Abyei and Panthou (Heglig): Clarifying the deliberate confusion
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By Luka Biong Deng

April 26, 2012 — There have been a number of concerning statements in
the press, in reports from NGOs and third parties, including from
Member States of the United Nations and African Union, that Heglig
(known as Panthou by most South Sudanese) is an area lying within the
territory of the Republic of Sudan. The Republic of South Sudan (South
Sudan) was also surprised to hear that so many members of the
international community were unaware that South Sudan has claimed this
area as its own and consistently included it as one of the disputed
areas requiring peaceful settlement with Sudan. This confusion over
Panthou also prevails among the people of South Sudan and surprisingly
among their leaders. I was particularly shocked by a statement made by
a senior member of our government in a high level informal gathering
that Heglig has been compromised by the final award of the Abyei
Arbitration Tribunal. As I tried to clarify to him certain facts about
the ruling of Abyei Arbitration, this senior official kept insisting
on his conviction and the more he was arguing the more he was exposing
his ignorance about the issue. I came to know that if it could take me
such effort to convince a senior official about Heglig, there also
must be a knowledge gap for others further away from the talks between
the two States.

As the Co-agent of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement together
with the Vice President Dr. Riek Machar to the Abyei Boundaries
Arbitration Tribunal and a member of the SPLM team for post-referendum
negotiation and designated to oversee the work of the Technical Ad-hoc
Border committee (often called the "North-South Border Committee"), I
would like to clarify the confusion over Panthou (Heglig) and the
final award of the Abyei Arbitration Tribunal and the claim of the
South Sudan over Panthou. Immediately after the announcement of the
final award of the Abyei Arbitration Tribunal on 22nd July 2009, I
made statement on the following day in Elsahafa newspaper that the
award did not resolve the North-South border and based on the evidence
available I said that Heglig remains to be part of Unity State. When I
tried to retrieve this statement from the electronic archive of
Elshafa newspaper for this article, the access to this statement was
specifically denied and restricted by the Sudan national security but
I managed to get a hard copy of the newspaper. This tells more about
how the regime in Khartoum would like to conceal facts from the public
over Heglig.

Despite claims to the contrary, Heglig was absolutely not determined
to be part of Sudan (the North) by the July 2009 ruling of the Abyei
Arbitration Tribunal (referred by many in South Sudan as the Permanent
Court of Arbitration decision (PCA decision). The parties signed an
Abyei Arbitration Agreement in 2008 which clearly provided that the
mandate of the arbitration tribunal was simply to determine if the
Abyei Boundaries Commission (ABC) exceeded its mandate and if it did,
to then "define (i.e. delimit) on map the boundaries of the area of
the nine

Ngok Dinka chiefdoms transferred to Kordofan in 1905." (see
http://www.pca- cpa.org/upload/files/Abyei%20Arbitration
%20Agreement.pdf). This is what the tribunal did. As a result, the PCA
decision only defined the border limits of the Abyei Area. The
tribunal issued no opinion with respect to the political status or
location of Heglig or any other area in Sudan or now South Sudan.
Indeed, in the entire 286 pages of the PCA decision, the tribunal
mentions Heglig only once and that was simply to describe the Ngok
Dinka’s assertion that there were permanent settlements and
agricultural areas in Heglig back in 1905. (see http://www.pca-
cpa.org/upload/files/ Abyei%20Final%20Award.pdf).

In particular, the Tribunal rules that the ABC Experts were not in
excess of mandate regarding their decision over the southern boundary
of the Abyei Area. The final and binding decision of ABC states that
the Southern Boundary shall be the Kordofan-Bahr el-Ghazal-Upper Nile
boundary as it was defined on 1st January 1956. As a result, arguing
that the PCA decision determined the status of Heglig has as much
validity as arguing that it also determined the political status and
location of Juba or El Obeid — simply because neither of those cities
were found to be within the Abyei Area.

Regarding South Sudan’s claim on Heglig, this is not a new assertion
of South Sudan. For years now South Sudan has consistently and openly
claimed Heglig as part of its territory, including (i) in the context
of the Technical Ad-hoc border Committee established by the
Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), (ii) after the issuance of the
PCA decision, and (iii) within the context of the negotiations with
the Government of Sudan as facilitated by the African Union High Level
Implementation Panel (AUHIP).

During the deliberations of the Technical Ad-hoc border Committee the
South Sudanese delegation consistently raised its claims to Heglig,
albeit the Government of Sudan refused to acknowledge those claims.
The disputing claims over the area were well known and the difference
of opinions on Heglig were evidenced, for example, in the October 24,
2010 joint letter of the Chairman and the Deputy Chairman of the
technical committee outlining the "Views of the Parties on the
Disputed Areas." This letter was written and presented to the Joint
Political Committee (of the National Congress Party and Sudan People’s
Liberation Movement). In the document, the NCP’s Chairman, Professor
Adallah Sadiq, listed four disputed areas and the Deputy Chair, Riek
DeGaol Juer, then presented (8) disputed areas which included what was
referred to as the ’South Kordofan/Unity state sector (Heglig).
Furthermore, immediately after the PCA decision was released Vice
President Riak stated that Heglig’s final status would need to be
determined by the Technical Ad-hoc Border Committee established by the
CPA. For instance, as reported by the Sudan Tribune on July 27, 2009,
the Vice President stated that Heglig was not part of the ruling in
the Hague, but "It will be resolved in the North-South border
demarcation process." (see http://www.sudantribune.com/There-a...).

Additionally, the Government of Southern Sudan prior to secession and
the Government of South Sudan post-secession, repeatedly asserted in
the context of the AUHIP-facilitated negotiations with the Government
of Sudan claiming Heglig as belonging to South Sudan and therefore
placing it on the list of "disputed areas" requiring further
settlement. For instance, on June 28, 2011 and in November 2011,
SPLM/GoSS and South Sudan respectively submitted a clear written
proposal stating "The six (6) disputed areas are: (i) Wanthou (Joda);
(ii) Maganis; (iii) Kaka; (iv) Northern Bahr el Ghazal; (v) Kaffia
Kanje and Hofrat el Nahas; and (vi) Panthou (Heglig)". South Sudan
tabled similar language during the February 2012 round of
negotiations, and reaffirmed this position in its oral and written
submissions made during the March 2012 negotiations. Indeed, the
failure of the parties to agree on the list of disputed areas
(including Heglig) and to agree on the mechanism for settlement —with
the South proposing international arbitration, is the primary reason
an agreement addressing the disputed border areas was never even
initialed in March 2012.

What is indisputable is that South Sudan claims Heglig as theirs and
Sudan claims it as theirs. The fact that Sudan has refused to "agree"
that it is disputed ---both in the context of the Technical Ad-hoc
Border Committee and in the Addis negotiations— does not make it any
less a disputed area. Those who would refuse to support the submission
of Heglig to a peaceful dispute resolution mechanisms because it is
not an "agreed disputed area" are playing a dangerous game by leaving
a critical matter unresolved between the parties which can result in
continued hostilities. The purpose of the negotiations is to address
such matters, not leave them to foment distrust and violence in the
future.

In closing, as shown from the above, the PCA decision did not decide
the final status of the Heglig area and South Sudan’s claim over the
area and its status therefore as a disputed area as between the two
States is not a new claim, but rather one that has been consistently
made for several years and witnessed by the AUHIP and other observers
to the Addis negotiations.

Luka Biong Deng is a senior member of South Sudan’s ruling SPLM.

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