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------Original message------
From: John Ashworth <[email protected]>
To: "Group" <[email protected]>
Date: Sunday, April 29, 2012 9:42:19 PM GMT+0300
Subject: [sudan-john-ashworth] In Sudan and South Sudan, questions of 
nationality

A South Sudanese church leader based in Sudan told me a couple of days
ago by e-mail that even though he travelled to Juba and obtained his
new South Sudanese passport and identity papers in good time, after
returning to Khartoum he is now stuck there and cannot leave, as the
Sudanese government now has to issue him with a stay visa, exit visa
and re-entry visa. Bukra, in sha'allah...

John

BEGIN

In Sudan and South Sudan, questions of nationality

Sun Apr 29, 2012 3:47pm GMT

* Hundreds of thousands stranded after Sudan, South Sudan split
* Southerners stuck without travel papers, routes blocked
* Northern traders want to stay in South, but worried

By Ulf Laessing and Yara Bayoumy

KHARTOUM/JUBA, April 29 (Reuters) - Sultan Kwaje's problems started
when his country disappeared from under him.

He was born in the southern part of Sudan but has lived in the north
for more than three decades. When South Sudan broke away as an
independent country from Sudan in July, Kwaje was left on the northern
side of the border, a foreigner.

The Sudanese government, he said, fired him from his job in the civil service.

Tens of thousands of South Sudanese in the north lost their jobs after
the split. About 500,000 are now technically illegal because they lack
official residency papers.

"I just want to leave," said Kwaje who lives in Wad al-Bashir camp,
one of several slums on the outskirts of Sudan's capital Khartoum. "I
am still owed all my severance rights but I just want to leave now.
Life is bad. We don't have jobs, no food, don't get medical
treatment."

As border fighting between Sudan and South Sudan has threatened to
turn into all-out war over the past three weeks, much of the attention
has focused on the countries' unresolved disputes over oil revenues.

But the crisis has also shone a light on the plight of the of hundreds
of thousands of people who found themselves on the wrong side of the
border at independence and are now treated as foreigners.

In Juba, the capital of South Sudan, thousands of Sudanese citizens
also face a new government that has declared them expatriates, though
it has not yet imposed any new rules for residency papers.

Plans for two deals that would grant each other's citizens residency
and free movement stalled when Khartoum called off a summit in protest
at border fighting.

Sudan's government initially gave southerners until April 8 to get the
right papers or leave. But South Sudan has struggled to set up a
functioning embassy in Khartoum to issue passports or identity cards.

"I am still waiting for my travel permit from the embassy," said
Moussa Majok, another South Sudanese living in the camp.

"I went there to register but I still haven't got the papers," he
said, drawing nods from others. "They don't care about us," he said,
referring to the southern government.

RELIGIOUS TENSIONS

About 400,000 South Sudanese, who initially came to the north fleeing
poverty and conflict, have returned home since October 2010. Many more
are packing up to make the long journey south in Wad al-Bashir camp,
where thousands live in makeshift homes made of wood, mud bricks or
corrugated iron.

Bags, bed frames, chairs and other furniture were piled high next to a
green mosque on a large square last week, waiting to be loaded onto
trucks.

Worries over religious tensions are also fuelling the exodus.

Most South Sudanese are Christian or follow traditional beliefs, while
Sudan is mostly Muslim. Last weekend, hundreds of Muslims stormed a
Khartoum church complex used by South Sudanese, ransacking buildings
and burning bibles.

Even when they get the required travel papers, southerners are stuck
because fighting has blocked most roads near the border, according to
the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), which helps people
return home.

The barge route down the Nile is also blocked. Sudan halted river
traffic in March, accusing Juba of using boats to transport weapons to
rebels in the north.

Both governments also suspended direct flights between the two
countries. Tickets via Kenya or Ethiopia cost up to four times what
Sudanese carriers charged last year.

SUDANESE STAYING IN JUBA

In a bustling market in Juba last week, Sudanese traders swapped
stories in front of stalls selling mobile phones and sun-baked
vegetables.

So far, northerners living in the south say they have not faced the
same level of official or social ostracism as southerners in Khartoum.
Many northerners in Juba want to stay put.

But beneath the buzz in the market, there was an undercurrent of apprehension.

"We are scared that one of these days they'll ask us for
identification papers," said 23-year-old Zulfid, sitting behind a
glass window selling Chinese-made mobile phones.

Zulfid, went to school in Khartoum but struggled to set up a business
in the Sudanese capital. "The government confiscates your goods.
There's bribery."

He had an easier time in the South.

"In Juba, taxes are less, the dollar is cheaper. Life and business is
much better than in the North," he said,

MUTUAL RESPECT

Saeed Zakariya, a bubbly 25-year-old who sells mobile phone
accessories in Juba, got a hint of the legal challenges that may lie
ahead if Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir and South Sudanese
President Salva Kiir fail to find a solution to the citizenship issue.

"I tried to book a ticket to fly to Malakal (another city) in South
Sudan), but my papers were not accepted," Zakariya said. He gave up
and stayed in the southern capital.

All the traders that Reuters spoke to said they had faced no
mistreatment or ill-will from South Sudanese.

"We are not afraid of being made to go back to the north. Their
difference is political, not on the ground. Not a single person has
asked me where I'm from," said Mohamed Suleiman, who came to Juba in
2009 when he could not find a job in his Sudanese hometown in Sennar
state.

Yaber, a 54-year-old man living in Juba since 1979, agreed.

"We are very happy. We're the same people, the same family," he said.
His son, Diyaaeldine was born in the south and the family has no
intention of leaving.

Smoking a cigarette in a stall filled with rows of rubber slippers,
Yaber, who refused to give his full name, said he was not worried
about his future in Juba.

"We share the same life, there is respect," Yaber said.  (Writing by
Ulf Laessing and Yara Bayoumy; Editing by Simon Robinson and Andrew
Heavens)

http://af.reuters.com/article/sudanNews/idAFL6E8FS1HA20120429?sp=true

END
______________________
John Ashworth

Sudan, South Sudan Advisor

[email protected]

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