Enough Project calls for Obama to reprioritize Sudan’s CPA implementation
Friday 20 February 2009.


 February  19,  2009  (WASHINGTON) – A US think-tank, the Enough Project of
 the  Center  for American Progress, released today recommendations for the
 new Obama administration for how to make a policy on Sudan, where conflict
 in  Darfur  is  entering  its sixth year and the North-South Comprehensive
 Peace Agreement (CPA) has not been fully implemented.


 "The  CPA  is  not  a  lost  cause,"  says  report author and Enough field
 researcher Adam O’Brien. "However, it badly needs focused support from the
 international community in terms of both incentives and pressure to send a
 clear  and consistent message that full implementation of the agreement is
 the essential foundation for peace in Sudan."


 In  its  recommendations, Enough Project renews calls since several months
 that  Obama  should  name  a special envoy and grant him two deputies: one
 focused  full-time  on  promoting  CPA  implementation  and  the  other on
 achieving a peace deal for Darfur consistent with the CPA.


 Foremost  among  the recommendations for Obama’s new leadership team is to
 “reprioritize  CPA  implementation  as part of a comprehensive approach to
 ending Sudan’s conflicts.”


 “Diplomatic  initiatives  have  tended  to compartmentalize Sudan’s myriad
 conflicts,  essentially  falling victim to Khartoum’s familiar ‘divide and
 rule’   strategy,”   says   the  report.  “By  diffusing  and  distracting
 international  focus, the ruling regime has been able to tighten its reign
 on power without making systemic changes to the structure of the state.”


 Consequently,  international actors should focus on the CPA, which “offers
 a   framework  for  the  kind  of  democratic,  structural  transformation
 necessary  to  alter  the root cause of Sudan’s many recurring conflicts,”
 says  the  report.  Various  parts  of  the  CPA are alleged to be not yet
 implemented:  a  press  law  consistent  with the constitution, a national
 security  law  consistent  with  the  constitution,  preparations  for the
 treaty-mandated    2009   elections,   north-south   border   demarcation,
 demobilization  of  armed  forces  and militias, withdrawal of forces from
 border  areas,  full  oil  revenue  sharing,  formation of effective Joint
 Integrated  Units  and  other  special protocols for once highly contested
 areas.


 With this report, Enough joins some other American policy advisory bodies,
 such  as  the US Commission on International Religious Freedom, in calling
 for  more  support  to  the  Sudan  People’s  Liberation  Army (SPLA), the
 guerrilla force that is one of the two main signatories to the CPA.


 “The SPLA has struggled to transition from a guerilla movement to a formal
 army,  a  process  complicated  by attempts to integrate southern militias
 that  opposed the SPLA during the war. To ensure that the south is stabile
 and  the  Government  of  Southern Sudan can deliver a peace dividend, the
 SPLA  must  continue  to  modernize  through  a  well-supported process of
 security  sector  transformation  that  improves  discipline,  command and
 control,   capacity,   and   competency.   Toward   this  end,  the  Obama
 administration  should  explore  the  sale of an air defense system to the
 GoSS,” recommends Enough.


 Enough   also   advises   providing   more   help  to  build  the  South’s
 infrastructure,  and  warns  against  focusing  solely on either short- or
 long-term  goals:  “The  overriding  policy  objective  of too many in the
 international  community  seems  to be to limp toward 2011 by preventing a
 premature collapse of the CPA and accomplishing the bare minimum necessary
 to stamp the referendum as free and fair,” the report states, referring to
 South  Sudan’s right to hold a referendum on secession in 2011. The report
 goes  on  to argue that just waiting for the referendum will not be enough
 to  prevent “a new civil war in Sudan and the violent dissolution of Sudan
 as a state.”


 Finally,  the  report  looks  beyond the 2011 terminus date of the interim
 period  outlined  by  the  CPA, recommending that the United States assist
 SPLM  and NCP, the two signatories to the peace agreement, to negotiate an
 oil  revenue-sharing  deal  beyond  that  time.  The  proposed measure, if
 accomplished, would lessen the incentive for the two largest political and
 military forces in the country to renew their decades-long struggle.


 Some  members  of the new administration have been more vocal about Darfur
 than  they  have about CPA implementation. Since taking office, Ambassador
 Susan  Rice,  the  US  representative  to the UN, referred to the "ongoing
 genocide in Darfur." Yet during a Senate roundtable event last week, Jerry
 Fowler,  the director of Save Darfur Coalition, cautioned against a "false
 dichotomy" in which the two policy areas are seen as competing.


 South  Sudan’s president, Salva Kiir Mayardit, visited the White House and
 State  Department  in early January, appealing to US leaders not to forget
 about the CPA


 (ST)


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