Refleksi : Referendum di Sudan Selatan untuk memisahkan diri menjadi negara 
merdeka, salah satu alasan utamanya  memisaahkan diriialah rakyat di Sudan 
selatan berpendapat  bahwa mereka diperlakukan tidak adil oleh Sudan utara yang 
diperintahi oleh orang-orang Arab. 

Bagaimana keadilan di NKRI? Apakah hanya rakyat Sudan Selatan saja boleh 
memisahkan diri karena ketidak adilan? Hehehehe

http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2010/1019/fr2.htm

14 - 20 October 2010
Issue No. 1019
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875

Spoils of Sudan
The key to unity is fairness and transparency, posits Gamal Nkrumah 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

President Hosni Mubarak in an unprecedented endorsement for Sudanese national 
unity told delegates in the Libyan Mediterranean seaside city of Sirte, the 
venue of the second Arab-African summit, that unity is the preferred option for 
Sudan. "Disintegration of the country will compromise the national interests of 
the Sudanese people, northerners and southerners, and all Africans and Arabs," 
Mubarak was quoted as saying.

Mubarak was supported by most of the Arab and African leaders assembled in 
Sirte. The Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi was especially vocal in his 
condemnation of the secession of southern Sudan, warning that it will spell 
disaster not only in Sudan, but also in the entire African continent. 

Gaddafi warned of the "contagion" of "secession fever". He noted that other 
African countries are vulnerable to this particular problem. That if Sudan 
broke up, it will lead to political chaos and instability.

Propagandists of both sides are gearing up to polish their credentials in the 
international arena. The Sudanese protagonists are heading for a showdown. 

"Sudan is in dire need of radical political reform," warned Sadig Al-Mahdi, 
former democratically elected Sudanese prime minister ousted in a coup d'etàt 
instigated by the now defunct National Islamic Front (NIF) and Sudanese 
President Omar Hassan Al-Bashir. Al-Mahdi, head of the opposition Umma Party, 
told Al-Ahram Weekly that if sweeping democratic changes are not instituted 
then Sudan is most likely going to be dismembered and return to the bloody 
civil war that ripped the country apart.

"Everything now depends on how the government headed by Al-Bashir conducts 
itself. We are on the threshold of a new Sudan, we have before us a fresh start 
and abundant natural resources including oil. Let us not miss this golden 
opportunity," Al-Mahdi stressed. 

Sudan's Second Vice-President Ali Osman Mohamed Taha flew to the southern 
Sudanese administrative capital of Juba to meet with Sudanese First 
Vice-President Salva Kiir who is also the president of the autonomous region of 
south Sudan. Kiir, who announced last week his inclination to vote for 
independence of southern Sudan in the forthcoming January 2011 referendum to 
determine whether southern Sudan will secede or remain as an integral part of 
the Sudanese political entity, is in a belligerent mood. 

Kiir wants to see the government in Khartoum headed by the National Congress 
Party (NCP) of Al-Bashir pay particular attention to the demands of southerners 
for an equitable distribution of the wealth of the country and a say in the 
decision-making process. Above all, Kiir would like to see a transformation in 
the political system that has run Sudan since independence from Britain in 
1956. The people of Sudan are poised for a "New Sudan", one in which all 
Sudanese are accorded the same political rights and benefit from the newfound 
oil-wealth of the country, mostly located in the south of the country. 
Otherwise, the threat of a return to civil war lingers. 

"Objectively things are not really better even though the oil revenues are 
coming in," concluded Al-Mahdi. A main grievance of southerners is the lack of 
transparency in how the oil contracts are negotiated and oil revenues are 
disposed of. Al-Bashir's critics contend he cannot have his cake and eat it. 
Alaska and Alberta are model success stories of regional governments which 
managed their windfall gains from oil to the enormous benefit of their people 
through transparency without seceding from Washington or Ottawa. South Sudan 
deserves no less.

President Al-Bashir is in an equally combatant disposition. "We will not accept 
any alternative to unity. Yes, we are prepared to make some compromises here 
and there, but the principle of a united, sovereign Sudan is utterly 
unalterable," the Sudanese president was unequivocal.

"We reject foreign interference in our domestic affairs and we strongly object 
to foreign powers inciting the southern Sudanese people to opt for secession. 
Such machinations are unacceptable."

The NCP of Al-Bashir and the southern-based Sudan People's Liberation Movement 
are currently engaged in peace and reconciliation talks in the Ethiopian 
capital Addis Ababa. United States diplomats and officials are also 
participating in the Addis Ababa negotiations. Washington wants Khartoum to 
officially acknowledge that the oil-rich enclave of Abyei is part and parcel of 
southern Sudan. The disputed territory is inhabited by a majority of ethnic 
Dinka Ngok, most of whom are pro-SPLM, with a minority of nomadic Arabised 
Messeiriya tribesmen who are overwhelmingly loyal to the NCP. 

A number of high-profile international personalities have visited Sudan 
recently. A United Nations Security Council delegation even included the chief 
diplomatic representative of the US at the UN Susan Rice and Scott Gration, the 
US chief envoy to Sudan. Also on a fact-finding mission to Sudan is the former 
South African president Thabo Mbeki representing the African Union. US 
President Barack Obama said that the Sudanese protagonists should negotiate 
terms of unity. The Obama administration's approach might sound to many 
Sudanese like a recipe for dangerous delay.

An exceptionally large number of international organisations are participating 
in the humanitarian relief effort in Sudan, including Darfur and southern 
Sudan. Organisations such as the World Food Programme, the UN Children's Fund 
and the UN Population Fund are particularly active in the humanitarian relief 
effort. The Sudanese government, however, has been ambiguous about the 
political role played by these organisations, suspecting them of encouraging 
southern Sudanese groups to secede. The international humanitarian 
organisations have denied the charge.

Sheikh Hassan Al-Turabi, Sudan's chief Islamist ideologue and leader of the 
opposition Popular Congress Party, told the Weekly that in order to rescue the 
democratic reform heralded by the Al-Bashir regime, it needs to demonstrate 
that it can shore up Sudan's fragile nascent democracy. "It is a daunting 
task", Turabi stressed. "Failure to institute democratic reform in Sudan would 
deepen fears that the country is at risk of breaking up into rival, warring 
states." (see p.8) 


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

Post message: [email protected]
Subscribe   :  [email protected]
Unsubscribe :  [email protected]
List owner  :  [email protected]
Homepage    :  http://proletar.8m.com/Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Kirim email ke