembered
that ‘when he was a child, he used to see himself in every
naked, hungry child in the district.’ This humanitarian
outlook turned out to have a profound effect on his life as
a soldier, a lecturer, a rebel leader, an ideologue and a
short-lived statesman. Dr Garang was, and is, regarded as
one of the finest Sudanese leader in the modern history of
Sudan: he was extraordinarily charismatic, highly
intelligent and unusually popular. He shot to fame
following the rebellion of Bor and Pibor Battalions in
1983; since then his name has been inexorably intertwined
with the struggle of the masses in the Sudan. Although the
Sudan has experienced an array of political leaders in its
political evolution, yet few politicians have distinct
personalities. Some of them go into politics to give
themselves a personality: they have so little sense of self
that they are comfortable only when they have some official
status. Others start with a personality if only to end up
with no personality at all. But Garang’s abilities,
professionalism, commitment and dedication to the cause of
the marginalised population of the country are something
all Sudanese politicians should aspire to. Garang rose to
this challenge with self-confidence, and his studious study
of the under-represented populace in the Sudan was a
primary motive in his struggle to redress this imbalance of
power and wealth in the Sudanese society. This why around
six million people thronged the streets of the Sudanese
capital, Khartoum, to greet him on Friday, July 8, 2005.
Better still, Garang was rare among the Southerners in
calling for national unity and had, therefore, also raised
the hopes of many Northern Sudanese, not only of keeping
Sudan’s one million square miles united, but also of
eventually freeing them from the hated fundamentalist
Government, restoring democracy and human rights and ending
the crisis in Dar Fur and Eastern Sudan.
John Garang was born on June 23, 1945 into a poor family in
Buk - a small Dinka village in Bor County on the eastern
bank of the Nile where no one, he once said, was able even
to read. By the age of 10, Garang was an orphan. He might
have stayed in Buk, becoming a cattle herder like his
father and grandfather before him, had a relative not paid
his fees and sent him to school - first in nearby Wau, then
across the Nile in Rumbek. In 1962, at the age of 17,
Garang joined the first Sudanese civil war - that is, the
Anya-Nya, but because he was so young, the then rebel
leaders encouraged him and others of his age to seek an
education, sending him to continue his secondary education
in Tanzania. After wining a scholarship to Grinnell College
in Iowa, he was awarded a bachelor’s degree in economics in
1969. He was offered a graduate fellowship at the
University of California, Berkeley, but chose instead to
return to Tanzania as a research fellow at Dar al-Salaam
University. There he met a future ally - Yoweri Museveni,
now the President of Uganda - and soon decided to return to
the Sudan to join the rebel Anya-Nya movement.
During the Addis Ababa peace talks, a junior officer within
the Anya-Nya rank and file called John Garang de Mabior
informed Joseph Lagu that he categorically had no
confidence that these negotiations would lead to a
permanent solution. When he was asked by Lagu as to what
had prompted him to think so, Garang, who was then an
officer in the Anya-Nya military intelligence, replied that
any resulting agreement from this peace process would not
last long if it were not to go deep into changing the
Sudanese body politics. Garang went on to name these issues
as: separation of religion from politics, the question of
ethnicities, security administration in Southern Sudan
during the Interim Period, the endorsement of the agreement
through a popular referendum. He added that there should
be, at least, a five-year transitional period before the
referendum. Furthermore, Garang warned the Anya-Nya leaders
about the unduly hasty approach in absorbing the former
rebel fighters into the Sudanese army. No sooner had Garang
put these remarks in writing to Lagu than his name was
removed from the negotiating team, and sent back to the
Anya-Nya headquarters in Upper Nile. Later, history had to
prove that Garang was right, and he was thinking ten years
ahead of his superiors.
Despite all his reservations, Garang joined the Sudanese
army as an absorbed officer; and, when he was asked by Lagu
yet again as to why he did accept the absorption into the
Sudanese Armed Forces in spite of his scepticism? Garang
replied: ‘I am still sticking to my opinion that this
agreement will not last, but I want to give it a chance,
and let us wait and see.’ Nonetheless, Garang made use of
opportunities provided by the Sudan army to pursue further
studies both academically and militarily. When the
aforementioned first civil war ended with the Addis Ababa
Agreement of 1972, many rebels - Garang among them, as
stated earlier, were incorporated into the Sudanese Armed
Forces. In 11 years as a career soldier, he rose quickly
from captain to colonel, completing the Infantry Officers
Advanced Course at the US Army Infantry School in Fort
Benning, Georgia; but taking a four-year study break to get
a master’s degree in agricultural economics and a doctorate
in economics at Iowa State University. Through working in
the Sudanese army in the North, Garang acquired skills and
experience in dealing with Northern fellow countrymen,
understanding their mentality, witnessing the deprivation
of other socially and economically marginalised population
in Northern Sudan, including the Nuba, the Funj, the Beja
and the people of Dar Fur. The Sudanese society is infested
with countless episodes of social diseases, including
racism, tribalism, religious bigotry, sectarianism,
exploitation, cultural assimilation, gender discrimination
and so forth. In the Northern communities, Garang witnessed
a great deal of this manifestly practised misdemeanour in
Arab jokes, folklore, neighbourhood relations, mass media,
employment opportunities and Government policies. As a
Dinka tribesman, Garang might have come across an
acrimonious, personal experience when he was not in his
army uniform. These were the sorts of issues that motivated
Garang and his colleagues to launch an underground movement
to agitate for socio-political change in the Sudan. They
were emboldened by President Nimeiri’s meddling with, and
rescinding of, the Addis Ababa Accord that put an end to
fratricidal hostilities in 1972.
However, no settlement which contravenes the principles of
eternal justice will ever be a permanent one. Let us be
warned by the example of the Addis Ababa Accord of 1972.
The results of undue haste in some respects and the
overlooking of or putting aside important matters were to
have catastrophic consequences later on. As to why the
second civil war started in the Sudan, it had been a
controversially polemic issue. Few wars, if any, have a
single origin. The outbreak of conflicts comes from a clash
of various causes. This was certainly true of the First
World War, yet it was overlooked by the peacemakers of
1919. Exhausted, physically and mentally, by four years of
slaughter, four years of hysterically ‘hating the Hun’,
they picked up one reason for it all: Germany. And this was
written into the peace treaty, and, therefore, into the
peace implementation. The result was the Second World War.
Much to the point, all the Israeli-Arab wars are the result
of previously unsettled conflicts, with the 1948 conflict
as a seminal factor in the current disputes. The US war in
Afghanistan in October 2001 was a consequence of the
unresolved dispute that was egged out by a struggle to
expel the Soviet troops from the Afghani territory. The
recent Iraqi war is connected, in one way or another, to
the unfinished business of Iraq-Kuwait war in the early
1990s. And so the second Sudanese civil war was a direct
result of the failure of the first one to deliver a
sustainable settlement of the dispute; and, if a new war
were to start in future, it would be because either a
number of groups came out of the Comprehensive Peace
Agreement bitterly unsatisfied or the agreement itself were
tampered with.
Sudan’s domestic history during the last fifty years that
followed its independence in 1956 consists largely of the
struggle of orders, whereby a large section of its
population sought protection from, and then political and
social equality with, the minority ruling class who
monopolise the state and control power, wealth, education,
business and so forth. Poverty has increased the economic
difficulties of small farmers, many of whom, because of the
harsh laws of loans, are falling into a state of virtual
serfdom. Constitutions are drafted, passed and amended, but
with little effects on the people they are supposed to
benefit from them. Legislations are enacted, but with
cobweb’s inefficiency that could allow the influential
people to go through, but hold back the weak. Worse still,
the gap between the centre and the peripheries in economic
development, literacy, social services, the standard of
living, income generation, medicare, child malnutrition,
the rate of infant and maternal mortality, life expectancy
and so forth continues to get wider and wider. Against this
backdrop, civil wars have been fought in the Sudan. In
1983, Dr Garang was sent to crush a mutiny in Bor by 500
Southern Government soldiers, who were resisting being
rotated to posts in the North. Instead, he started a rebel
movement, the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army
(SPLM/A), which was opposed to military rule and Islamic
dominance of the country, and encouraged other army
garrisons to mutiny against the Islamic laws imposed on the
country by the Nimeiri Government. This mutiny marked the
beginning of the second phase of Sudanese civil war, which
resulted in more than one and half million deaths and over
four million internally displaced persons and refugees in
over twenty years of bloody conflict. The excesses of human
rights violations in war-stricken parts of the country by
the Khartoum regimes soared incessantly to the point that
the citizens of these war-affected areas began to rethink
their position on the slogans of national unity. The basis
of statehood, and of unity, can only be general acceptance
by the participants if justice, equality, egalitarianism,
freedom and social development are the practices of
governments, and not only being beamed out as mere texts
enshrined in constitutions. Surely, when more than twelve
million people have become convinced that they are rejected
in a country in which they live, and that there is no
longer any basis for unity between them and other groups of
people, then unity has already ceased to exist. You cannot
kill thousands of people, and keep killing more, in the
name of unity. There is no unity between the dead and those
who killed them; and, worse still, there is no unity in
slavery and domination.
On this occasion, the Sudanese authorities should find a
way out of the bloody dispute in Dar Fur region, Eastern
Sudan and the simmering resentments in far Northern Sudan.
Let us not wait until injustice, suffering and human rights
abuses reach their zenith to the degree that the population
of these regions start to call for the ‘right to
self-determination’, because extremism begets extremism at
the other end. The situation in Dar Fur dictates a second
thought. States are made to serve people; governments are
established to protect the citizens of a state against
external enemies and internal wrongdoers. It is on these
grounds that people surrender their right and power to
self-defence to the government of the sate in which they
live. But when the whole machinery of the State, and the
powers of the Government, are turned against a whole group
of the society on the grounds of racial, tribal or
religious prejudices, then the victims have the right to
take back the powers they have surrendered, and to defend
themselves. With the exception of the religion factor, the
crisis in Dar Fur is similar in effect and intensity to the
one once existed in the South, the Nuba Mountains and
Southern Blue Nile before the conclusion of peace deal. But
why peace between the Sudan regimes and the SPLM/A was an
elusive matter for so long a time? The post-Nimeieri
regimes were either influenced by the sectarian and
dogmatic parties - and, therefore, not negotiating in good
faith - or dithering was the means utilised to evade peace
overtures. When the generals of the Transitional Military
Council (TMC), who took over power from Nimeiri in a
popular uprising in April 1985, invited Dr Garang to
Khartoum, he replied to their request that ‘they were not
bishops to go to Khartoum to give a blessing to what the
archbishops had done there!’ ‘We should have been
consulted,’ he added. He called the TMC May II - that is,
the May regime without Nimeiri, but with his lately
promoted defence minister at the helm - that is, Lt-Gen
‘Abd al-Rahman Swar al-Dahab: this fact, then
controversially, was later proved by the political
development in the Sudan to be correct and that the SPLM/A
was right. In actuality, governments are institutions not
individuals. Truly speaking, Nimeiri was overthrown, but
his repressive institutions remained intact. These were
what the National Alliance for National Salvation called
the vestiges of May regime; they include the notorious
package of September laws, the sacked civil servants and
cashiered army officers, the abrogation of Addis Ababa
Accord and the wide spread of corruption which crippled the
Sudanese economy. Had Garang accepted this tantalising
offer from the TMC, he would have been promoted to
major-general or lieutenant-general only to retire in a
year’s time and together with him retire the aspirations
and hopes of the socially marginalised people for whom he
was fighting. Pensively, Garang pondered the Sudanese
ailments for which the deprived Sudanese population are
suffering, including injustice, economic marginalisation,
illiteracy, rampant diseases and so forth. He came up with
a socially engineered solution - that is, the New Sudan,
which was widely publicised in his public speeches, media
interviews and published theses (John Garang Speaks,
London, 1987; The Call for Democracy in Sudan, London,
1992; and The Vision of New Sudan: Questions of Unity and
Identity, Cairo, 1998). He called for the Sudan in which
democracy prevails, free from sectarianism, secessionism,
and religious, social and/or racial discriminations and
prejudices. Garang caused a political furore in the
conceptual thinking of Southern Sudanese politicians which
had been centred, for a very long time, on the separation
of Southern Sudan; this call has been oscillating from a
demand for federalism in the early days of Sudan’s
independence from the Condominium Rule in 1956 to a total
secession from the central Government that was, and is so
much so, dominated by the Northerners ever since the
creation of the modern Sudan.
The Southerners have, therefore, come to believe that
liberation from this yoke of domination lies in
dismembering the country. Garang, on the other hand,
refused to surrender to this existing reality, and,
instead, embarked on a new venture which advocated the
destruction of the old Sudan and reconstructing, in its
place, a new one according to a new empirical formula in
which the Southerners and other marginalised people of
Sudan should not become the guests of the central
authority, but original partners in power- and
wealth-sharing. Rejecting the political process in its old
clothes, Garang called for egalitarianism as the norms of
the day, and advocated a country in which justice and the
rule of law were practised. Like John F Kennedy who once
said: ‘Let us not be Democrats nor Republicans, but let us
be Americans,’ John Garang also reiterated more than once
that ‘let us not be Northerners or Southerners, but let us
be, first and foremost, Sudanese.’
Garang the great theorist knew instinctively how simple
ideas, when repeated over and over again, could work best
like fire on dry grass on a mass audience; he also knew how
to appeal to the emotions of his listeners, and how to
reassure them that they were not to blame for Sudan’s ills,
but it was all the fault of clique-dominated Government in
Khartoum; thus came the idea of the SPLM/A as a movement in
lieu of a political party at the inception of armed
struggle. The call for a New Sudan is a serious response by
the SPLM/A against ‘the attempt by various Khartoum-based
regimes to build a monolithic Arab-Islamic state to the
exclusion of other parameters of the Sudanese diversity;
this constitutes the Fundamental Problem of Sudan and
defines the Sudanese conflict. The Sudanese state has
excluded the vast majority of the Sudanese people from
governance, and, therefore, their marginalisation in the
political, economic and social fields. This provoked
resistance by the excluded. There have been wars and there
continues to be wars in the Sudan simply because the
majority of the Sudanese are not stakeholders in
governance. The Arab-Islamic state in the Sudan ended up
being imposed by force, rather than by consent of the
governed through a consensual social contract; and force
has been responded with force.’ The solution to this
Fundamental Problem of Sudan is to evolve an ‘all inclusive
Sudanese state’, which is called the New Sudan, because the
previously tested minoritarian-based rule is the antithesis
of majority aspirations. As Sudanese citizens, the
population should enjoy civic rights in a country which
there should be a progress towards human rights and social
welfare, the eradication of poverty and putting an end to
the cycles of hunger, the achievement of primary education
to all and the promotion of gender equality, and an
endeavour to attain development based on stronger emphasis
on basic human needs - such as, reasonable health, access
to clean water and the equality of opportunities.
The vision of New Sudan Garang was championing was to be
achieved through a two-tier process: a military struggle
and a political dialogue that could lead to a peaceful
settlement. This is why the SPLM/A continued to talk to the
Government of the day in Khartoum, regardless of its
nature. The Sudanese people, as well as political observers
and pundits, may wonder what is different now between the
Addis Ababa Accord of March 1972 and the Comprehensive
Peace Agreement of January 2005 as signed in the Kenyan
capital, Nairobi. The difference is that the ultimate
concession of self-rule and the opportunity for
self-determination have been grasped by the Southerners
from the Northern Government. Previously, the 1972
agreement focused on integrating the Southern rebels into
the national army, unlike the present agreement that will
see the evacuation of the garrison towns in the South,
which the Sudan Government had previously concentrated its
might, and the redeployment of SPLA troops to those areas.
It is hard to underestimate the importance of this element
of the agreement. After 22 years of struggling to control
and defeat the rebel SPLA, costing the lives of countless
young soldiers, civilians and students, the Sudan
Government is now walking away from the South. In this
current agreement, we must not allow any sense of
exploitation, any spirit of greed nor any grasping desire
to over-ride the fundamental principle of righteousness.
Vigorous attempts will be made by our empowered
partner-in-power to bully the new comers to make them
depart from the strict principles of right, and to satisfy
some base, sordid and squalid ideas of avarice, but let us
resist them all.
On Saturday, July 30, 2005, alas, Garang died after the
Ugandan presidential MI-72 helicopter he was riding
crashed. He died with five of his personal bodyguard -
namely, Lt-Col Amak Malwal, Lt-Col ‘Ali Mian Majuk, First
Lieut Deng Majok Kwang, Lieut Juma Mian Deng and First
Lieut David Oboko Obur, and seven Uganan crew members. He
had been returning from a meeting in Rwakitura with his
long-time ally, President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda. Great
leaders and prophets never reach the promised land; take,
for instance, Prophet Moses who died in the wilderness
before taking the Israelites to the promised land only to
bequeath the onus of the mission to his lieutenant, Joshua;
take also Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, President Samora
Machel of Mozambique and Yousif Kuwa Makki, to name but a
few. The post-Garang SPLM/A leaders should strenuously
strive to ensure the Sudanese people that Garang did not
die in vain, and that his legacy, vision, teachings and
aspirations are attained as his widow asserted immediately
after receiving the bitter news that her husband was dead.
The Sudanese masses have been deceived far too long that
they lost confidence in the Northern-based political
process, party system and factional squabbles. Based on a
false hope that the entire people could be fooled all the
time, the policies of the National Islamic Front regime
became a bitter source of controversy, and the catastrophic
situation in the Sudan had made people flock to the SPLM/A
vision, as laid down in the programme of New Sudan, which
has attracted, and continues to attract, more and more
people. It is easy to get depressed about the quality of
modern political leaders in the Sudan, about how readily we
are taken in by plausible promises delivered in a plausible
manner, but Garang was not given a chance to live up to his
pledges to the Sudanese people. His life was cut short by
death that we are praying today for his soul and that may
Almighty God give him peace in his eternal life and give
the disconsolate Sudanese people courage and wisdom to
follow in his footsteps.
*Dr Omer M Shurkian is a Sudanese from the Nuba Mountains
in central Sudan. He is the chairman of the London based
Nuba Mountains Solidarity Abroad (NMSA) As a human rights
activist, he was involved in a campaign against the Sudan
Government’s human rights violations meted out on the Nuba
people in the Sudan. He also published a number of articles
on the plight of the Nuba people.
Sept 15, 2005 — It is very difficult indeed as to where and
how to pay a tribute to a man who dedicated all his life to
the oppressed people of Sudan. In a recent press interview
just before his death, Dr John Garang de Mabior remembered
that ‘when he was a child, he used to see himself in every
naked, hungry child in the district.’ This humanitarian
outlook turned out to have a profound effect on his life as
a soldier, a lecturer, a rebel leader, an ideologue and a
short-lived statesman. Dr Garang was, and is, regarded as
one of the finest Sudanese leader in the modern history of
Sudan: he was extraordinarily charismatic, highly
intelligent and unusually popular. He shot to fame
following the rebellion of Bor and Pibor Battalions in
1983; since then his name has been inexorably intertwined
with the struggle of the masses in the Sudan. Although the
Sudan has experienced an array of political leaders in its
political evolution, yet few politicians have distinct
personalities. Some of them go into politics to give
themselves a personality: they have so little sense of self
that they are comfortable only when they have some official
status. Others start with a personality if only to end up
with no personality at all. But Garang’s abilities,
professionalism, commitment and dedication to the cause of
the marginalised population of the country are something
all Sudanese politicians should aspire to. Garang rose to
this challenge with self-confidence, and his studious study
of the under-represented populace in the Sudan was a
primary motive in his struggle to redress this imbalance of
power and wealth in the Sudanese society. This why around
six million people thronged the streets of the Sudanese
capital, Khartoum, to greet him on Friday, July 8, 2005.
Better still, Garang was rare among the Southerners in
calling for national unity and had, therefore, also raised
the hopes of many Northern Sudanese, not only of keeping
Sudan’s one million square miles united, but also of
eventually freeing them from the hated fundamentalist
Government, restoring democracy and human rights and ending
the crisis in Dar Fur and Eastern Sudan.
John Garang was born on June 23, 1945 into a poor family in
Buk - a small Dinka village in Bor County on the eastern
bank of the Nile where no one, he once said, was able even
to read. By the age of 10, Garang was an orphan. He might
have stayed in Buk, becoming a cattle herder like his
father and grandfather before him, had a relative not paid
his fees and sent him to school - first in nearby Wau, then
across the Nile in Rumbek. In 1962, at the age of 17,
Garang joined the first Sudanese civil war - that is, the
Anya-Nya, but because he was so young, the then rebel
leaders encouraged him and others of his age to seek an
education, sending him to continue his secondary education
in Tanzania. After wining a scholarship to Grinnell College
in Iowa, he was awarded a bachelor’s degree in economics in
1969. He was offered a graduate fellowship at the
University of California, Berkeley, but chose instead to
return to Tanzania as a research fellow at Dar al-Salaam
University. There he met a future ally - Yoweri Museveni,
now the President of Uganda - and soon decided to return to
the Sudan to join the rebel Anya-Nya movement.
During the Addis Ababa peace talks, a junior officer within
the Anya-Nya rank and file called John Garang de Mabior
informed Joseph Lagu that he categorically had no
confidence that these negotiations would lead to a
permanent solution. When he was asked by Lagu as to what
had prompted him to think so, Garang, who was then an
officer in the Anya-Nya military intelligence, replied that
any resulting agreement from this peace process would not
last long if it were not to go deep into changing the
Sudanese body politics. Garang went on to name these issues
as: separation of religion from politics, the question of
ethnicities, security administration in Southern Sudan
during the Interim Period, the endorsement of the agreement
through a popular referendum. He added that there should
be, at least, a five-year transitional period before the
referendum. Furthermore, Garang warned the Anya-Nya leaders
about the unduly hasty approach in absorbing the former
rebel fighters into the Sudanese army. No sooner had Garang
put these remarks in writing to Lagu than his name was
removed from the negotiating team, and sent back to the
Anya-Nya headquarters in Upper Nile. Later, history had to
prove that Garang was right, and he was thinking ten years
ahead of his superiors.
Despite all his reservations, Garang joined the Sudanese
army as an absorbed officer; and, when he was asked by Lagu
yet again as to why he did accept the absorption into the
Sudanese Armed Forces in spite of his scepticism? Garang
replied: ‘I am still sticking to my opinion that this
agreement will not last, but I want to give it a chance,
and let us wait and see.’ Nonetheless, Garang made use of
opportunities provided by the Sudan army to pursue further
studies both academically and militarily. When the
aforementioned first civil war ended with the Addis Ababa
Agreement of 1972, many rebels - Garang among them, as
stated earlier, were incorporated into the Sudanese Armed
Forces. In 11 years as a career soldier, he rose quickly
from captain to colonel, completing the Infantry Officers
Advanced Course at the US Army Infantry School in Fort
Benning, Georgia; but taking a four-year study break to get
a master’s degree in agricultural economics and a doctorate
in economics at Iowa State University. Through working in
the Sudanese army in the North, Garang acquired skills and
experience in dealing with Northern fellow countrymen,
understanding their mentality, witnessing the deprivation
of other socially and economically marginalised population
in Northern Sudan, including the Nuba, the Funj, the Beja
and the people of Dar Fur. The Sudanese society is infested
with countless episodes of social diseases, including
racism, tribalism, religious bigotry, sectarianism,
exploitation, cultural assimilation, gender discrimination
and so forth. In the Northern communities, Garang witnessed
a great deal of this manifestly practised misdemeanour in
Arab jokes, folklore, neighbourhood relations, mass media,
employment opportunities and Government policies. As a
Dinka tribesman, Garang might have come across an
acrimonious, personal experience when he was not in his
army uniform. These were the sorts of issues that motivated
Garang and his colleagues to launch an underground movement
to agitate for socio-political change in the Sudan. They
were emboldened by President Nimeiri’s meddling with, and
rescinding of, the Addis Ababa Accord that put an end to
fratricidal hostilities in 1972.
However, no settlement which contravenes the principles of
eternal justice will ever be a permanent one. Let us be
warned by the example of the Addis Ababa Accord of 1972.
The results of undue haste in some respects and the
overlooking of or putting aside important matters were to
have catastrophic consequences later on. As to why the
second civil war started in the Sudan, it had been a
controversially polemic issue. Few wars, if any, have a
single origin. The outbreak of conflicts comes from a clash
of various causes. This was certainly true of the First
World War, yet it was overlooked by the peacemakers of
1919. Exhausted, physically and mentally, by four years of
slaughter, four years of hysterically ‘hating the Hun’,
they picked up one reason for it all: Germany. And this was
written into the peace treaty, and, therefore, into the
peace implementation. The result was the Second World War.
Much to the point, all the Israeli-Arab wars are the result
of previously unsettled conflicts, with the 1948 conflict
as a seminal factor in the current disputes. The US war in
Afghanistan in October 2001 was a consequence of the
unresolved dispute that was egged out by a struggle to
expel the Soviet troops from the Afghani territory. The
recent Iraqi war is connected, in one way or another, to
the unfinished business of Iraq-Kuwait war in the early
1990s. And so the second Sudanese civil war was a direct
result of the failure of the first one to deliver a
sustainable settlement of the dispute; and, if a new war
were to start in future, it would be because either a
number of groups came out of the Comprehensive Peace
Agreement bitterly unsatisfied or the agreement itself were
tampered with.
Sudan’s domestic history during the last fifty years that
followed its independence in 1956 consists largely of the
struggle of orders, whereby a large section of its
population sought protection from, and then political and
social equality with, the minority ruling class who
monopolise the state and control power, wealth, education,
business and so forth. Poverty has increased the economic
difficulties of small farmers, many of whom, because of the
harsh laws of loans, are falling into a state of virtual
serfdom. Constitutions are drafted, passed and amended, but
with little effects on the people they are supposed to
benefit from them. Legislations are enacted, but with
cobweb’s inefficiency that could allow the influential
people to go through, but hold back the weak. Worse still,
the gap between the centre and the peripheries in economic
development, literacy, social services, the standard of
living, income generation, medicare, child malnutrition,
the rate of infant and maternal mortality, life expectancy
and so forth continues to get wider and wider. Against this
backdrop, civil wars have been fought in the Sudan. In
1983, Dr Garang was sent to crush a mutiny in Bor by 500
Southern Government soldiers, who were resisting being
rotated to posts in the North. Instead, he started a rebel
movement, the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army
(SPLM/A), which was opposed to military rule and Islamic
dominance of the country, and encouraged other army
garrisons to mutiny against the Islamic laws imposed on the
country by the Nimeiri Government. This mutiny marked the
beginning of the second phase of Sudanese civil war, which
resulted in more than one and half million deaths and over
four million internally displaced persons and refugees in
over twenty years of bloody conflict. The excesses of human
rights violations in war-stricken parts of the country by
the Khartoum regimes soared incessantly to the point that
the citizens of these war-affected areas began to rethink
their position on the slogans of national unity. The basis
of statehood, and of unity, can only be general acceptance
by the participants if justice, equality, egalitarianism,
freedom and social development are the practices of
governments, and not only being beamed out as mere texts
enshrined in constitutions. Surely, when more than twelve
million people have become convinced that they are rejected
in a country in which they live, and that there is no
longer any basis for unity between them and other groups of
people, then unity has already ceased to exist. You cannot
kill thousands of people, and keep killing more, in the
name of unity. There is no unity between the dead and those
who killed them; and, worse still, there is no unity in
slavery and domination.
On this occasion, the Sudanese authorities should find a
way out of the bloody dispute in Dar Fur region, Eastern
Sudan and the simmering resentments in far Northern Sudan.
Let us not wait until injustice, suffering and human rights
abuses reach their zenith to the degree that the population
of these regions start to call for the ‘right to
self-determination’, because extremism begets extremism at
the other end. The situation in Dar Fur dictates a second
thought. States are made to serve people; governments are
established to protect the citizens of a state against
external enemies and internal wrongdoers. It is on these
grounds that people surrender their right and power to
self-defence to the government of the sate in which they
live. But when the whole machinery of the State, and the
powers of the Government, are turned against a whole group
of the society on the grounds of racial, tribal or
religious prejudices, then the victims have the right to
take back the powers they have surrendered, and to defend
themselves. With the exception of the religion factor, the
crisis in Dar Fur is similar in effect and intensity to the
one once existed in the South, the Nuba Mountains and
Southern Blue Nile before the conclusion of peace deal. But
why peace between the Sudan regimes and the SPLM/A was an
elusive matter for so long a time? The post-Nimeieri
regimes were either influenced by the sectarian and
dogmatic parties - and, therefore, not negotiating in good
faith - or dithering was the means utilised to evade peace
overtures. When the generals of the Transitional Military
Council (TMC), who took over power from Nimeiri in a
popular uprising in April 1985, invited Dr Garang to
Khartoum, he replied to their request that ‘they were not
bishops to go to Khartoum to give a blessing to what the
archbishops had done there!’ ‘We should have been
consulted,’ he added. He called the TMC May II - that is,
the May regime without Nimeiri, but with his lately
promoted defence minister at the helm - that is, Lt-Gen
‘Abd al-Rahman Swar al-Dahab: this fact, then
controversially, was later proved by the political
development in the Sudan to be correct and that the SPLM/A
was right. In actuality, governments are institutions not
individuals. Truly speaking, Nimeiri was overthrown, but
his repressive institutions remained intact. These were
what the National Alliance for National Salvation called
the vestiges of May regime; they include the notorious
package of September laws, the sacked civil servants and
cashiered army officers, the abrogation of Addis Ababa
Accord and the wide spread of corruption which crippled the
Sudanese economy. Had Garang accepted this tantalising
offer from the TMC, he would have been promoted to
major-general or lieutenant-general only to retire in a
year’s time and together with him retire the aspirations
and hopes of the socially marginalised people for whom he
was fighting. Pensively, Garang pondered the Sudanese
ailments for which the deprived Sudanese population are
suffering, including injustice, economic marginalisation,
illiteracy, rampant diseases and so forth. He came up with
a socially engineered solution - that is, the New Sudan,
which was widely publicised in his public speeches, media
interviews and published theses (John Garang Speaks,
London, 1987; The Call for Democracy in Sudan, London,
1992; and The Vision of New Sudan: Questions of Unity and
Identity, Cairo, 1998). He called for the Sudan in which
democracy prevails, free from sectarianism, secessionism,
and religious, social and/or racial discriminations and
prejudices. Garang caused a political furore in the
conceptual thinking of Southern Sudanese politicians which
had been centred, for a very long time, on the separation
of Southern Sudan; this call has been oscillating from a
demand for federalism in the early days of Sudan’s
independence from the Condominium Rule in 1956 to a total
secession from the central Government that was, and is so
much so, dominated by the Northerners ever since the
creation of the modern Sudan.
The Southerners have, therefore, come to believe that
liberation from this yoke of domination lies in
dismembering the country. Garang, on the other hand,
refused to surrender to this existing reality, and,
instead, embarked on a new venture which advocated the
destruction of the old Sudan and reconstructing, in its
place, a new one according to a new empirical formula in
which the Southerners and other marginalised people of
Sudan should not become the guests of the central
authority, but original partners in power- and
wealth-sharing. Rejecting the political process in its old
clothes, Garang called for egalitarianism as the norms of
the day, and advocated a country in which justice and the
rule of law were practised. Like John F Kennedy who once
said: ‘Let us not be Democrats nor Republicans, but let us
be Americans,’ John Garang also reiterated more than once
that ‘let us not be Northerners or Southerners, but let us
be, first and foremost, Sudanese.’
Garang the great theorist knew instinctively how simple
ideas, when repeated over and over again, could work best
like fire on dry grass on a mass audience; he also knew how
to appeal to the emotions of his listeners, and how to
reassure them that they were not to blame for Sudan’s ills,
but it was all the fault of clique-dominated Government in
Khartoum; thus came the idea of the SPLM/A as a movement in
lieu of a political party at the inception of armed
struggle. The call for a New Sudan is a serious response by
the SPLM/A against ‘the attempt by various Khartoum-based
regimes to build a monolithic Arab-Islamic state to the
exclusion of other parameters of the Sudanese diversity;
this constitutes the Fundamental Problem of Sudan and
defines the Sudanese conflict. The Sudanese state has
excluded the vast majority of the Sudanese people from
governance, and, therefore, their marginalisation in the
political, economic and social fields. This provoked
resistance by the excluded. There have been wars and there
continues to be wars in the Sudan simply because the
majority of the Sudanese are not stakeholders in
governance. The Arab-Islamic state in the Sudan ended up
being imposed by force, rather than by consent of the
governed through a consensual social contract; and force
has been responded with force.’ The solution to this
Fundamental Problem of Sudan is to evolve an ‘all inclusive
Sudanese state’, which is called the New Sudan, because the
previously tested minoritarian-based rule is the antithesis
of majority aspirations. As Sudanese citizens, the
population should enjoy civic rights in a country which
there should be a progress towards human rights and social
welfare, the eradication of poverty and putting an end to
the cycles of hunger, the achievement of primary education
to all and the promotion of gender equality, and an
endeavour to attain development based on stronger emphasis
on basic human needs - such as, reasonable health, access
to clean water and the equality of opportunities.
The vision of New Sudan Garang was championing was to be
achieved through a two-tier process: a military struggle
and a political dialogue that could lead to a peaceful
settlement. This is why the SPLM/A continued to talk to the
Government of the day in Khartoum, regardless of its
nature. The Sudanese people, as well as political observers
and pundits, may wonder what is different now between the
Addis Ababa Accord of March 1972 and the Comprehensive
Peace Agreement of January 2005 as signed in the Kenyan
capital, Nairobi. The difference is that the ultimate
concession of self-rule and the opportunity for
self-determination have been grasped by the Southerners
from the Northern Government. Previously, the 1972
agreement focused on integrating the Southern rebels into
the national army, unlike the present agreement that will
see the evacuation of the garrison towns in the South,
which the Sudan Government had previously concentrated its
might, and the redeployment of SPLA troops to those areas.
It is hard to underestimate the importance of this element
of the agreement. After 22 years of struggling to control
and defeat the rebel SPLA, costing the lives of countless
young soldiers, civilians and students, the Sudan
Government is now walking away from the South. In this
current agreement, we must not allow any sense of
exploitation, any spirit of greed nor any grasping desire
to over-ride the fundamental principle of righteousness.
Vigorous attempts will be made by our empowered
partner-in-power to bully the new comers to make them
depart from the strict principles of right, and to satisfy
some base, sordid and squalid ideas of avarice, but let us
resist them all.
On Saturday, July 30, 2005, alas, Garang died after the
Ugandan presidential MI-72 helicopter he was riding
crashed. He died with five of his personal bodyguard -
namely, Lt-Col Amak Malwal, Lt-Col ‘Ali Mian Majuk, First
Lieut Deng Majok Kwang, Lieut Juma Mian Deng and First
Lieut David Oboko Obur, and seven Uganan crew members. He
had been returning from a meeting in Rwakitura with his
long-time ally, President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda. Great
leaders and prophets never reach the promised land; take,
for instance, Prophet Moses who died in the wilderness
before taking the Israelites to the promised land only to
bequeath the onus of the mission to his lieutenant, Joshua;
take also Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, President Samora
Machel of Mozambique and Yousif Kuwa Makki, to name but a
few. The post-Garang SPLM/A leaders should strenuously
strive to ensure the Sudanese people that Garang did not
die in vain, and that his legacy, vision, teachings and
aspirations are attained as his widow asserted immediately
after receiving the bitter news that her husband was dead.
The Sudanese masses have been deceived far too long that
they lost confidence in the Northern-based political
process, party system and factional squabbles. Based on a
false hope that the entire people could be fooled all the
time, the policies of the National Islamic Front regime
became a bitter source of controversy, and the catastrophic
situation in the Sudan had made people flock to the SPLM/A
vision, as laid down in the programme of New Sudan, which
has attracted, and continues to attract, more and more
people. It is easy to get depressed about the quality of
modern political leaders in the Sudan, about how readily we
are taken in by plausible promises delivered in a plausible
manner, but Garang was not given a chance to live up to his
pledges to the Sudanese people. His life was cut short by
death that we are praying today for his soul and that may
Almighty God give him peace in his eternal life and give
the disconsolate Sudanese people courage and wisdom to
follow in his footsteps.
*Dr Omer M Shurkian is a Sudanese from the Nuba Mountains
in central Sudan. He is the chairman of the London based
Nuba Mountains Solidarity Abroad (NMSA) As a human rights
activist, he was involved in a campaign against the Sudan
Government’s human rights violations meted out on the Nuba
people in the Sudan. He also published a number of articles
on the plight of the Nuba people.
Solution for today and vision for tomorrow Solution for today & vision for tomorrow
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