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From: IRIN <[email protected]>
To: "Elisabeth Janaina" <[email protected]>
Date: Monday, April 30, 2012 2:11:34 PM GMT-0000
Subject: SUDAN-SOUTH SUDAN: All we are tweeting is give peace a chance

SUDAN-SOUTH SUDAN: All we are tweeting is give peace a chance

KHARTOUM, 30 April 2012 (IRIN) - As Sudan and South Sudan sink deeper into 
full-scale conflict and hostile rhetoric nine months after the country split in 
two, people from both sides of the border are tweeting a very different 
message, one of peace, solidarity and frustration with their leaders.
 
These voices are galvanized around the microblogging site's keyword-marking 
hashtag "#NewSudans" - a pluralized echo of the unitary, democratic "New Sudan" 
espoused by John Garang, the late leader of the Sudan People's Liberation 
Movement (SPLM), which fought Khartoum during a 1983-2005 civil war and is now 
in power in the newly formed Republic of South Sudan.
 
Secession in July 2011 may have irrevocably put an end to Garang's vision of a 
single Sudan free of oppression and marginalization, but, judging by the 
thousand or so tweets incorporating the new hashtag since its 28 April 
inception, the underlying ethos lives on.
 
Some examples:
 
"NEVER AGAIN to war", wrote @MimzicalMimz. 

"Everyone must put his gun down. Let's talk it out. Money you spend in war can 
be better spent in development , health & education," said @Neo0rabie. 

"The ruling elite is drumming on patriotism 2 cover for their failure for da 
passed 6 yrs n those to come, We r small prawns being played bout in da waves" 
lamented @afabdelaziz.
 
"No entrapment by false and/or artificial identities. It doesn't matter if 
you're Arab or African as long as you're SUDANESE," said @simsit. 

"I'm from Shendi, El Fasher [in Darfur]. I'm a Northerner, a Southerner, a 
Nuba, a Zaghawi, a Fur and a Hadandawi", wrote political blogger Moez Ali 
(@his_moezness). 

"I'm not Arab, I'm not African, I'm not Afro-Arab, and I don't belong to any 
tribe, I'm just Sudanese. I'm not from Khartoum, nor from Omdurman, I'm from 
Sudan," tweeted @moaltaweel. 

For @kashiff111, #newSUDANS is "powerful with its individualism, colorful with 
its diversity, tolerant with its unity, peaceful with its faith." 

@AhmadMohamed10 looks forward to "Sudan and South Sudan - living side by side 
in peace with close economic, cultural & social cooperation/exchange" through 
an "EU style federation with all the freedoms & economic cooperation that 
entails." 

@MimzicalMimz appealed for: "No more new vague laws targeting women, activists, 
journalists, lawyers or students" and "No more racist newspapers, yes; no more 
Al Intibaha!" - a reference to the government mouthpiece and the most widely 
read newspaper in Sudan. 

Counterpoint 

The new hashtag was jointly launched by Aguil Lual, a public health manager of 
South Sudanese origin, and Khaled Albaih, a cartoonist and fellow tweeter from 
Sudan, amid the battle for the borderland oil fields of Heglig earlier in 
April, and the accompanying jingoism in official media.
 
One of the most visible manifestations of these increasing tensions was the 23 
April attack on a Presbyterian church in Khartoum. 

"I thought we can still engage in dialogue around unity, respect for diversity, 
need for transformation and being united in our 'Sudan-ness,' since we don't 
expect our leaders to achieve peace," Lual told IRIN. 

"It's important to keep such dialogues going since here are many Sudanese on 
all sides who don't understand or don't have the knowledge or choose to ignore 
that many groups were marginalized or had rights limited, not just 
Southerners," she added.
 
Usamah, another prolific microblogger in Khartoum, told IRIN, "I think the war 
in Heglig and its ramifications domestically on each side proved that, to the 
dismay of many, Sudan's and South Sudan's future are so much tied to each 
other. And that has forced peoples of the two countries to realize that it's 
not merely an NCP-SLPM issue.
 
"In the light of this, Lual's initiative is pretty much spot on, and 
interaction between Sudanese and South Sudanese will definitely increase, which 
is great," he said, adding however that the impact of this initiative was 
likely to be undermined by Twitter being "for the foreseeable future, very 
elitist." 

sa/am 
[END]

This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=95385



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