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------Original message------
From: Eric Reeves <[email protected]>
To: "Eric Reeves" <[email protected]>
Date: Wednesday, May 2, 2012 8:50:04 PM GMT-0400
Subject: Sudan Historian Douglas H. Johnson on the location of Heglig/Panthou

*Sudan Historian Douglas H. Johnson on the location of Heglig/Panthou*



Eric Reeves

May 2, 2012



The location of Heglig/Panthou has been badly and inaccurately reported for
weeks, in no small measure because of diplomatic blundering by the U.S.,
the European Union, the African Union, and the
UN<http://www.sudanreeves.org/2012/04/14/where-is-heglig/>.  A
corrective is desperately needed, and we will have no more authoritative
account than the substantial overview provided here by distinguished Sudan
historian Douglas H. Johnson.  Among his many other qualifications, Johnson
was a member of the Abyei Boundaries Commission (ABC) established by the
Abyei Protocol of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (2005).



Let us be clear at this urgent moment: the issue of Heglig/Panthou is of
fundamental importance in resolving present military confrontations along
the border regions between Unity State (South Sudan) and South Kordofan
(northern Sudan), and must be addressed honestly and on the basis of all
available information. In light of the present 48-hour countdown to a
North/South cease-fire---a deadline set by the UN Security Council this
morning<http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/sns-rt-us-sudan-southsudan-aubre84114s-20120502,0,6017777.story>
(May
2, 2012)---the issue cannot be finessed or avoided.



It is imperative that UN Security Council members, the AU, the EU, and the
U.S. back away from previous peremptory and unjustified assignments of
Heglig/Panthou to northern Sudan.  Not to do so will, no doubt, please
Khartoum; but it make all-out war distinctly more likely, given the
intensity of recent fighting in the Heglig/Panthou region, and the military
testing that Khartoum's Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) will undoubtedly begin on
the expiration of this 48-hour period.  This is the most likely precipitant
of renewed violence, should a cease-fire take hold.



Juba is all too aware of the geographic presumption that has guided
previous international pronouncements on Heglig/Panthou; if this
presumption persists, the Southern leadership will lose confidence in key
members of the international community essential to any peaceful mediation.



Johnson's account full account, with critical historical maps, is available
upon request as a PDF attachment; the text alone can be found below.



*From his conclusion:*



"Given the history of the Panaru area outlined above, any government or
international body that declared that Heglig is 'internationally
recognized' as part of Sudan has been premature at best and prejudicial to
a final resolution at worst.



"The question that has to be resolved, in the terms of the CPA, is whether
Panthou/Heglig is east or west of the boundary line established in 1931. If
east, it is part of Unity State; if west, it is part of Southern Kordofan.
If it is part of Unity, it is part of South Sudan; if it is part of
Southern Kordofan it is part of Sudan.



"We know from the above summary that up through 2003 Heglig was generally
assumed to be part of what is now Unity State. The boundary changes
proposed in the national parliament in 1980 explicitly acknowledged this,
as did the 1983 proposed route for the oil pipeline."



*[full text]*



*NOTE ON PANTHOU/HEGLIG*

* *

 By Douglas H. Johnson, 2 May 2012



THE COLONIAL BACKGROUND



The Rueng Dinka territory of Panaru is at the centre of the debate over the
location of Panthou/ Heglig. The Rueng, who are now contained within Unity
State in the Republic of South Sudan, neighbour the Ngok Dinka and
originally were administered along with them as part of Kordofan Province.
Their current location in Unity State, and the disputed location of
Panthou/Heglig is the outcome of a series of administrative transfers in
the early twentieth century.



At the beginning of the Anglo-Egyptian Condominium the Rueng Dinka were
found with their cattle as far north as Lake Keilak, in what is now South
Kordofan.*1*  In 1907 it was reported that many of them had left ‘Fanaru
[Panaru] in South Kordofan’ for Khor Atar in Upper Nile because of raiding
by the Misseriya-Humr.*2*  By 1913 the Awet section of the Rueng were
complaining about further incursions by the Misseriya-Humr on their lands
around Lake Jau (or Abiad), where the Awet had settled ‘long before the
Arabs came’.*3*



*Map 1: Rueng Dinka sections (Sudan Survey Department, 1:2,000,000 Southern
Sudan Map)*

* *

When the Nuba Mountains became a separate province in 1913 the Rueng
sections were divided between the Nuba Mountains and Kordofan. One branch
of Rueng was transferred to the neighbouring southern province of Bahr
el-Ghazal in the early 1920s, and in1927, following the decision to
re-absorb the Nuba Mountains Province into Kordofan, most of the rest of
the Rueng were transferred there, too, on the grounds that they were more
easily accessible to the administrators of Bahr el-Ghazal and that they
were already in close contact with the Nuer of that province. The boundary
rectification between the provinces was made at a local level meeting of
the neighbouring District Commissioners.*4*



The Rueng were now split between Bahr el-Ghazal and Kordofan, where some
Dinka remained as part of the Southern Kordofan District with its
headquarters at Kadugli.*5*   By 1930, however, all Rueng were transferred
to the administration of Upper Nile Province, and in 1931 the provincial
boundaries were gazetted as follows.*6*  As a result of the transfer of the
Rueng Ajubba the Rueng Await [Awet] and the Rueng Alorr sections of Dinka
from Kordofan to Upper Nile Province, the boundary between these Provinces
has been altered as follows:-



Commencing from a point on the existing Province Boundary midway between
Debba Mongok and Debba Karam Nyet (Lat. 9º 21' Long 28º 38') the boundary
runs in an easterly direction until it meets Khor Amadgora. Thence
northwards to the Bahr el Arab leaving the village of Rumla Ngork to the
Upper Nile. Thence in a N. Easterly direction to the Raqaba ez Zarqa at a
point 1/2 mile west of Tibusia, thence along the Raqaba ez Zarqa to
'Aradeib, thence eastward along Lat. 9º 45' to the old Kordofan - Upper
Nile boundary, thence north along that boundary and continuing along the
old Kordofan N.M.P. boundary to Lat. 10º 5' marked on the map 'Clump of
Heglig' thence N. Easterly to a point 3 miles due west of the centre of
Lake Abyad [Lake Jau], thence due east to the eastern shore of the Lake,
thence S.E. through the Fed Abu Finyer to the Rest House at the point where
the Tonga-Talodi road crosses the Haqaba south of Abu Qussa, thence up that
Raqaba to where it joins the existing Province Boundary.



This was the official provincial boundary line in effect when Sudan became
independent on 1 January 1956. The Sudan Survey 1:250,000 maps 65-H and
65-L on which this boundary was marked (see Map 2), and on which all
subsequent maps of the area are based, was last updated for topographical
detail in 1937. The area bisected by the line is mainly a blank space.
Aside from marking some water sources and the occasional clump of heglig
trees (*Balanites aegyptiaca*, *hijlij *in Arabic and *thou *in Dinka) no
villages or annual cattle camps, no place names of 'Panthou', 'Aliny' or
even 'Heglig' are recorded. The reason is that this area lay outside
administrators' usual trek routes. The maps record the main lines of
communication and main waterways. They document the limits of
administrative knowledge, not the full scale of indigenous settlement.



OIL, NAME CHANGES AND ETHNIC CLEANSING



The discovery of oil in the late 1970s created immediate tensions between
the central government in Khartoum and the Southern Regional Government in
Juba. Oil was declared a national resource, and official announcements from
Khartoum were vague about the location of the main oil fields, stating only
that they were located some 500 kms south of Khartoum. The first fields to
be developed were given names such as 'Unity' and 'Heglig' which disguised
their location, and the Chevron oil company basing its headquarters in
Muglad rather than Bentiu. In 1980 the national parliament attempted to
redraw the boundaries of Upper Nile Province with the passage of
legislation establishing new regional governments in northern Sudan, and
the map accompanying the legislation annexed the oil fields to Kordofan.
This map was withdrawn after protests from the Southern Regional government.



One of the first fields to be developed was at Panthou, meaning the place
or village of the *Balanites aegyptiaca *in Dinka. The name was changed to
Heglig in Arabic. Nimeiri proposed to create a new Unity Region by
amalgamating Western Upper Nile District, Abyei and parts of Southern
Kordofan, but in the end only Western Upper Nile was renamed Unity when the
Southern Region was abolished in 1983 and Upper Nile Region was
reconstituted by re-uniting Upper Nile and Jonglei Provinces.



There was also controversy on the siting of an oil refinery to process oil
from the field. The decision was made to site the refinery on the White
Nile at Kosti, linked to the oil fields by a pipeline. In 1983, shortly
before the Bor Mutiny and the outbreak of civil war, an official map of the
route of the pipeline was released, showing it starting at the oil fields
within Western Upper Nile District, but immediately routed out of Upper
Nile into Kordofan, paralleling the Nile until it reached Kosti.*7*



The civil war brought an end to oil exploitation inside Upper Nile until
the 1990s when the Sudanese Armed Forces and allied militias cleared large
areas of their civilian populations. The establishment of Sudan’s oil
industry in Unity State was accomplished through massive demographic
displacement of its indigenous inhabitants, especially along the old
provincial boundary lines. The territory of Panaru, in particular, was
cleansed of its occupants to make way for the development and expansion of
the oil industry.*8*



Up through 2003 it was generally understood that Panaru, or Heglig, was
part of the Unity State administration, and the National Congress
Party-appointed governor of Unity State, Dr. Joseph Monytuil described it
as such in his 2003 annual report. In mid-2004, as the CPA negotiations
were drawing to a conclusion, he was informed by Dr. Nafie Ali Nafie, then
Minister of Federal Government Chambers in the office of the Presidency,
that he was mistaken, and 'that Heglig does not belong to Unity State as it
appeared in your aforesaid map but it belongs to Western Kordofan State as
indicated in the accompanying map approved by the National Survey
Corporation, for information and correction of the map of Unity State
referred to'.*9*  The accompanying map identifying this correction is not
detailed enough to determine whether Heglig is located in relation to the
1931 provincial boundary line at 29° 32' (and some seconds), or the line
has been moved east in order to include Heglig in Western Kordofan.



*Map 3: Nafie Ali Nafie's 2004 Map*

* *

It should be noted that the two protocols of the CPA affecting the division
of oil revenues - the Wealth Sharing Protocol (7 January 2004), and the
Abyei Protocol (26 May 2004) - were signed before the date of Nafie Ali
Nafie's letter (14 June 2004). Placing Heglig in Western Kordofan would
therefore have been done in full knowledge that only the revenue from
fields within South Sudan would be shared.



HEGLIG AND THE ABYEI BOUNDARIES COMMISSION



It has been commonly asserted that the 2005 Abyei Boundaries Commission
(ABC) allocated Heglig to Abyei, and the 2009 ruling of the Permanent Court
of Arbitration (PCA) finally determined that it was part of Sudan. Neither
assertion is strictly correct.



The ABC was tasked to determine the territory of the nine Ngok Dinka
chiefdoms transferred from Bahr el-Ghazal to Kordofan in 1905. We were
enjoined repeatedly by the members of the government delegation not to take
into consideration any developments in the territory that post-dated 1905.
This meant in practice that the development of cotton cultivation in the
Nyama area, the construction of the railroad passing through Meiram, and
drilling of oil wells were irrelevant to our deliberations and were not to
be a factor in our decision.



The maps we had at our disposal and which we examined for topographical,
demographic and historical evidence therefore did not include details of
the recent establishment of the oil industry in and around the area. We did
ask the Sudan Survey Authority for copies of the most recent editions of
the 1:250,000 maps to compare them with the historic maps we had consulted,
but we never received the maps we requested.



Our understanding of the oral testimony we gathered from the Ngok and Rueng
groups we spoke to was that Ngok and Rueng territories were contiguous,
which is, in fact, how they are depicted on the Sudan Survey 1:2,000,000
tribal map of Southern Sudan (Map 1). We knew from the historical records
referred to above that the Rueng were transferred, bit by bit, from Nuba
Mountains, Bahr el- Ghazal and Kordofan to Upper Nile, and that the
province boundary drawn on the map in 1931 after the final transfer was
complete represented the dividing line between Rueng and Ngok territory. We
drew our boundary up to that line, which was also the provincial boundary
line in existence in 1956.



The ABC did not push the boundary line east in order to include Heglig in
Abyei. Heglig is mentioned only once in passing in our report (as part of
an SPLM submission which we did not accepted in full), and it does not
appear on any of the maps accompanying the report.



If Khartoum moved the boundary to include Panthou/Heglig inside Western
Kordofan (as is suggested by Nafie Ali Nafie's 2004 letter and Map 3), that
does not affect our decision in any way, since we were using the 1931
boundary as a fixed point on which we could anchor Abyei’s northern
boundary line, not the boundary between Western Kordofan and Unity as it
was in 2005. Panthou/ Heglig was part of the ABC award only if its location
is west of the 1931 boundary line. If its location is in fact east of that
line, then it could not have been included in the ABC award.



The PCA did not give the same weight to oral and historical evidence as we
did when reviewing the eastern border of the Abyei Area. Their decision to
adjust the boundary was based on their assessment that we had not given
sufficient reason in the ABC report for adopting the old Kordofan–Upper
Nile boundary as the eastern boundary of the Ngok territory.



The PCA made no ruling about Panthou/Heglig itself, or about any other
portion of the 1956 boundary line. To do so would have exceeded their
mandate, and had the court exceeded their mandate no doubt the Sudan
government would have objected.



The government of South Sudan asserted its claim over Panthou/Heglig
shortly after the PCA ruling, stating that the issue of Heglig was still to
be resolved in the North-South border demarcation process. They have
repeated this in their submissions to the North-South Border Technical
Committee and to the African Union High Implementation Panel.*10*



RESOLUTION



Given the history of the Panaru area outlined above any government or
international body that declared that Heglig is 'internationally
recognized' as part of Sudan has been premature at best and prejudicial to
a final resolution at worst.



The question that has to be resolved, in the terms of the CPA, is whether
Panthou/Heglig is east or west of the boundary line established in 1931. If
east, it is part of Unity State; if west, it is part of Southern Kordofan.
If it is part of Unity, it is part of South Sudan; if it is part of
Southern Kordofan it is part of Sudan.



We know from the above summary that up through 2003 Heglig was generally
assumed to be part of what is now Unity State. The boundary changes
proposed in the national parliament in 1980 explicitly acknowledged this,
as did the 1983 proposed route for the oil pipeline. If Juba can prove that
Khartoum either moved the boundary or falsified the map in 2004 then they
win their case.



But it must be remembered that map evidence is only a representation of the
situation on the ground. Maps can be imprecise, inaccurate, or false.
Testimony, whether documentary or oral, on how the area was administered
since 1931 is as important, if not more important, in determining the
jurisdiction over Panthou/Heglig. All such evidence should be considered in
order to reach a fair and just solution to this dispute.



*Douglas H. Johnson   2 May 2012*



*1*          Butler, 'Report on Patrol in Southern Kordofan', 14 February
1902, National Records Office, Khartoum [NRO] CAIRINT 3/5/92.



*2 *         *Sudan Intelligence Report *[*SIR] *154 (May 1907), NRO INTEL
6/5/16.



*3 *         C.C. Marshall, Inspector Talodi, Koweilat Dinkas of Mek Mabior
& Mek Fadl-el-Maula Bilkwai, 1 April 1913, NRO Dakhlia I 112/13/84.2

*Map 2: Kordofan–Upper Nile Province 1931 boundary line (Sudan Survey
1:250,000 maps 65-H and 65-L)*

* *

*4 *         Governor Kordofan Province to Civil Secretary, Khartoum, 3
January 1927 NRO Bahr el-Ghazal Province [BGP] 1/5/30. *Sudan Monthly
Intelligence Report *399 (October 1927), NRO INTEL 6/16/55.



*5*          J.A. Gillan, Governor Kordofan to Governor Bahr-el-Ghazal, 1
July 1929, NRO BGP 1/5/30.



*6 *         C.A. Willis, *The Upper Nile Province Handbook, *Oxford
University Press for the British Academy, 1995, p.306; 'Alteration of
boundaries between Kordofan and Upper Nile Province', *Sudan Government
Gazette *546, 15 May 1931, p.115 (Sudan Archive Durham vol. 1931; The
National Archives, Kew, FO 867/43).



*7*          I was shown a copy of this map by the Deputy Commissioner of
Upper Nile in Malakal in May 1983 when I was there transferring Malakal's
closed files to the Southern Regional Records Office in Juba. He
complained, 'First you come to take our archives, now they come to take our
oil.'



*8 *         Human Rights Watch, *Sudan, Oil, and Human Rights Abuses, *New
York & Washington, DC, 2003.



*9*         Dr. Nafie Ali Nafie, Minister, Federal Government Chambers,
Khartoum, to Dr. Joseph Monytuil, Governor, Unity State, 14 June 2004.



*10*          See Luka Biong Deng, 'Abyei and Panthou (Heglig): Clarifying
the Deliberate Confusion', Gurtong, 1 May 2012,
http://www.gurtong.net/ECM/Editorial/tabid/124/ID/6894/Default.aspx

-- 
Eric Reeves
Smith College
Northampton, MA  01063

413-585-3326
[email protected]

Website: www.sudanreeves.org
Skype: ReevesSudan
Twitter: @SudanReeves

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