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------Original message------
From: Eric Reeves <[email protected]>
To: "Eric Reeves" <[email protected]>
Date: Monday, May 7, 2012 6:49:09 PM GMT-0400
Subject: Will the Cease-fire Hold in Sudan Border Regions? A Timeline of 
Agreements Made and Abrogated by Khartoum

*Will the Cease-fire Hold in Sudan Border Regions?  A Timeline of
Agreements Made and Abrogated by Khartoum*

* *

If history is any guide, Khartoum’s agreement to the cease-fire terms
dictated by the May 2, 2012 UN Security Council Resolution, supported by
the African Union, will prove meaningless; follow-up agreements will be
signed, and they too will prove meaningless. The National Islamic
Front/National Congress Party regime has never abided by any agreement with
a Sudanese party---and never will, certainly not without much more vigorous
international pressure on Khartoum, pressure that is not disabled by a
factitious “even-handedness,” a moral equivalency between the NIF/NCP *
génocidaires *and the struggling leadership in Juba.



Eric Reeves

May 7, 2012



Introduction (present text): http://www.sudanreeves.org/?p=3108
Part 1 (2012) at: http://www.sudanreeves.org/?p=3101
Part 2 (2011) at: http://www.sudanreeves.org/?p=3089



*INTRODUCTION*



That we should be asking with such uncertainty about the fate of a
cease-fire agreement that may hold the key to whether Sudan and South Sudan
resume war is not surprising.  At countless junctures in the past year and
a half, the Khartoum regime has been encouraged to think that it can,
without real consequence, abrogate or renounce agreements made with various
Sudanese and South Sudanese parties.  The military seizure of Abyei
represents only the most conspicuous example.  Present uncertainty, then,
is not surprising; what is surprising is how rapidly the international
community, and too often news reporting, has lost sight of the historical
context out of which our uncertainty grows.  Since *fall of 2010* there
have been a great many agreements abandoned by Khartoum---indeed, if we are
even slightly scrupulous, *all* agreements the regime has made have been
abrogated, renounced, violated, or simply ignored.



This in turn continues a pattern that stretches back to the beginning of
the National Islamic Front/National Congress Party regime following
its *military
coup in June 1989*---a coup, we should recall, deliberately timed to abort
the most promising chance for a North/South peace agreement
since*independence in 1956
*.  Both the Umma of Sadiq al-Mahdi and the Democratic Unionist Party
seemed prepared to reach an agreement with the Sudan People's Liberation
Movement/Army.



Instead, unfathomably destructive war continued, in which more than 2
million people were killed, and as many as 5 million displaced.  The human
suffering, overwhelmingly by Southern and Nuba civilians, defies all
description.  And yet, despite the demands of a UN Security Council
resolution on Wednesday,* May 2*, Khartoum violated the cease-fire on
Friday, *May 4* according to reports from Juba: Sudan Armed Forces (SAF)
used long-range artillery to target Sudan People's Liberation Army
(SPLA) positions within the Tishwin, Lalop and Panakuach area of Unity
State.  Indeed, on the *very day following the UNSC cease-fire demand*,
backing the African Union peace mediation effort, Juba reported that twelve
bombs again targeted Lalop, critically wounding a child and mother.  There
are unconfirmed but highly plausible reports of artillery fire into these
same areas on Saturday, *May 5*.  The cease-fire has already been violated
by Khartoum.



We should note that the UN Security Council threw its support squarely
behind the AU effort despite the fact that the Southern leadership has long
been distinctly unhappy with chief AU mediator Thabo Mbeki (as were
Darfuris before Southerners).  Even so, it was Juba that first and eagerly
embraced the cease-fire proposal and continued AU mediation, even before
the Security Council resolution; it was Khartoum that accepted the AU
framework only "in
principle"---<http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/05/02/us-sudan-southsudan-au-idUSBRE84114S20120502>a
qualification behind which massive violence is likely to be justified.



We have only to look at comments coming from the Foreign Ministry to see
the implications of Khartoum's "acceptance in principle," and its claims
that the SPLA is still "occupying" parts of northern Sudan.  Encouraged by
the hasty and deeply misguided international effort to describe SPLA
seizure of Heglig as an "invasion" of the North, Khartoum is now making a
series of commensurately misleading claims:



"[The Foreign Ministry cited] 'continuous aggression and attack from South
Sudan's army on Sudanese soil until today.' 'The government of Sudan hopes
the other party will commit to stop the hostilities completely and withdraw
its troops from the disputed areas so as not to put SAF (Sudanese Armed
Forces) in a situation where it has to defend itself,' the ministry added."
(Agence France-Presse [Khartoum], May 4,
2012<http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/Sudan+says+will+hostilities/6563377/story.html>
)



Here we see the dangerous result of South Sudan becoming independent
without strong international commitment and assistance in resolving border
disputes with Khartoum and overseeing final border demarcation.  We can
expect to see this excuse for military actions on Khartoum's part for the
foreseeable future, even as some of the "disputed" areas are disputed only
on the basis of regime intransigence (see, for example, the Rift Valley
Institute analysis of the Kafia Kingi
area<http://www.humansecuritygateway.com/showRecord.php?RecordId=34466>
in
Western Bahr el-Ghazal, where the* January 1, 1956 border* conspicuously
puts the enclave in South Sudan). Without clearly delineated and demarcated
borders, the opportunities for Khartoum to initiate military actions
self-described as "self-defense" will be many and continuous. In turn, the
grim and dispiriting lessons of Abyei have certainly not been lost on Juba.



*Yet again, the international community focuses on only one issue in Sudan*



Arguably the most dangerous part of this uneasy "cease-fire" is that it
diverts international attention away from the massive humanitarian crises
the regime has engineered in other parts of Sudan, including the Nuba
Mountains of South Kordofan, Blue Nile, the refugee camps for people who
have fled from conflict in these regions (more than 100,000 in Upper Nile;
likely more than 40,000 in Unity; and perhaps 40,000 in Ethiopia)---and of
course Darfur. Relentlessly suffering, and increasingly invisibly, the
people of Darfur have been betrayed repeatedly by the international
community, most recently and destructively in the form of the widely
despised Doha Peace Agreement (*July 2011*) (see *Appendix 1 *to* Part
1<http://www.sudanreeves.org/2012/05/07/part-1-a-timeline-for-khartoums-abrogation-of-agreements-to-date-in-2012/>
* for a bibliography of recent reports on humanitarian and security
conditions in Darfur).  As Darfur was sacrificed on the altar of CPA
completion in *2004*, at the very height of the genocide---and beyond---so
it is again the victim of diplomatic tunnel vision.



Despite increasingly desperate calls from humanitarian organizations,
especially those working on food, water, and sanitation, many of these
humanitarian efforts remain under-funded and without adequate
resources. More dangerously, there is still no access to the Nuba Mountains
or displaced persons in Blue Nile.  Although Juba accepted a joint
UN/African Union/Arab League proposal for humanitarian access to all in
need on *February 9*---three months ago---Khartoum has recently declared
that it is still studying this multilateral proposal, which it again
welcomes "in principle."  The clear effort is to wait out the remainder of
the dry season, and offer limited access only once the rains have begun
(any week now), making delivery inordinately more difficult.



One measure of how little access there is to these desperate regions is the
continually recycled figure of "417,000 displaced by fighting in South
Kordofan and Blue Nile."  This figure was first promulgated by the UN in
early* December 2011* (see a Reuters
dispatch<http://uk.reuters.com/article/2011/12/13/uk-sudan-fighting-idUKTRE7BC1DW20111213>
 of *December 13, 2011*).  That the figure has not changed in *five
months*---it
continues to be regularly cited in a range of dispatches and reports,
without any acknowledgement of its original date---is a measure of how
little we know about the scale of the catastrophe that is unfolding,
largely invisibly; substantial anecdotal reports, however, from a wide
range of observers in the Nuba make clear that this number almost certainly
vastly understates.  That the UN is not in a position to update this
figure---only the relentlessly increasing number of refugees pouring into
Upper Nile and Unity States (South Sudan) and Ethiopia---should be a
scandal. Instead, the figure is uncritically re-cycled.



Attention remains diverted as well from Abyei, where we are approaching the
one-year anniversary of Khartoum's military seizure of the contested
region, in violation of the *Abyei Protocol* and the *2009 ruling by the PCA
*.  More than 100,000 Dinka Ngok who were forced to flee Abyei to Warrap
and other Southern states are still unable to return, and confront grim
humanitarian conditions.  There is no evident pressure on Khartoum to
withdraw its forces from Abyei, despite a *June 20, 2011* commitment to do
so with deployment of an Ethiopian peacekeeping force under UN
auspices.  Indeed, Khartoum still refuses to negotiate in good faith a
Status of Forces Agreement with the United Nations Interim Security Force
for Abyei (UNISFA).  The international community, taking its cue from the
U.S., seems content to see the dream of self-determination for the
"residents" of Abyei, promised by the CPA, slowly wither away.



*The need for historical context*



No assessment of prospects for the current cease-fire agreement, such as it
is, can possibly be meaningful without taking account of the Khartoum
regime's *23 years* of relentless abjuring, reneging, renouncing, ignoring,
and denial of agreements it has signed or committed to.  That it continues
to receive international diplomatic credit for these agreements---despite
relentlessly consistent bad faith---of course only encourages the regime to
sign more agreements, agreements that it has no intention of abiding by.



This promiscuous agreement-making and -signing is part of what energizes
the deeply misguided "moral equivalence" that has stalked Sudan diplomacy
for well over a decade.  It is the illusion that the political, diplomatic,
and finally moral equities of Southerners and the Khartoum regime are
somehow equivalent when they clearly are not.  This is the same illusion
that leads U.S. special envoy Princeton Lyman to oppose regime change in
Khartoum, and at the same time to declare his confidence in the regime's
ability to "carry out reform via constitutional democratic measured." Once
Khartoum has been conceded this much, it is no surprise that the results
are the very opposite of those Lyman professes to believe possible under
this tyrannical regime.



With such a perspective dominant within the international community, we can
do no more at present than survey recent and more distant history: the
chances that this cease-fire agreement is more likely to hold than
Khartoum's commitment to previous agreements can be calculated only on the
basis of previous abrogations.



The present time-line focuses in *Part
1<http://www.sudanreeves.org/2012/05/07/part-1-a-timeline-for-khartoums-abrogation-of-agreements-to-date-in-2012/>
* on those agreements Khartoum has made and/or violated in the first five
months of *2012. *It extends the time-line running through December
31, 
2011<http://www.sudanreeves.org/2011/12/30/a-timeline-for-catastrophe-sudans-continuing-slide-toward-war/>,
which appears here---in revised form---as *Part
2<http://www.sudanreeves.org/2012/05/05/part-i-a-timeline-for-khartoums-violation-of-agreements-in-2011/>.
 Part
2* focuses on events leading up to and including the *May 2011*military
seizure of Abyei, which abrogated the agreement represented by the Abyei
Protocol of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (*2005*), as had the earlier
denial of a self-determination referendum to the people "resident" in
Abyei, as defined geographically by the *2009 *PCA ruling.  The timeline
continues through Khartoum's military assaults on Southern Kordofan (*June
5, 2011*) and Blue Nile (*September 1, 2011*).



[Significant violations of agreements, signed or committed to, are
highlighted by *§.  *All emphases, *bold* and *italics*, throughout these
timelines have been added.]



*Introduction: A time-line of reneging and bad faith*

* *

*§ 1999:  *As a framework for understanding the agreements to which Sudan
has formally committed itself (*Parts 1 and 2)*, we should recall a time
when the UN human rights reports on the "situation in Sudan" were actually
worth reading---here from *May 1999* (E/CN.4/1999/38/17):



"As a Member State of the United Nations, the Sudan is *bound by the
Charter of the United Nations*. Further, it is *obliged to respect the
human rights and fundamental freedoms of all persons within its territory*,
as set out *inter alia* in the following instruments to which the Sudan has
become a party:



the *International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights*;



the *International* *Covenant on Civil and Political Rights*;



the *International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination*;



the Convention on the *Rights of the Child;*



the *Slavery Convention*, as amended;



the *Supplementary Convention on the Abolition of Slavery*, the Slave
Trade, and Institutions and Practices Similar to Slavery;



*the Convention relating to the Status of Refugees* and the Additional
Protocol thereto.



"As a *member of the International Labour Organization*, the Sudan has
ratified its Conventions concerning Forced Labour (No. 29), the Abolition
of Forced Labour (No. 105), the Right to Organise and Collective Bargaining
(No. 98), Employment Policy (No. 122) and Discrimination (Employment and
Occupation) (No. 111).



*"On 23 September 1957, the Sudan became a party to the four Geneva
Conventions of 1949*, which set out humanitarian rules for armed conflicts.



"Further, it is to be noted that the *Sudan has signed the Convention
against Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or
Punishment*. Although signature has not yet been followed by ratification,
the Sudan has, by signing, shown the intention to accept the obligations
under this Convention and, under customary international law, as reflected
in the *Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties*, is obligated not to do
anything which would defeat the object and purpose of the Convention
against Torture, pending a decision on ratification.



"In addition to the *obligations arising from conventional international
law, the Sudan is also bound to respect the standards of international
customary law*."



This list of obligations will seem a dismaying grotesquerie to those
familiar with the regime's long history of brutal domestic repression, it
policy of enslaving Southerners, its massive and continuous violations of
the Geneva Conventions to which it is party, the vast crimes against
humanity represented by the systematic denial of humanitarian assistance to
desperate civilians, as well as by widespread and systematic bombing of
civilian and humanitarian targets for more than a
decade<http://www.sudanbombing.org>,
its routine use of torture as an instrument of the security forces, and the
conspicuous racism embodied not only in the practice of slavery, the
widespread institutional exclusion of "Africans," the racial basis for
targeted human destruction (including the Nuba and the people of Darfur),
but the present practice of "ethnic culling" of the northern population, a
policy that de-nationalizes "Southerners" solely on the basis of race and
ethnicity (see *July 4, 2011 *in *Part 2*).



The violations of these various "agreements" are so utterly routine that
only the most dogged human rights organizations continue to make mention of
them.



*Other agreements violated over the past decade:*

* *

*§  January 2002: *Although usually touted as impressive success, the UN
peacekeeping mission in the Nuba Mountains was responsible for securing
compliance with an agreement that included, *inter alia*, the demand that
there be no redeployment of military forces.  On signing the agreement, and
in direct contravention of its terms, Khartoum immediately took military
advantage of the cease-fire and re-deployed two full brigades from South
Kordofan to the fighting in the oil regions of what was then Western Upper
Nile.  In *January 2003* I questioned in Kauda the head of this
mission, Norwegian Brigadier-General Jan Erik Wilhelmsen, about the
redeployment of the two SAF brigades in violation of the agreement.  The
General sniffed contemptuously and said only that "this occurred before I
got here."  Such casual acceptance of violations of agreements set the
stage for much that would follow.

* *

*§  October 2002*: Khartoum and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army
signed a "*Cessation of Hostilities Agreement*."  And yet three months
later I was interviewing civilians from Western Upper Nile who had recently
been badly wounded by helicopter gunships.  Not until further international
pressure in *February 2003 *was the cease-fire meaningfully observed by
Khartoum, in large part because of the superb work of the Civilian
Protection Monitoring Team (CPMT) based in Rumbek (Lakes State).



*§  2004: *The breakthrough *Abyei Protocol*---negotiated in* 2004*---was a
linchpin in the successful completion of the *Comprehensive Peace Agreement*
 (*CPA*) (signed *January 9, 2005*).  As discussed above and below,
Khartoum massively violated this agreement and construed its terms in ways
that were contemptibly disingenuous.  Especially conspicuous actions
included:



*§  July 2005: *President Omar al-Bashir refuses to accept the findings of
the *Abyei Boundaries Commission*, established by the *CPA* and whose
membership was agreed to by both Khartoum and Juba.



*§  May 2008*:  Khartoum's regular and militia forces burn *Abyei town* to
the ground, and in a prelude to the military seizure of *May 2011*, force
many tens of thousands of Dinka Ngok to flee southward to *Warrap State*.



*§  January 2011: *efforts by the regime to delay and ultimately prevent
the agreed upon self-determination referendum prove fully successful.



*March 2011: *SAF* *military deployments captured in satellite
photography<http://www.satsentinel.org/imagery/frontline-abyei> make
unambiguously clear that Khartoum intends to seize Abyei militarily; there
is no meaningful response from the international community, which is well
aware of what is impending.



*§  May 20 - 21, 2011: *Khartoum easily moves from its positions of forward
deployment to seize Abyei militarily.  A year later, the SAF remains in
full military control, despite the presence of an Ethiopian peacekeeping
brigade with UN auspices.



[for a detailed timeline of the events in Abyei through *late May 2011*,
see: "An Abyei Timeline: The Long Road to Khartoum's Military
Invasion<http://www.sudanreeves.org/2011/05/27/an-abyei-timeline-the-long-road-to-khartoums-military-invasion/>
."]



*§  2005 - 2011:* The various terms of the *CPA *designed to "make unity
attractive" for all Sudanese quickly fall apart, as many of the most
powerful officials in Khartoum's security cabal have no intention of
fulfilling the terms of the *CPA*.  Southerners quickly find that whatever
portfolio they might nominally hold, a "shadow ministry"---staffed by
senior regime officials---wields real control over the ministry
portfolio.  Key meetings are either secret or deliberately conducted in an
Arabic that goes at a pace and with a colloquial content that often makes
it difficult even for those with fluent "Juba Arabic" to keep up with
important points of discussion.  This is the regime's vision of "*
power-sharing*."



*§  Wealth-sharing* quickly became for Khartoum an exercise in bookkeeping
obscurantism: we will never know how many billions of dollars altogether
were kept from the South by means of accounting legerdemain, but it is a
very substantial number.  Khartoum's willingness to cheat on the terms of
wealth-sharing were recently underscored when during fighting between
Tishwin and Heglig, the SPLA discovered an illegal and surreptitious
"tie-in" pipeline designed.



Khartoum also refused to convene in a timely way the *boundary commission
charged with first delineating and the demarcating the North/South border* as
it stood on *January 1, 1956*.  What participation occurred was largely in
bad faith, at least at the highest political levels.  The deliberate
obstruction of this critical task was, it is now clear, designed to make
possible the present militarily ambiguous situations, which profit only
Khartoum; Juba gains nothing from such indeterminate borders, and
international policing is made infinitively more difficult in the absence
of demarcation, indeed even delineation in far too many places.



*§*  The *CPA* was also to have afforded *"popular consultations" for the
people of South Kordofan and Blue Nile*; they were to address key
outstanding political issues in these long marginalized regions.  Precisely
what these *"consultations"* were to provide, and by what mechanisms, was
never adequately specified.  But Khartoum's intentions were easily
discerned when in early *May 2011* the regime engineered the election of
Ahmed Haroun as governor of South Kordofan.  Haroun is under indictment by
the International Criminal Court for scores of war crimes and crimes
against humanity.  He was put in his present position by Khartoum to
continue those crimes against the Nuba.



Although hastily and foolishly ratified by the Carter Center, the *South
Kordofan elections* were yet another violation of the* CPA*, no matter how
we construe *"popular consultations."*  Moreover, the Carter Center account
was subsequently vigorously challenged by a forceful and fully informed
critique from the Rift Valley
Institute<http://www.africafiles.org/article.asp?ID=25638>;
but the damage had been done, and a month after Haroun's election, South
Kordofan was turned into a bloodbath by Khartoum's regular and militia
forces



*§  October/November 2010: *Obama administration officials, including
special envoy Scott Gration and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, bring
conspicuous pressure to bear on Juba to compromise further on Abyei,
despite the compromises already represented in both the Abyei Protocol and
Juba's acceptance of the July *2009 ruling* on Abyei's boundaries by the
Permanent Court of Arbitration.  Senator John Kerry, part-time
administration envoy and aspirant to the office of Secretary of State,
reveals a contemptible but consequential ignorance in declaring Abyei to be
an insignificant "few hundred square miles" standing in the way of peace
for millions (in fact, Abyei as defined by the PCA is over 4,000 square
miles <http://reliefweb.int/node/372107>, almost the size of Kerry's larger
neighbor to the south, the state of Connecticut.



*§  November 2010: *Khartoum begins regular bombings of South Sudan, right
up to and following the self-determination referendum of *January 9,
2011*. Even
before the recent massive wave of aerial attacks, there had been more than
40 confirmed attacks on civilians or
humanitarians<http://www.sudanbombing.org> in
the South---or attacks so indiscriminate as to have no possible primary
military purpose. These attacks violate a wide range of international human
rights and humanitarian law.



*Part *(2012), including Darfur Appendix, can be found at:

http://www.sudanreeves.org/2012/05/07/part-1-a-timeline-for-khartoums-abrogation-of-agreements-to-date-in-2012/



*Part 2 *(2011) can be found at:

http://www.sudanreeves.org/2012/05/05/part-i-a-timeline-for-khartoums-violation-of-agreements-in-2011/



-- 
Eric Reeves
Smith College
Northampton, MA  01063

413-585-3326
[email protected]

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

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