Boma That Fell: The ‘Al-Qaida’ of SSDA Rebellion .




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By Martin Garang Aher

May 15, 2013 (SSNA) -- The South Sudanese town of Boma in Pibor County
had fallen to South Sudan Democratic Army, SSDA, a gubernatorial
rebellion led by David Yau. The same month, May 2013, South Sudanese
army at the frontline in Pibor demonstrated uncharacteristic display
by abandoning positions at the frontline and going on a looting spree
in Pibor itself as many reports propose. Other incidences of civil
disorder staged by the retreating army from Pibor have been reported
on the outskirts of Bor town, the state capital.

Although the army behaviour could not be delinked from poor
performance in service delivery and logistical negligence, the fall of
Boma plateau is remarkably atypical. It is possibly the very first
time that a military incursion into the SPLA/M Boma had merely lasted
for minutes, if not hours, after which her inhabitants are sent
helter-skelter into the merciless Tingily semi-desert. It is
implausibly difficult to put thoughts together in determining the
underlying circumstances that led to easy slip of Boma into the hands
of the militia. The South Sudanese media and the military seemed to
have also resigned to the fall of Boma. No one knows if Boma has been
abandoned only for a season or for eternity.

This raised questions whether the softly captured and eerily whispered
Boma in the news was the same Boma that served as the spring board
into Eastern Equatoria by East Equatoria Axis in 1980s? Was this the
Boma so known to Major Nyachigak Nyachiluk, Lt Colonel Martin Manyiel
Ayuel, commander Kuol Amum, Commander Gilario Modi Hurnyang and Bol
Madut or the Kiswahili ‘boma’ the homestead? South Sudanese who
wandered the bush are perhaps asking these questions. One convincing
answer rests in the reasoning that the mentality about the importance
of Boma has increasingly became illusive to leaders and the military.
Boma of today is not synonymous anymore to Boma of yore.

The Boma of today, the Boma of South Sudanese regular and paid army,
the Boma that could be captured and the course of history would never
change, the liberated and outlandish Boma of logistical clumsiness and
of command and control debacles was probably the Boma that fell. This
is the Boma that nobody cares if it is overran a thousandth fold, for
it will forever be in South Sudan. Welcome then to Jebel Buma, the
Upper and Lower Boma, ‘Boma Up and Boma Down,’ the SPLA and SSDA
Berlin divided by ridges.

Boma of old was a different bush town, too daring to meddle with and
too comfortable to hold on to it. It became the recuperating point for
recruits and refugees crossing Sahara Tingily either way between
Ethiopia and South Sudan. Incarcerated SPLA/M political prisoners like
Arok Thon Arok, Karubino Kuanyin Bol and others had their home on
Upper Boma. At an elevation of about 1100 meters above sea level,
anyone defending it had an eye view on the attackers and wielding a
demigod power to rain munitions on them. During the dry season, her
surrounding semi-desert was always a deeply cracked and waterless
alluvial soil; a hell of a place not only to thirsty humans but also
to animals. Boma was undeniably impermeable to alien forces. The SPLA
forces stormed it once and battled for its defence countable times.

It was Major Bior Ajak, famous as Tahir Bior Abdala Ajak who commanded
the Neran battalion that forcefully entered Boma for the first time in
early 1980s and established a command base for Eastern Equatoria Axis.
The SPLA/M Movement was at the time arching out military operational
fronts throughout Southern Sudan. Since that time, Boma never fell to
Jellaba and their allies. One proven historical wartime reality had
for years stood unremittingly opposed to quick fall of the area to
external invasion after its initial capture: elevation of Boma itself.
The town or a post had always served as a defensive armoury to her
inhabitants throughout the twenty-one years of war, particularly where
there was a will to defend it. That willpower is unquestionably
dwindling much to the forgetfulness of the eminence of the area as a
national heritage.

The prominence of Boma plateau and its national importance in South
Sudan is as historical as it is strategically significant. Boma is the
hub of wildlife diversity in South Sudan, expanding in area to about
2300000ha, probably followed by Chelkou. It is an area of vast
resources that a nation could tap into for economic gains and
progress. Little known to many is the botanical implication of Boma.
Boma has a profusion of Coffee Arabica which grows in its rain forest
ecosystem as a wild plant. This is a rare gift of nature that ought to
keep Boma within the government’s arm’s length for resources
mobilisation and development in the country. It was first noticed in
the colonial Sudan in 1930s by a botanist, Dr. A.S. Thomas. He later
wrote an academic paper in 1942 entitled: “The wild Arabica coffee on
the Boma Plateau, Anglo-Egyptian Sudan.” After that, Boma slipped into
the Sudanese negligence of her multiple marginalities. So if anyone
feels the compulsion to tabulate the regions of national importance in
South Sudan, Boma will, for reason to be defended, jostle in the
second place after oil fields.

There are veritable corollaries of the fall of Boma to Yau Yau rebel
forces but one is of a particular concern: the Potentiality for the
expansion of broad based rebellion that might recruit, not only from
Murle but also from other local population in the area. Boma is home
to Murle, Kishipo/Suri and Anyuak. It is therefore indispensable to
worry for invariable reasons since ethnic composition of Boma is that
of a people who have never been friends, but may find a unifying
factor in Yau Yau. He could use Murle pastoralists to forcefully
recruit sedentary agriculturalists Kishipo and Anyuak. A biblical
maxim states that a prophet is not accepted in his hometown. Yau Yau’s
testimonial of seriousness in South Sudan would likely be felt when he
exerts control over Murle’s adjacent communities. The probable outcome
would be an establishment of a base - the Al Qaeda of the rebellion.
If this happens, Juba might not have to worry about Boma but Pachalla,
Jebel Raid and Pakok/Korchum without forgetting the support Yau Yau
might get among the Taposas. Effectively, Juba would be cut off from
the Ethiopian and Kenyan Borders closest to it. This move could
completely turn the tables on summary ‘amnesties’ that the government
is fond of extending. Ever since, such amnesties have only served to
build personalities than to provide credible solutions. There is
proven belief going around that ‘if you want to be a Major-General in
the South Sudanese army, first be a rebel.’ Well, a rebel one might be
and Major General one might win, but certainly what angers a civilian
to take up arms in the first instance may get him into the woods again
al beit heavily laden with military titles. Yau Yau is a case in
point.

>From Gumuruk, the village town of one blue mountain, Yau Yau the
pastoralist and theologian is presently in the mountains of ‘Boma Up’
Plateau. Opposite to his theological training as a preserver of souls,
he is slaying people up there. South Sudanese army must do a lot more
to bring him to ‘Boma Down’ and out of town.

Martin Garang is a South Sudanese living in Australia. He can be
reached at [email protected]

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