Hizkias Assefa - Mediation of Civil Wars - Approaches and Strategies. The Sudan Conflict-Westview Press (1987)
Hizkias Assefa - Mediation of Civil Wars - Approaches and Strategies. The Sudan Conflict-Westview Press (1987)
Hizkias Assefa - Mediation of Civil Wars - Approaches and Strategies. The Sudan Conflict-Westview Press (1987)
Hizkias Assefa
First published 1987 by Westview Press
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1. INTRODUCTION
2. PRECONDITIONS FOR SUCCESSFUL MEDIATION OF
CIVIL WARS
9. CONCLUSION
EPILOGUE
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Index
Acknowledgments
This work would not have been possible without the cooperation and
assistance of many people. I am infinitely grateful to the peacemakers in
this study — Canon Burgess Carr, whom I interviewed in Cambridge,
Mass; Mr. Dwain Epps, in New York; Mrs. Barbara Haq, in London; Dr.
Leoplodo Niilus, in Geneva; Mr. Kodwo Ankrah, in Kampala; and Mr.
Samuel Bwogo, in Khartoum. They not only shared their time and their
thoughts with me but also allowed me to enjoy their generosity and
humanity which has left me with a sense of deep respect and inspiration.
I must also express my deep appreciation to Dr. Chris Mitchell, London;
Dr. Louise Pirouet, Cambridge, England; Dr. Storrs McCall, Montreal; and
Dr. Raphael Badal, Khartoum, for sharing their views and materials on the
Sudan as well as for their hospitality. Thanks must go to Dr. Jerome
Laulicht, who read an earlier draft of this manuscript and made a number of
valuable suggestions; and to Dr. Richard Cottam, Dr. Daniel Cheever, Dr.
David Gould, and Dr. Alex Weilenmann, all of Pittsburgh, from whom I
benefitted a great deal in discussing this subject matter. My thanks to Joan
Friedman who edited this manuscript with humor and enthusiasm.
I am very grateful to Mr. Ninan Koshy, Mr. Eric Weingartner, Mr. Ans
Van der Bent and the Commission of the Churches for International Affairs
of the World Council of Churches for their assistance and for facilitating my
research in Geneva. Special thanks go to Mr. Dwain Epps for his contagious
enthusiasm and support which helped keep my interest going during the
first stages of this work when I had many doubts about the feasibility of the
undertaking.
Then, I would like to thank my family. I cannot express enough gratitude
to my wife, Gretchen Van Evera, who has been my discussant and source of
support, without whose help, understanding, and encouragement this work
might not have been a reality. I would like to express my deep appreciation
for the help and encouragement I received from Mary Van Evera as well as
the inspirations I have derived from her example. My special gratitude and
affection also for my daughters: Sarah, who patiently tolerated the
competition of this book for my attention, and Martha, who held back
coming to this world until the week this book was completed. My thanks to
my brother, Solomon, for helping in and enduring the final stages of the
book's preparation. Finally, I would like to express my gratitude to my
mother, Abeba Reda, who showed me the importance of reconciliation; and
to my father, Assefa Wolde Gebriel, who instilled in me the values of
perseverance and scholarship, and who, together, taught me that there is
more than one side to an issue.
Hizkias Assefa
Part One
Theory of Mediation
Chapter 1
Introduction
Frank Hubbard, a nineteenth century caricaturist, remarked: "peace has
its victories no less than war, but it does not have as many monuments to
unveil." Almost a century later, the famous philosopher John Dewey,
seemingly trying to convert this observation into a guide for behavior,
suggested that "the only way to abolish war [is] to make peace heroic."
The need to make peace heroic has become even more imperative in the
nuclear age since we live in a world where our preparations and skills in
waging destructive conflicts have surpassed our efforts and skills in waging
peace. This book pays tribute to the heroism of peacemaking by unveiling
one monument that had been shrouded in mystery for some time and by
identifying some approaches to the containment of conflict. It examines
mediation as a method for the resolution of internationalized civil wars and
analyzes the various conditions that facilitate its success. It then presents a
case study where mediation was successfully utilized in an intractable
internationalized civil war and examines the approach from the perspective
of theory and practice.
There are several reasons why this study focuses on mediation and on
civil wars. Before proceeding further, however, it is necessary to define
these two concepts as they will be used in the subsequent analysis. It is
difficult to define mediation precisely since it incorporates processes
common to other third party interventions. Some authors have distinguished
among five kinds of third party conflict resolution mechanisms: good
offices, inquiry, mediation, arbitration, and adjudication.1 While it is easy to
distinguish between mediation, arbitration, and adjudication, the distinction
between mediation, inquiry, and good offices is not so clear. In fact, the last
two appear to be either components of mediation or to differ from it only in
the degree of noncoercive initiative permitted to the third party. Then terms
such as "conciliation" (which some view as a combination of mediation and
inquiry)2 and "intermediation" (which does not have any technical
definition)3 are often used interchangeably with "mediation". In this study,
the term mediation will include good offices and inquiry, and will be
defined as an intervention in a conflict, by an actor not a party to the
dispute, aimed at helping the parties resolve their conflict peacefully
through negotiation and compromise.
The second concept calling for definition is the notion of civil war. It has
been defined as a war fought between different geographical areas, political
divisions, or ideological factions within the same country.4 In the literature
one finds terms such as internal wars used interchangeably with civil wars.
For example, for Janos, internal war is a concept that includes civil war, and
he defines internal war as a "violent conflict between parties subject to a
common authority and of such dimensions that its incidence will affect the
exercise or structure of authority in the society."5 Even though Janos'
definition is more precise, it has some limitations. It could hardly be said
that in civil wars of secession the insurgents are subject to the same
authority as their opponents. The authority exercised by the incumbents
over the secessionists seems to be only de jure and not de facto in most
instances. Moreover, many authors warn about the futility of trying to draw
strict boundaries between internal wars and external or international wars.
For example, Kelly and Miller point out that "only conceptually can there
be a purely internal war, although, as affected by the variables of goals,
scope, and duration, there are obviously greater and lesser degrees of inner-
outer permeability in such wars."6 Keeping these limitations in mind, the
term internal war shall be used in the subsequent analysis as a more generic
term that includes civil war.
The reasons for this study's focus on mediation and civil wars are as
follows: First, the significance and the gravity of civil wars seem to be on
the increase.7 One commonly thinks that large scale wars are the result of
direct conflict between the superpowers. However, even minor or isolated
internal conflicts have the potential to lure in major powers, thereby
escalating the destructiveness of the conflict and even at times endangering
international peace and security.8 There have been many examples of such
conflicts since the end of World War II: Korea, Vietnam, Cambodia, East
Pakistan, Afghanistan, Cyprus, Lebanon, Jordan, Cuba, El Salvador,
Nicaragua, Nigeria, Sudan, Angola, Rhodesia, Zaire, Ethiopia, Chad, etc. In
some of these conflicts, nuclear weapons were even considered as options
by some decision makers to "win" these intractable wars. It seems that the
ideological divisions in the world today foster the perception that the
outcome of every political struggle in every part of the world is of vital
concern to each of the ideological blocs. Moreover, modern technology is
steadily decreasing the significance of national boundaries for military
strategy and ideological commitments. As a result, internal wars become
forums for larger conflicts such as racial, anti-colonial, anti-imperialist, or
cold war rivalries. Conflicts in remote areas tend suddenly to acquire
strategic importance, and wars that might at first seem insignificant,
become breeding grounds for larger conflicts and violence.
Some argue that the nuclear era has made all-out international wars
extremely dangerous, and that internal wars reduce the risk of such
confrontations by allowing states to wage their conflicts indirectly through
local political movements and rebellions elsewhere.9 There might be some
validity to this argument However, as illustrated in the examples cited, the
danger that internationalized civil wars pose to global peace and security is
still so grave that they cannot be accepted as substitutes for direct interstate
wars. Methods for their avoidance or peaceful resolution must be found.
The second reason for the focus on civil wars is that to date, most of
these conflicts have been waged in poor, third-world countries. Conflicts
that might have spent themselves out, were it not for international
intervention, continue on for years. Consequently, they exacerbate the
already abysmal poverty of these countries by destroying their fragile
economic bases and inflicting endless misery upon generations of people.
Thus, from the perspective of the people of these countries, a way out of
such conflicts becomes even more imperative. In addition, the type of civil
war which is examined in this study, war of secession, is a problem that has
been plaguing many African countries. Therefore, a study of the peaceful
termination of such wars would be particularly relevant to many afflicted
countries.
Thirdly, mediation was made the focus of this study because it seems to
be the most appropriate mechanism to resolve internal wars when compared
to all the other third party and even non-third party conflict resolution
devices. The other major third party conflict resolution mechanisms,
adjudication and arbitration, are not relevant for the resolution of large-
scale, violent social conflicts such as civil wars. It is very difficult to
imagine civil wars being resolved through court litigation or by the decision
of an arbitrator.
Fourthly, when one examines other conflict resolution mechanisms that
do not involve third parties, there are further grounds for arguing that
mediation is a preferable method. Non-third party mechanisms range from
outright victory or loss by one party to the conflict at one end of the
spectrum, to voluntary negotiation and bargaining at the other. An outright
military solution could hardly be said to resolve the conflict even though it
may terminate it. Since the underlying problems behind the conflict are not
dealt with, the dictates of the victors in the confrontation will prevail only
until the vanquished muster enough power to reverse the situation or to
force some sort of accommodation. Even if the losers fail to reverse the
power relationship, a coerced solution contains the seeds of future conflict
and tension. The other end of the spectrum of non-third party mechanisms
consists of negotiation and bargaining. These could be the most ideal means
of settling large-scale social conflict if they involve compromise and
accommodation. However, the process of negotiation, when it does not
involve third party intermediation, is fraught with many problems that
prevent its success or even limit its frequent use.
The problems in negotiation arise partly from the patterns of
communication inherent in the process itself. The mode of communication
between the parties in a negotiation tends to encourage a contest of wills.
Messages sent by the parties to each other embody a large amount of
distortion because they frequently tend to be implicit and discrete, using
threats, warnings, bluffs, and sometimes outright misinformation.10 It is
difficult to come by concessions and compromise because they might lead
to the perception that the party who makes the concession is weak.
Moreover, the lack of external sources of information uncolored by the
hostilities, stereotypes, suspicions, fears, and prejudices of the conflicting
parties limits the range of options and alternatives that might be apparent to
the negotiators. Because of these shortcomings, the success of direct
negotiations between conflicting parties can be severely limited.
Mediation, on the other hand, incorporates some of the beneficial aspects
of negotiation while rectifying its shortcomings. It maintains aspects such
as the parties' independence in decision-making, their full participation and
involvement in the resolution process, and the potential for dealing with the
root causes of the conflict. But, at the same time, it remedies the defective
communication that afflicts the negotiation process. The mediation process
can filter out the distorted messages, encourage open and frank interactions,
expand the range of options and alternative solutions, provide face-saving
devices for concession, and, in general, make compromise and
accommodation an attractive instead of a disgraceful option. It encourages
commitment to the results of the negotiations by creating a forum in which
the parties are able to present their cases fairly and justly.
Although, from the various means of conflict resolution mechanisms
discussed, mediation seems to be both the most appropriate and the most
beneficial method of dealing with civil wars, unfortunately the full potential
and advantages of this method have not been fully exploited. In fact, very
few civil wars have been resolved through mediation or even through
negotiated settlements.
In order for mediation to be utilized more frequently as an effective
method of resolving civil wars, it must be thoroughly understood and its
theory more fully developed. At this point, let alone the theory, even the
literature on the subject is scant and in disarray. This book attempts to
contribute to the systematic theorization of mediation by synthesizing the
fragmentary literature and developing a series of hypotheses that determine
the success of mediation of civil wars. Then an actual case of a mediated
civil war is presented in order to analyze the possible correspondence
between the existing theory and actual practice.
This study consists of three parts. Part One presents a bird's-eye view of
the state of mediation theory and goes on to develop a series of hypotheses
about necessary and sufficient conditions that contribute to the successful
mediation of civil wars. The hypotheses are developed by synthesizing the
various claims and postulates presented in the fragmentary literature, and
reconciling, to the extent possible, some of the contradictions. This part
then concludes by reflecting on the viability of mediation as a means of
resolving civil wars in light of the presented hypotheses about the
conditions required for its success. Various methods of organizing these
hypotheses are suggested and the impact of such arrangements on the
viability of mediation is examined.
Part Two is primarily factual and historical. It presents a case study of the
Sudan Civil War (1955-72) which was waged for seventeen years and
claimed over 500,000 lives before it was finally settled through mediation.
Very little is known about this civil war and even less about its resolution
process. Chapter three examines the root-causes of this conflict while
chapter four explains the actual dynamics and development of the conflict.
The subsequent chapters of Part Two deal with the peace process. Chapter
five presents an account of mediation efforts that were attempted but failed
to bring about a resolution, while chapter six describes the mediation
process that was finally able to bring about a negotiated settlement.
Existing writings on the conflict resolution process in the Sudan Civil
War are very scanty. Several authors have dismissed the whole process by
superficially mentioning that some third party mediation was involved
towards the latter phases of the conflict. As Paul Wehr points out, the
tendency of historians has been to write chapters vividly detailing and
describing the war process but devoting only paragraphs to the termination
process.11 The Sudan Civil War is a classic illustration of this tendency.
Because there has not been much prior research on the mediation process,
that part of the case study is based mainly on original information from
primary sources. The method utilized to gather the information was to
interview the key third party actors in the mediation process and to examine
letters, correspondence, internal memoranda, minutes and reports of
meetings, and unpublished documents. The documentary information and
the archival materials were used to build the basic structure for the
presentation of the case study. Whenever gaps in the sequence of events in
the documentary materials were found, or the documents were unclear,
information from the interviews was used to clarify or fill in the gaps.
The case study is presented in a factual and narrative style with
maximum description and minimum interpretation and analysis. The aim
behind this style of presentation is, as far as possible, to let the story stand
by itself, uninfluenced by the theoretical discussion of Part One, so that the
results of the examination of whether or not there is any correspondence
between the theory and practice is not unduly biased.
Part Two has several purposes. Primarily, it serves as a contribution to the
sparse data-base of systematically studied and analyzed cases of peacefully
resolved civil wars which is essential for theory construction in this vital
area. Secondly, it serves as a factual base in which to search for evidence
that supports or contradicts the hypotheses generated in Part One. Of
course, at this stage of the theory of mediation of civil wars, the only thing
that can be done is to compile evidence and not to validate or reject any
hypotheses. The dearth of case studies or available data does not allow us
that luxury. Thirdly, the case study sheds light on a practically unknown
conflict resolution effort which has many interesting facets and provides
many useful insights into similar conflicts.
In Part Three, theory and practice are tied together. Chapter seven begins
the analysis by looking at the case study and, without reference to the
theory of Part One, identifies those factors and circumstances that stand out
as being important for the success of the conflict resolution process as well
as those that led to the demise of earlier efforts. The basis for the
identification of the factors in this chapter are the opinions of authors and
observers of the Sudan conflict and its settlement process. Chapter eight
expressly and consciously reexamines the case study using the structure and
hypotheses of Part One. It analyzes which hypotheses were supported and
which were contradicted by the evidence in the case study. If a hypothesis is
contradicted by the evidence, an alternative formulation or an entirely new
hypothesis is suggested.
Chapter nine concludes the study by making some general observations
about the lessons that could be learned from the Sudan experience for the
mediation of similar conflicts elsewhere and providing some suggestions
for future research.
1
"Good offices" has been defined as a technique of peaceful settlement of conflict whereby a
third party acts as a go-between, transmitter of messages, and provider of meeting place, with
the aim of bringing about direct negotiation between the parties. Jack C. Plano and Ray Olton,
The International Relations Dictionary, 3rd ed. (Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-Clio, Inc., 1982),
216.
"Inquiry" is a formal and impartial determination of the facts underlying a dispute in which the
third party reports his/her findings to the parties with the aim of clarifying the basis for the
conflict. Ibid., 217.
"Mediation" is a procedure whereby a third party aids the disputants in finding a solution by
offering specific proposals as possible terms of settlement. Ibid., 218.
"Arbitration" is a mechanism whereby the parties willingly submit to a third party for a decision
on their dispute, and agree in advance to be bound by the decision. They also specify in
advance what the issues of the dispute are and the procedure to be followed. Ibid., 252.
"Adjudication" is settling a dispute by submitting it to determination by an established court of
law. Ibid., 249.
2
Ibid., 231.
3
David L. Sills, ed., International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences Vol.7 (New York:
Crowell, Collier & Macmillan, 1968), 509.
4
Piano and Olton, 164.
5
Andrew Janos, "Authority and Violence: The Political Framework of Internal Wars," in Internal
War, Problems and Approaches, ed. Harry Eckstein (London: The Free Press, 1964), 130.
6
George A. Kelly and Linda B. Miller, Internal War and International Systems: Perspectives on
Method, Occassional Papers in International Affairs, No. 21 (Cambridge, Mass.: Center for
International Affairs, Harvard Univ., August 1969), 5. See also Modelski, "International
Settlement of Civil Strife," in International Aspects of Civil Strife, ed. James Rosenau
(Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Univ. Press, 1964), 149; and Robert R. Randle, The Origins of
Peace: A Study of Peacemaking and the Structure of Peace Settlements (New York: The Free
Press, 1973), 207-208.
7
See Keith Sutter, An International Law of Guerrilla Warfare (New York: St. Martin's Press,
1984), 1. Small and Singer point out that for the 68 years period between 1871 and 1939, 40
civil wars took place, while during the 31 years between 1946 and 77 alone 37 civil wars
occured. See Melvin Small and J. David Singer, "Conflict in the International System;
Historical Trends and Policy Futures," in Explaining War: Selected Papers from the
Correlates of War Project David Singer and Associates (Beverly Hills: Sage Publications,
1979), 68.
8
Small and Singer substantiate this view with data for the period between 1946-1977. During
this time, 37 civil wars took place and 63% of them were internationalized. Ibid.
9
Evan Luard, ed., The International Regulation of Civil Wars (New York: New York Univ. Press,
1972), 9.
10
The series of studies by Deutsch and Krauss have illustrated how the use of threats and
counterthreats in the bargaining process tend to lead to the escalation of the conflict, to fiercely
competitive behavior and even to the failure of the bargaining process itself. Morton Deutsch and
Robert Krauss, "Studies of Interpersonal Bargaining," Journal of Conflict Resolution 6 (1962):
52.
11
Paul Wehr, Conflict Resolution (Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1979), xv.
Chapter 2
Preconditions for Successful
Mediation of Civil Wars
In this chapter a series of hypotheses that identify conditions for the success
of mediation of civil wars will be developed. Before moving on with this
task, a brief overview of the state of the theory in this aspect of mediation
will be helpful.
Mediation theory is still in its infancy. There is a dearth of case studies,
and only few attempts at systematic and overarching theories exist. Of
course, one can find a good deal of isolated and disconnected research on
various aspects of mediation. However, they are full of contradictory
claims, and frustrate attempts to fully understand and effectively utilize this
valuable conflict resolution mechanism.
Moreover, the great bulk of the existing literature deals unevenly with
different aspects of mediation. For example, it treats international and labor
mediation extensively and ignores other contexts of mediation such as civil
wars. Given this lack of information, a serious question arises as to whether
valuable insights could be gained by transferring experiences from one
context of mediation to another. One determinant of the justifiability of
such transfer is, no doubt, the analogy of the context from which the
experience is transferred. Rose and Rose point out various criteria that
distinguish internal conflicts from international conflicts, and according to
these criteria, internal wars seem to share more characteristics with
international conflicts than with internal conflicts such as labor-
management disputes.12 Especially in wars of secession, where the
insurgents are trying to create their own new state, the actors in the conflict
are states or state-like actors. It has been noted that civil wars have an
important international component and are becoming increasingly
internationalized.13 Therefore, whenever a gap exists in the theoretical
discussion of mediation of civil wars, an attempt will be made to determine
whether it may be filled by looking at experiences in the mediation of
international conflicts.
Two veins of theory exist in the literature that identify factors that make
mediation successful. Proponents of the first assume that the success or
failure of mediation depends heavily on the mediator. Based on this
presumption much of the literature attempts to identify desirable
characteristics and skills for the mediator and to outline appropriate tactics
and strategies that could be utilized in mediation.14 The second group
challenges these premises concerning the importance of idiosyncratic
factors to successful mediation arguing that the scope for effective
mediation is much narrower and that, in certain kinds of disputes, the
attributes and tactics of the mediator could be only marginal factors at best
Thus, they attempt to identify various environmental factors to explain the
success of mediation efforts.15
The aim of this chapter is to develop a series of hypotheses which
identify conditions that facilitate success in the mediation of civil wars.
Works that attempt to isolate conditions favorable to the success of
mediation in general are very few; and there has been practically no effort
to examine how those conditions relate to civil wars. Modelski's work is the
only one that comes close. However, it does not deal with mediation per se,
but with conditions that favor negotiations for peaceful settlement of
internal wars. Since whatever is conducive to the peaceful settlement of an
internal war will also be useful for its mediation, Modelski's work will be
used as a point of departure for the analysis undertaken in this chapter. As
the analysis progresses, the factors identified by Modelski will be critiqued
and expanded by relating and synthesizing them with other relevant works.
The following sections examine conditions which could be identified as
essential for the success of mediating civil wars:
Stalemate
One of the most important preconditions for effective third party
intermediary intervention is stalemate. It has been defined as a state of
affairs:
in which neither side, given its aims, has the resources to overwhelm the
other (absolutely, or without incurring unacceptable losses)....Stalemate
creates between the parties that situation of balance without which
negotiations cannot properly begin. (Emphasis added.)26
Dealing with this concept is very confusing because it has been given a
multitude of connotations and implications by various authors.
One concept interchangeably used with stalemate is "power parity."
Many have argued that the probability of the success of an intermediary's
effort is related to the existence of at least a rough parity of power between
the conflicting parties.27 They justify this argument by saying that if there is
a marked difference in power between the contenders, the stronger party
would expect total victory and would have no incentive to accept
mediation. The stronger party may even view the mediator as a stumbling
block towards the achievement of victory and may either not cooperate with
him or her, or may tend to use the latter as an instrument for facilitating
surrender.28 "It goes strongly against the grain of human nature to seek a
negotiated solution when one can be imposed merely by demanding it"29
On the other hand, power parity could also be competitive and escalatory
and thus endanger the success of mediation. The balance of power theory
has been criticized on the grounds that it leads to escalation and show down
of force in an attempt by each party to upset the balance since each party
has an equal chance of winning or losing.30
Part of the apparent inconsistency between these two lines of argument
arises from the confusion created by the interchangeable use of the terms
"parity" and "stalemate". These two terms do not necessarily have the same
implications. Power parity could exist merely at the level of untested
perceptions; while stalemate implies that the parity has been actually tested
by confrontation and that the conflict is deadlocked. If the balance exists
merely on a perceptual level, it is likely to be competitive and escalatory.
Therefore, especially when viewed in conjunction with the other
precondition identified so far, "that the capability of the parties for violence
and mischief must be demonstrated", it makes more sense to talk of
"stalemate" rather than mere "parity of power" as a precondition for
successful mediation.
However, mere stalemate does not seem to be enough. Its existence may
not necessarily lead to a search for mediation unless the state of deadlock
created exacts a "high and rising cost" from the protagonists.31 The desire to
cut the rising cost provides an incentive to settle the conflict. However, if
the intervention takes place too long after the parties have decided to incur
the "high and rising cost", each party could resist political settlement
because the more it has spent in pursuit of its goals the more it will hesitate
to withdraw. Withdrawal from the conflict might be considered a "betrayal
of those who have already lost their lives," and might imply an admission
that they have spent all their resources on something unattainable.32 This
would reflect poorly on the political judgment of the leaders of the
conflicting parties and could threaten their ability to stay in power. Thus,
intervention must take place at the time when the parties are expecting a
high and rising cost, but before it is incurred. This calls again for precision
timing and finetuning.
Based on the concept of equality of power, a mediation strategy known as
"empowerment," which has special relevance for civil wars, has been
developed. Where power is grossly asymetrical in its distribution, it is
argued that the third party must help the weaker party empower itself before
meaningful negotiation and settlement can occur. Wehr explains the concept
of "empowerment" as follows:
Interests at Stake
Some argue that the issues of the conflict have an important bearing on
the success or failure of mediation. The claim is that some issues lend
themselves to mediation and others do not. The definition of these issues,
however, is replete with contradictions. In abstract, one might argue that
some issues are basically zero-sum, leave no room for accommodation and
therefore no space for negotiation and compromise. Disputes arising from
core values deeply held by the parties might serve as an example of this
situation since they end by being basically judgments of right and wrong.
Territorial issues have also been considered to belong in the category of
nonmediatable issues. It has been argued that the reason for the
intractability of the Middle East conflict is the territorial nature of the
issues.36 Comparatively, economic and power-sharing conflicts lend
themselves to negotiation and mediation. However, even such a broad
classification is unsatisfactory. Issues that ostensibly appear zero-sum at the
beginning could be converted into positive-sum issues by the involvement
of a skillful mediator who could help the parties reduce their perceptual
rigidities and mutual incompatibility by redefining the issues in new and
interesting ways. Also, the nature and characteristics of the issues could
change or acquire different negotiable dimensions as the conflict
progresses. In the context of civil wars, it is possible to argue that wars of
secession and territorial independence might be among those issues having
the appearance of a zero-sum game, and might therefore be difficult to
mediate. It is easy to imagine why a state may be unwilling to negotiate its
own disintegration. However, the conflict could start as a movement for
secession, and the point of settlement could be political autonomy within
the framework of one state, which is comparatively more amenable to
negotiation. It is risky, therefore, to dismiss any issue as being inappropriate
for mediation.
Instead of looking at the content of the issues, a more helpful way of
determining their appropriateness for mediation might be to look for their
complexity or multidimensionality. It is possible to contend that a complex
or multidimensional issue lends itself to mediation because it creates more
possibilities for tradeoffs. Since not all the dimensions of the issue may be
of equal importance to the two parties, a willingness to compromise on
some of the issues in return for concession on the others might be created.
Alternatively, if it is a single issue conflict or is presented as such in the
negotiations, it would generate the perception of "lose-all" or "win-all" and
the mediator's flexibility would be severely restricted. One strategy
emanating from this is that the mediator could break up the issue into
negotiable sub-units and start to negotiate from the less difficult sub-issues
and work up to the more difficult ones. This could build a benevolent cycle
of good will, flexibility, confidence in the process, and an attitude of
cooperation.
(c) listening: "active listening," helping parties to vent hostility and frustration;
(d) sense of timing; judging when conflict is receptive to intervention, when negotiations are
appropriate;
(e) trust and credibility development establishing "credentials," trust relationships with conflict
parties and between them, intervenor objectivity;
(h) imagination: the capacity for elimiating impasses through imaging creative alternatives,
recombining alternative solution or parts thereof, priority goals reranking,
(i) joint-costing: helping conflict parties to accurately assess the costs of conflict to each, and the
potential benefits of resolving it; and
(j) crisis management minimization of hostility and violence in extremely tense conflict
situtations through such measures [as] ...controlling access to weapons of violence on all sides,
[and] rumor control.48
and
-that the issues for the negotiation be multiple and many-sided.
Under the third group, the characteristics and skills of the mediator, the
following conditions were identified:
-that the mediator should manifest the variety of skills and characteristics
listed on page 22 and page 26.
-that the mediator should have leverage over the conflict parties,
and
-that the mediator be a representative of a nonpolitical, nongovernmental
international body or at least have the backing of such an institution.
The underlying claim of the discussion so far is that if these conditions
exist, mediation of civil wars has a higher likelihood of success. A question
arises, however, whether the list of conditions needing to be satisfied is too
formidable to make mediation appear impracticable in many situations
which may not manifest all the required characteristics. One wonders,
therefore, whether all the conditions enumerated are equally important or if
they could be ranked according to their importance to the success of the
mediation effort.
By examining the strength of the arguments about the importance of
these conditions marshalled by various authors, it might be possible to
narrow down the list to a smaller set of conditions without which mediation
would have no chance of success.
The existence of stalemate was considered to be a very important
condition by many authors, even though it was framed in many different
ways. (See, for example, Young, Cot, Modelski, Ott, Wehr, Liska, and
Touval cited earlier.) Of course, in order for stalemate to facilitate
successful mediation, it was argued that it must be paired with other factors
like high and rising cost for nonsettlement and a relatively low intensity
level of conflict.
This does not mean, however, that even such an elaborately qualified
stalemate condition alone is sufficient It must be accompanied by a
mediator who is well-qualified and possesses all the required resources.
Even though the sufficiency of the characteristics and qualifications of the
mediator has been disputed in the literature,55 it cannot be denied that
chances for successful mediaton would be higher if the required condition
of stalemate was supplemented by a well-qualified and skilled mediator.
In addition, there is consensus among many authors that some issues are
mediatable and others are not. Even though there has been no final
agreement on exactly what these issues are, it seems to be established that
they must be essentially non-zero-sum and that they must be
multidimensional.
While each of these three conditions may be insufficient to make
mediation of civil wars successful, viewed cumulatively or jointly, a group
of conditions can be formulated (consisting of stalemate, qualified and
skilled mediator, and the nature of the issues), which could be considered
both necessary and sufficient This way, it could be argued that a mediation
effort would be worthwhile in all situations where at least these three
conditions are satisfied, even though ail the other characteristics are not
present.
Moreover, a further examination of the long list of conditions reveals that
the mediator is not entirely dependent on the existence of all of them before
intervention. Some of the conditions could, to a certain extent, be
influenced by the mediator. For example, there might be situations where
stalemate might have existed in fact, but that the parties might continue
their fighting, either because of their lack of awareness of the stalemate, or
out of the unrealistic hope that they will attain their objectives. The
mediator can more quickly avail of the benefits of stalemate by using his or
her skills and trusted relationship with the parties to articulate and make
visible to them the existence of stalemate and to impress upon them that the
continuation of their conflict might not lead to the attornment of their
objectives.
The condition called "the clear identity and inner cohesion of the conflict
parties" could also be influenced by the intermediary. As part of the
empowerment strategy, the intermediary could help resolve disagreements
between factions within the conflict parties, by aiding them to negotiate
their differences and to fomulate common positions with the mediation
process in mind. This would encourage not only a wider support for the
mediation, but also foster inner cohesion which is one of the important
requisites for success.
Thus, the pessimism about the feasibility of mediating civil wars which
might arise from the apparently long list of conditions that must be satisfied
may not be justified. This, hopefully would encourage more frequent resort
to mediation as an approach to peacemaking than has been the case in the
past.
12
See Arnold and Caroline Rose, "Intergroup Conflict and Its Mediation," International Social
Science Bulletin 6 (1954): 28.
13
See George A. Kelly and Linda B. Miller, Internal War and International Systems: Perspectives
on Method (Cambridge, Mass.: Center for International Affairs - Harvard University, 1969);
James Rosenau, ed., International Aspects of Civil Strife (Princeton, N.J., Princeton
University Press, 1964), Chapter 3; Keith Sutter, An International Law of Guerilla Warfare
(New York: St. Martin's Press, 1984); and Small and Singer, "Conflict in the International
System; Historical Trends and Policy Futures," in Explaining War: Selected Papers from the
Correlates of War Project (Beverly Hills: Sage Publications, 1979).
14
See for example Oran R. Young, The Intermediaries: Third Parties in International Crisis
(Princeton, N.J., Princeton Univ. Press, 1967); J.P. Cot, International Concilliation (London:
Europa Pubications, 1972); Arthur S. Meyer, "Functions of the Mediator in Collective
Bargaining," in Industrial Peacemaking (New York, Columbia University Press, 1962);
Elmore Jackson, Meeting of Minds: A Way to Peace through Mediation (New York: McGraw
Hill, 1952); Roger Fisher, International Mediation: A Working Guide (Boston: International
Peace Academy, 1978); and Ann Douglas, Industrial Peacemaking (New York, Columbia
University Press, 1962).
15
See Marvin Ott, "Mediation as a Method of Conflict Resolution: Two Cases," International
Organization 26 (1976): 596-618; and Carl Stevens, "Mediation and the Role of the Neutral,"
in Frontiers to Collective Bargaining, eds., John T. Dunlap and Niel W. Chamberlain (New
York: Harper & Row, 1967); see also Daniel Frei, "Erfolgsbedingungen fur
Vermittlungsaktionen in Inlernationalen Konfiikten," Politsche Vierterljahresschri 16 (1975).
16
George Modelski, "International Settlement of Internal Wars," in International Aspects of Civil
Strife,ed., James Rosenau (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Univ. Press, 1964), 142.
17
See for example Lewis A. Coser, The Functions of Social Conflict (Glencoe, III.: The Free
Press, 1956), 73 & 88. The same view is expressed by Lincoln P. Bloomfield and Amelia C.
Leiss, Controlling Small Wars: A Strategy for the 1970s (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1969),
27.
18
Oti, 616.
19
Ibid.
20
Frei, 454.
21
His reason is that the supporters, especially when they are super powers, have a common
interest in not letting local conflict escalate to the nuclear level and perhaps also a common
tacit agreement not to risk the influence they have gained through the conflict by its
intensification.
22
Modelski, "International Settlement," 142.
23
Ibid.
24
Frei, 463.
25
Jackson, 27.
26
Modelslci, "Intenational Settlement," 143.
27
See Joseph Himes, Conflict and Conflict Management (The University of Georgia Press,
Athens, 1980), 240; Saadia Touval, The Peace Brokers (Princeton N.J.: Princeton Univ. Press,
1983), 9; Young, The Intermediaries: Third Parties in International Crisis, 43-44; George
Liska, Nations in Alliance: The Limits of Interdependence (Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press,
1962), 204; and Ott, 616.
28
Keith R. Legg and James F. Morrison, Politics and the International System, An Introduction
(New York: Harper & Row, 1971), 284. See also Arthur Meyer, "Function of the Mediator in
Collective Bargaining," Industrial and Labor Relations Review 13 (1960): 60.
29
Modelski, "International Settlement," 149.
30
See A.F.K. Organski World Politics (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1961), 293; and Quincy
Wright, "The Escalation of International Conflicts," Journal of Conflict Resolution 9 (1965),
441-442.
31
See Ott, 616.
32
Frank Edmead, Analysis and Prediction in International Mediation, UNITAR, PS No. 2, (New
York: UNITAR, 1971), 9.
33
Paul Wehr, Conflict Regulation (Boulder, Colo: Westview Press, 1979), 37-38. See also Roger
Fisher, International Conflict for Bginners (New York: Harper & Row 1969); and Adam
Curle, Making Peace (London: Tavistock Publications, 1971).
34
Modelski, "International Settlement," 143.
35
This model is analogous to national systems where the government assumes the role of the
prosecutor and the judge at the same time, but different arms of the government assume these
duties, A similar pattern exists in the division of labor between the General Assembly and the
Secretariate of the UN in handling international conflicts.
36
Touval, 8.
37
The list is based on the abridged summary provided by Ott, 599.
38
For Wehr, respect includes credibilty as someone with past success in settling disputes. Wehr,
50. Moreover, Frei adds a qualification here and warns that too much respect could be
detrimental. He contends that success in mediation is hindered if the mediator is either too
prominent or too insignificant.
39
See the next section for a detailed discussion of this characteristic.
40
See Frei, 482; and Cot, 12, for example.
41
Young, "Intermediaries, Additional Thoughts on Third Parties," 56.
42
C. H. Yarrow, Quaker Experiences in International Conciliation (New Haven, Conn.: Yale Univ.
Press, 1978), 256.
43
Some observers have criticized the use of excessive leverage in the Mid-East negotiations of the
early 1970s by US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger because it created a situation in which
each party was negotiating with Kissinger rather than with each other for whatever
concession the United States would give them. See Roger Fisher, "Playing the Wrong Game?"
in Dynamics of Third Party Intervention, ed., Jeffrey Rubin, 95-121.
44
Robert Walton, Interpersonal Peacemaking: Confrontations and Third-Party Consultation,
(Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley, 1969.)
45
See Arthur Lall, Modern International Negotiation: Principles and Practice (New York:
Columbia Univ. Press, 1966), 100; and Frei, 484.
46
Ibid.
47
Yarrow, 278.
48
Wehr, 51-52.
49
Jackson, Meeting of Minds, 28.
50
Ibid., 28.
51
Edmead, 15.
52
Ibid.
53
Edmead, 16.
54
Ibid. Edmead, however, points out situations where this may not be the ease. He contends that
even though political leadership may change, bureaucratic and military leadeships are often
more permanent, and, depending on their importance in the society, may cause the original
commitment to persist.
55
See Ott, 597; and Touval, 17.
Part Two
Case Study
Chapter 3
The Origins of the Conflict
Until the end of the nineteenth century, the Sudan was not the political entity
it is today and had no fixed boundaries.59 About the fifteenth century,
Sennar, an ancient city in Northern Sudan, was the capital of a very strong
"arabized-negro" nation of the Fung. This nation extended north to the
border of Egypt, which was, at that time, under the Ottoman Empire. The
Fung Kingdom was seriously declining by the end of the eighteenth century
and it was eventually conquered in 1820 by Mohammed Ali, an Albanian,
who was the Viceroy of Egypt for the Ottoman Empire. In trying to establish
independence from the Arab faction in Egypt, he decided to build an army of
slaves and freed slaves who would be entirely loyal to him. Having
exhausted most of his resources in attempting to conquer Mecca, "he turned
his eyes southwards to the Sudan, the still unknown land from whence came
slaves, and which was rumored to contain gold and ivory in plenty,"60
Mohammed Ali thus began to make slave raids and to contract for the
delivery of young men from the Sudan, as slaves, to build an army which he,
as a foreigner in Egypt, could trust. As many as 5,000 captives were taken in
one of these raids. Some were kept in the army while others were sold.61
However, slavery was nothing new in the Sudan. Previous to the reign of
Mohammed Ali, slaves were either captured in war, bought in the slave
markets of Sennar, or taken on a much smaller scale during slave raids,
mainly for domestic work or labor in the fields.62 Nonetheless, Mohammed
Ali was responsible for starting the slave trade on a mass scale. His
administration in the Sudan was reported to have been specifically geared
for this purpose. It has been estimated that during the ninteenth century,
Arab slavers carried off about two million people from Southern Sudan.
Failing to find the fabled riches of the Southern Sudan, Mohammed Ali
relied upon the slave trade to provide him with wealth.63
Commencing in 1821, Mohammed Ali sent armies, commanded by his
sons, to the South to capture slaves in large numbers.64 "There was much
devastation in the South during this period, and inter-tribal warfare was
encouraged and exploited to facilitate the acquisition of slaves."65
By 1847, the "anti-slavery" sentiment that had begun in Europe had also
influenced the Sultan at Constantinople and he forbade slave trading in his
empire. But this trade was a very big business in the Sudan which would not
be easily stopped. In fact, the possession of firearms enabled the slave
traders to penetrate even further south. Some slave traders had become
powerful merchant-brigands, with their own forts and private armies of
enlisted slaves. Between 1869 and 1879, a tough struggle took place
between the Egyptian government, which had employed several European
soldiers and administrators, and the slavers.66
In 1869, the new ruler of Egypt, Khedive Ismael, employed Sir Samuel
Baker, an Englishman, to lead an expedition to the South to stop the slave
trade. Even though he was unsuccessful in suppressing it, he was able to
stretch Egyptian control to the borders of Uganda. In fact, according to
Albino, the slave trade had increased by 1870 and an estimated 12,000 to
15,000 slaves per annum were exported northwards to Kordofan or Darfur.67
Sir Samuel was succeeded by General Gordon, who was first named
Governor of one of the Southern provinces of the Sudan and then, Governor
General of the whole of the Sudan. His primary goal, like that of his
predecessor, was to pacify the country and suppress the slave trade; and he
seems to have succeeded in at least breaking up many of the slave
companies that had overrun the South.68
After the Round Table Conference failed, the facade of reconciliation broke
down. On July 8, 1965, an incident occurred between a Northern soldier
and a Southerner in Juba, in which the Northerner was wounded.
This caused the Muslim garrisons to run amok in the town: they
cordoned off certain districts along the Nile Bank, set fire to grass
roofed huts and shot the occupants as they emergedmany were drowned
when they jumped into the river to escape. Rioting did not die down
until late the following day....The Southerners claimed that over 3000
huts were burned, and the official Northern figure of those killed was
1,019 in the two days.158
On July 10, in an unsuccessful Anya Nya attack on the army head quarters
at Juba, government troops claimed they shot twenty-five "outlaws". In
Wau, the capital of Bahr el Gahzal, Southern eyewitnesses described how,
on July 11, 1965, seventy-five Southerners were surrounded at a wedding
party and shot by Northern soldiers. On the afternoon of the same day, the
Anya Nya attacked the army camp at Wau in reprisal. Several Northern and
a few Anya Nya soldiers were killed in the attack. The Anya Nya attack at
Wau caused Mahgoub to take an even tougher stance. He insisted that the
guerillas must be subdued, and on July 19, gave "the rebels an ultimatum to
surrender or face the consequences."159 Subsequently, a number of
atrocities took place in the South. O'Ballance called this period of heavy
death tolls a "black month". The violence in Wau was followed by an
incident in Rumbek on July 20, where soldiers allegedly shot up the town,
killing hundreds. At Warajwok, the men of the village were reportedly
rounded up and 187 shot on August 5, 1965.160 The Anya Nya also
committed atrocities and killings. On August 13, they attacked and killed
several Northerners near Wau. A few days later, they surrounded seventy
government soldiers from Khartoum, killing many before paratroopers
arrived to rescue the survivors.161 Unable to hit the guerillas, the
government soldiers usually made targets of the civilian population. As a
result, they burned many villages and killed or scattered many innocent
civilians.
The month of August was also marked by many violent activities.
Although it is difficult to verify all the claims and counterclaims, large
numbers of casualties occurred, among them many educated Southerners,
even though it was not clear whether the Northerners intended this, or
whether it was accidental. Many mission churches and schools suffered at
the hands of the military. "On the 13th of October, the Church Missionary
Society estimated that about half the churches in the South have been
destroyed."162
The government predicted that the rebels would be defeated by the end of
the year, and increased its budget for weapons and military expenditure in
the South. Government forces claimed large scale victories against the
Anya Nya. Southern leaders in exile claimed that they had driven all the
"Arabs" from the South, with the exception of the military and a few
merchants. At about this time, President Nkrumah of Ghana offered to
mediate between the Anya Nya and the Sudanese government. But Prime
Minister Mahgoub refused the offer on the grounds that the Southern
problem was an internal affair.163
By the end of 1965, it was estimated that in the South there were about
15,000 government soldiers164 and from 2,000 to 10,000 Anya Nya
forces165 Despite several bombing raids made on Anya Nya camps towards
the end of 1965, not much damage was sustained.166
The Anya Nya enjoyed free movement across the boundaries of Ethiopia,
Uganda, the Congo (Zaire), the Central African Republic and, to some
extent, Kenya. They were also allowed to establish military training camps
in some of these countries; and, in some instances, received aid and
encouragement from these governments or their allies.167 Even though
government forces claimed control over the cities, the Anya Nya were
making it difficult to move in the countryside. Between October 1966 and
February 1967, the Anya Nya destroyed approximately thirty-four bridges
and two tanks, stole medical supplies, captured several arms and
ammunition depots, killed or wounded thirty-three policemen and soldiers,
and killed about one hundred civilians.168 According to some accounts, the
government had been forced out completely from some areas and the rebels
were not only living there, but had started cultivation and had clean water
supply guarded by their own soldiers.169
In April 1966, the Prime Minister toured the South. He "could not travel
anywhere...except by plane or under heavy army escort" due to the lack of
security.170 During the tour, he ordered the formation of "peace villages"
where people were asked to come from the countryside and live under the
protection of the army. The aim was to cut the links of the Anya Nya with
the rural population, but the plan did not succeed, A few Southern
politicians who were in Uganda, moved to Southern Sudan and attempted to
form a provisional government for the South. This attempt failed because it
lacked the support of many Anya Nya fighters.
On July 25, 1966, a motion of censure against the government caused
Mahgoub to resign. He was replaced in December by Sadiq al Mahdi, a
descendant of the original Mahdi, the religious leader. The new Prime
Minister announced that he would take a different approach to the Southern
problem, although he would continue the policy of containment of the
rebels and the peace village program. He also declared his policy to be
"aimed at crushing the rebellion, and bringing about a dialogue with those
elements favoring a political solution."171 Skirmishes between the Anya
Nya and government forces continued. A large sweeping operation against
the Anya Nya which lasted fourteen days was carried out. The operation
was claimed to have killed a large number and to have taken 528 prisoners.
Sadiq also tried to restrict the movement of the Anya Nya across the
borders by improving his relations with neighbours like Uganda, the Congo,
the Central African Republic and Ethiopia, countries "in which many
Sudanese political leaders were engaged in hostile activities against the
Sudan."172
Uganda agreed "to cooperate [with the Sudan] to the extent of conducting
joint operations, by the Sudanese army and the Ugandan armed forces,
against the rebels. The refugees were moved away from the borders and the
Southern exiles were warned against carrying on hostile activities against
the Sudan. In some cases those who continued them were arrested."173 The
Congolese government agreed to cooperate with Khartoum and halt
movement of arms and rebel troops across their common border.174 The
Congolese are also reported to have agreed to cooperate in returning the
refugees who wished to go back.175
In addition, Sadiq also made various agreements with Ethiopia. On July
26, 1966, a joint boundary commission to demarcate the whole frontier
between the two countries was established. In January 1967, the Sudan
Foreign Minister visited Ethiopia and, in return, Emperor Haile Selassie of
Ethiopia visited the Sudan in February. Both governments affirmed that
they would not interfere in each other's internal affairs, that the Sudan
would not assist the Eritreans, who were fighting to secede from Ethiopia
and that Ethiopia would not aid the Anya Nya. However, all these
agreements of cooperation between the Sudan and its neighbours did not
last long and the Anya Nya were not much restricted from movement across
the borders.
In the meantime, the Twelve Man Committee, formed by the Round
Table Conference in March 1965, had continued to meet and had produced
a report and recommendations. It suggested that neither separation nor a
centralized government was suitable and recommended various schemes of
power-sharing between the North and South. However, the Prime Minister
did not want to hear these recommendations and the report was not made
public.176
The Communist Party, which had been banned by the previous Prime
Minister was now striving hard for recognition, although neither the
government nor the various political parties wanted to grant them any seats
in the National Assembly. On December 28, 1966, a group of young
communist officers failed in a coup d'etat against the existing government.
One of the officers involved was Colonel Gaafar al-Numeiri, who later
became President of the Sudan. About 400 people were arrested including
Numeiri. In January 1967, the government decided to release all the
civilians and some military officers. Among them was Numeiri who was
relieved of his eastern command and sent to command the infantry school.
"Being told that there would be no further promotion for him simply made
him a more determined revolutionary."177 Premier Sadiq would not allow
the re-establishment of the Communist Party, even though creation of a
Socialist Party was allowed because of demands from crowds
demonstrating in the streets.
In May 1967, Sadiq was defeated in a vote of confidence and
Mohammed Mahgoub returned to power. The reappearance of Mahgoub did
not inspire confidence among Southerners. In fact, it served only as a
reminder of his repressive policies. As expected, "he reintroduced his
former harsh laws and regulations which gave virtual license to his soldiers
in the South to keep order as they thought fit."178
On January 10, 1968, the government announced amnesty for all those
who had taken part in the coup against the government and those who had
fled the country, if they gave themselves up. The promise of amnesty,
however, encouraged no Southern refugees to return. Fighting continued
between government forces and the Anya Nya.
The Anya Nya gradually transformed themselves into a recognizable
guerilla force in the period between 1965 and 1970. During these years they
acted independently of the politicians claiming authority over them. The
force was not well-coordinated within, mainly due to ethnic differences.179
Each command was more or less an autonomous unit and refused to
cooperate with either the other regional commanders or with the politicians.
Southern politicians were also very much divided in their aims. The Sudan
Unity Party and SANU members within the Sudan were willing to accept a
united Sudan. On the other hand, SANU members in exile wanted
separation. The Anya Nya leaders claimed that they were fighting for
complete secession. The Southern Front advocated federation as long as a
plebiscite was allowed in the South.
In order to forge unity, a meeting of Southern politicians was called and
the Southern Sudan Provisional Government (SSPG) was formed in August
1967, with the aim of establishing a government in the areas controlled by
the Anya Nya. However, besides its lack of firm control over the Anya Nya,
it had little Southern support.180
Moreover, although it was estimated that the Anya Nya had grown to
about 10,000, they were poorly armed and undisciplined, with desertions,
divisions, and quarrels along tribal lines. Most of the diverse groups within
the Anya Nya lacked political education and motivation.181 The SSPG, like
the Anya Nya, was infested with tribal rivalries and was further dividing
and splintering itself. In March 1969, a faction took over its leadership and
renamed the SSPG the Nile Provisional Government, with the express
purpose of fighting for complete independence and Southern unity. In
September 1969, another faction splintered and formed the Anyidi
Revolutionary Government Soon after, two other contending governments
were created, one within the Southern Sudan called the Sue River
Revolutionary Government, the other in exile in East Africa called the
Sudan-Azania Government. Most of these governments claimed to be the
sole representatives of the people of Southern Sudan.182
External Involvement
The alliance of Numeiri with the Communist Party had provided the
Soviet Union with an opportunity to be involved in the Sudan.
The Soviet support alone amounted to $150 million after the Arab-Israeli
war of 1967. In addition, Sudan is reported to have received military aid
from Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia.218 The Russians were reportedly
encouraging use of their doctrine of massive manpower and firepower on
the small Sudanese army and supposedly this was reducing the efficiency of
the army. Moreover, "the Russians persistently intermixed politics with
training, which grated on the ears of the religious-minded Sudanese."219
In addition to the involvement of the Soviet Union and its allies, the Arab
world was also providing backing to the Sudanese government in its
conflict with the South. Egypt was assisting the growing Sudanese air force,
by soliciting material and financial aid on behalf of the Sudan from the
Arab League nations of Libya, Saudi Arabia, and Algeria.220 It was alleged
that "Egyptian, and later Soviet, pilots flew attack missions to the South.221
Algeria also sent military and material supplies to the North.222
The Israelis were involved on the side of the SSLM. Since the Arab-
Israeli war of 1967, there were persistent allegations of Israeli involvement
on the side of the Anya Nya. After the war, they reportedly mounted a
diplomatic offensive in Africa to neutralize African sympathy for the Arab
countries. Thus, they improved their diplomatic relations with many
countries, increased their expert and technical aid, and even started military
training missions in Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, and Zaire. In February 1970,
the African Research Bulletin reported that "Israel is now able to supply
arms and military know-how...to the Christian South Sudanese
guerillas....The supplies are made possible by the 'military missions' Israel
has set up in the neighbouring countries of Kenya, Uganda, and the
Congo."223 The Israelis are reported to have dropped Soviet-made weapons
captured from the Arabs in the Six-Days War from an unmarked DC-3
aircraft at night from either Uganda or Ethiopia. In addition, the Israelis
were reported to have run training camps in Ethiopia and Uganda for the
Anya Nya near the borders. The weapons supplied included heavy machine
guns, hand-grenades, World War II rifles, and land mines.224 This military
help bolstered the morale of the Anya Nya and served to improve their
performance to the extent that they were able to control the countryside and
render the Northern Sudanese soldiers ineffective. Thus, two-thirds of the
Northern Sudanese army, along with Egyptian equipment and
reinforcements were effectively diverted from targeting at Israel. This
maneuver served the principal interest of Israel in the Sudan conflict.225
Some observers also note that Israel was acting as a surrogate for the United
States and other Western powers to deter Soviet expansion in Black Africa.
The Sudan's geographical position in the heart of Africa, and between the
Arab and the African worlds, rendered it an important strategic position for
any power, such as the Soviet Union, who might wish to expand its
influence.
Until 1970, relations between President Milton Obote of Uganda, and
Israel were very good. By 1970, however, Obote was moving closer to
Numeiri, and he turned down the request of an Israeli General to build
training facilities for Southern guerillas in north Uganda.226
In January 1917, General Amin overthrew Obote, and the latter sought
refuge in the Sudan. Amin had visited Israel in 1968, and had come back
impressed and favorably inclined towards the Israeli cause. He threw out
the Russian training mission that was operating in Uganda and replaced
them with Israelis to train his air force. Thus, another opportunity arose for
the Israelis to help the Anya Nya. General Amin reportedly had secret
contact with Colonel Lagu, the most important Anya Nya leader by then,
and Amin even visited his headquarters in the South, accompanied by two
Israeli officers on at least two occasions. He assisted the Anya Nya by
allowing supplies to cross the Ugandan border. On one occasion he
switched medical supplies intended for the Ugandan army to the Anya
Nya.227 O'Ballance claims Amin was able to recruit about 5,000
Southerners to help him overthrow Obote, and after he came to power, he
had about 3,000 Southern Sudanese in his army.228
When the Sudanese government saw the pro-Anya Nya sentiments of
General Amin, it not only gave refuge to Milton Obote, but also helped him
to recruit and train an armed force at a camp in the South which had been
captured from the Anya Nya. Thus, guarded by Northern Sudanese soldiers,
Obote was training forces hostile to General Amin.
On November 11, 1970, while Obote was still in power, an
internationally-known mercenary, Rolf Steiner, was captured in Kampala.
Obote, as a sign of his friendship with Numeiri, handed Steiner over to the
Sudan government. Beshir points out that there was pressure on Obote from
West Germany, Israel, and church organizations not to hand Steiner over to
the Sudan.229 Steiner is reported to have belonged to the Hitler Youth Corps
and the Nazi Storm Troopers. After the end of World War II he joined the
French Foreign Legion and fought in Indochina and Algeria. After that he
was employed as a mercenary and fought first in the Congo and later in the
Nigerian Civil War. During his trial in Khartoum in August 1971, he
testified that he, in cooperation with another British mercenary, Alexander
Gay, was involved in training the Anya Nya and acting as a liaison with
their external supporters. He is said to have testified that he was recruited
by some West German organizations who had raised about $20 million for
aid to the South. He was sent to the South allegedly with the cooperation
and direction of the Verona Fathers in Rome, who were involved in
missionary activities in the South until their expulsion in 1964. He also
testified that he built two airstrips for the transportation of supplies, and
constructed a hospital during his stay in the South.230 Steiner confirmed that
the Israelis had established bases and military training centers in the South
as well as in Ethiopia and Uganda close to the Sudanese borders.231
Similar activities were taking place in other neighbouring countries such
as Ethiopia, Zaire, Chad and even Kenya. Most of these countries had a
sizable number of Southern Sudanese refugees on their borders, and they
either encouraged or tolerated guerilla activities from these refugee camps
against the Sudan army. This might have been because of ethnic or other
affinities with the Anya Nya or because these governments, as in the case of
Ethiopia, may have had their own conflict with the Sudanese government,
and were using the insurgency in the Sudan for their own ends.
In addition, there was peripheral involvement by some Scandinavian and
other Western European countries like Germany, and multinational
organizations like Caritas International and Joint Church Aid, about whom
more will be said in chapter six. In Norway, the Association for Southern
Sudan was established, whose primary purpose was to publicize the plight
of Southern Sudan and to put pressure on governments and political parties
to take political action. The organization took the case of the Southern
Sudan to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights and urged the
investigation of the situation in the South by the commission.232 A
committee calling itself the South Sudan Action Committee was established
with its aim, among other things, to awaken "public interest as well as
official concern for the conflict in the Sudan.... [to] work through various
national and international channels...to gather, evaluate and publish material
on the political situation and the humanitarian need in the Sudan."233 By
April 1971, this group had raised between $7 and $8 million to send to the
South.234
The expulsion of the missionaries from the Sudan allegedly angered the
churches, and some of them aided the refugees or the Southern Sudanese
within Anya Nya-controlled territories, sending food, medicine, farming
implements, and other relief materials, some of which obviously got into
Anya Nya hands. This, according to some observers, helped save for the
Anya Nya scarce resources which could be used for the purchase of needed
items for their army and civil administration.235 Wai also points out that in
their efforts to raise funds the church organizations played a role in
publicizing the war.236
Today the same Western European church organizations which ran the
Uli airstrip in Biafra, supply large quantities of medical supplies, food
and clothing to the South Sudan refugees....At considerable risk, part of
this aid is crossing the border illegally into the South Sudan....There are
also plans for a "Uli-type" airstrip inside the South Sudan so relief can
be flown in....The French have relief supply lines all ready and
effective....In the neighbouring countries the United Nations relief
organizations and other bodies such as the Swedish Red Cross and the
World Council of Churches are pooling their resources to help
refugees.237
Beshir particularly mentions Caritas International, Caritas (West
Germany), Action Committee for Africa--Biafra and Southern Sudan (West
Germany), and the Verona Fathers (Italy) as being particularly active in
their support for varied motives. "Some looked at [the conflict] as a
religious war against Islam...and some as a fight against communism,"238
"Some [missionaries] may even have helped the Anya Nya get arms."239
By 1971, a stalemate had been created between the Anya Nya and the
Sudanese army with two-thirds of the Sudanese army tied down in the
South.240 At the same time, war casualties were mounting. By February
1972, some have estimated that as many as 500,000 Southerners had lost
their lives due to the conflict, either because of direct military violence or
dislocation, deprivation and disease; and hundreds of thousands more were
rendered homeless or driven into exile.241 There is no public record of
Northern casualties.
While these events were taking place in the political and military arenas
of the conflict, a process was uderway during 1970 and 1971 that eventually
brought about a negotiated settlement to the war.
116
Cecil Eprile, War and Peace in the Sudan, 1955-1972 (London: David & Charles, 1974), 39.
117
See Dunstan M. Wai, The African-Arab Conflict in the Sudan (New York: Africans Publishing
Co., 1981), 58-S9.
118
Report of the Commission of Inquiry into the Disturbances in the Southern Sudan During
August 1955, quoted in Wai, The African-Arab Conflict, 58.
119
Eprile, 39. To substantiate Eprile's interpretation, Wai, a Southern Sudanese, writes; "it is
difficult to establish its [the telegram's] authenticity, but it was not unlikely that the Prime
Minister could have sent such a message to his administration in the South....Moreover, the
substance in the alleged telegram reflected the attitude of some of the Northern
administrators." Wai, The African-Arab Conflict, 58.
120
Report of the Commission of Inquiry
121
Eprile, 40.
122
Ibid., 41.
123
Ibid.
124
Edgar O"Ballance, The Secret War in the SudaE: 1955-1972 (Hamden, Conn.: Archon Books,
1977), 39.
125
Ibid., 40.
126
Eprile, 42.
127
Report of the Commission of Inquiry cited in Eprile, 42.
128
David W. McClintock, "The Southern Sudan Problem: Evolution of an Arab-African
Confrontation," Middle East Journal 24 (1970): 466.
129
Report of the Commission of Inquiry
130
Eprile, 45.
131
Ibid.
132
Beshir, 73.
133
O'Ballance, 46.
134
According to Wai, Khalid did not feel he could manage the endless strife among the parties and
form a strong government, therefore "he confided his desire for the army to take over the
government." Wai, The African-Arab Conflict, 75.
135
Scherf, 9.
136
Beshir, Background to Conflict, 81-82.
137
Cecil Eprile, "Sudan: the Long War," in Conflict Studies, ed., Brian Cozier, No. 21 (March
1972): 6. An Anya Nya document alleges that there was "a government plan to move one and
a half million Arabs to the Southern Sudan, to be preceded by the mass arrest of all Southern
former Parliamentarians" and that this plan was "revealed to Southern leaders by an Arab
informant." The Anya Nya Strugg: Background and Objectives (South Sudan: South Sudan
Resistance Movement, 1970), 6. What is interesting is not whether these allegations were true
or not but that the Southerners believed them and acted on them.
138
Wai, The African-Arab Conflict, 90; and Beshir, Background to Conflict, 83.
139
Moharned O. Beshir, The Southern Sudan: From Conflict to Peace (London: C. Hurst & Co.,
1975), 53.
140
O'Ballance, 61.
141
Beshir, Background to Conflict, 84.
142
O'Ballance, 63.
143
Ibid., 61.
144
Beshir, Background to Conflict, 86.
145
Ibid.
146
A letter from SANU to the Prime Minister of the Sudan, November 1964. Quoted in Beshir,
Background to Conflict, Appendix 10.
147
Ibid.
148
See Beshir, From Conflict to Peace, 8-10.
149
Eprile, "The Long War", 7.
150
For a schematic presentation of the positions taken by the various groups in the conference, see
Wai, The African-Arab Conflict, 102-104.
151
William Deng of SANU reportedly encouraged his supporters within the Anya Nya to increase
their activities in order to "scare" the conferees into accepting federation. See The Economist
(August 14, 1965). See also Keith Kyle, "The Southern Problem in the Sudan," World Today
(December 1966), 515.
152
Beshir, Background to Conflict. 97. See also Wai, The African-Arab Conflict, 101.
153
Beshir, From Conflict to Peace, 6.
154
New York Times December 31, 1965.
155
O'Ballance, 80.
156
Clyde Mark, "Sudan, the Struggle Between North and South," The Library of Congress,
Legislative Reference Service, Washington, D.C. June 26, 1969.
157
Beshir, From Conflict to Peace, 26.
158
O'Ballance, 80.
159
McClintock, 471.
160
Eprile, War and Peace, 61.
161
O'Ballance, 83.
162
Ibid., 84.
163
Ibid., 85.
164
Mark, 15.
165
See The Washington Post, Feb. 20, 1966; the Washington Sunday Star, Dec. 25, 1966; and the
New York Times Sept., 12, 1968 for various estimates. McClintock points out that the Anya
Nya had 2,000 fighters and by mid-1960 "was able to tie down about 15,000 regulars and
absorb a major portion of Khartoum's...annual defence budget." McClintock, 470.
166
Beshir, From Conflict to Peace, 40-41.
167
Ibid., 35-37.
168
Ibid., 37.
169
Ibid. 37.
170
Ibid. 36
171
O'Ballance, 90.
172
Beshir, From Conflict to Peace, 40.
173
Ibid., 92.
174
McClinlock, 472.
175
Beshir, From Conflict to Peace,41.
176
O'Ballance, 92.
177
Ibid., 93.
178
Ibid., 95.
179
Wai, 110.
180
Beshir, From Conflict to Peace, 55.
181
Eprile, War and Peace, 55.
182
For a detailed description of the internal divisions and redivisions that were taking place within
the Southern movement, see Wai, The African-Arab Conflict, 110-115.
183
O'Ballance, 104
184
Ibid., 105.
185
Peter Mogga, The Addis Ababa Agreement, A Progressive Reconciliation (Khartoum:
Government Printing Press, 1974): 3.
186
Ministry of National Guidance, Policy Statement on the Southern Sudan (Khartoum:
Government Printing Press, 1969).
187
Wai, The African-Arab Conflict, 145-146.
188
Lobban, 25.
189
See the New York Times, Jan. 2, 1970; and the Christian Science Monitor Jan. 14, 1970, for
details.
190
O'Baliance, 106.
191
Ibid., 106.
192
Eprile, War and Peace, 130.
193
O'Ballance, 107.
194
Ibid., 123.
195
Sec for example, the claims of the Anya Nya's military success in the Grass Curtain 2 (July
1971), and similar claims by the government of the Sudan against the Anya Nya in the
government newspaper, Sudan News (March 1971).
196
O'Ballance, 125-126.
197
Interview given by Joseph Lagu to William H. Dorsey, Sept 5, 1972, "A Southerner's View of
the Sudanese Settlement," in New Middle East (October 1972): 17.
198
Eprile, War and Peace, 99.
199
Dunstan Wai, ed., The Southern Sudan: The Probem of National Integration (London: Frank
Cass, 1973), 163-164.
200
John Waterbury, "The Sudan in Quest of Surplus," American University Fieldstaff Reports, Part
II Domestic and Regional Politics, Vol 21, no. 9., 1976.
201
O'Ballance, 136.
202
Storrs McCall, interview with the author, Balsom Lake, Ontario, Canada, August 6, 1981.
203
Joseph Lagu, "The Dynamics of Cooperation between the Anya Nya and the People," Grass
Curtain 1 (April 1971). See also Eprile, War and Peace, 100-102.
204
Wai, The African-Arab Confict, 212.
205
Eprile, War and Peace, 99.
206
April 28, 1971 memorandum, "News from Norway," World Council of Churches Archives, 2.
207
Eprile, War and Peace, 108.
208
Ibid., 125.
209
O'Ballance, 108.
210
Eprile, War and Peace, 127.
211
O'Ballance, 111.
212
ibid., 113.
213
ibid.
214
Ibid.
215
Lobban, 25.
216
Beshir, From Conflict to Peace, 83.
217
Wai, African-Arab Conflict, 134-135.
218
Trevor N. Dupuy, Grace R. Hayes, and John A.C. Andrews, The Almnac of World and Military
Power, 3rd ed. (New York: R.R. Bowker Co., 1974), 259-261.
219
O'Ballance, 121.
220
Wai, African-Arab Conflict, 134.
221
O'Ballance, 118.
222
Wai, African-Arab Conflict, 134.
223
Africa Research Bulletin, February 1-28, 1970.
224
Scherf, 24.
225
Wai, African-Arab Conflict, 139.
226
O'Ballance, 127.
227
Ibid.
228
Ibid.
229
Besbir, From Conflict to Peace, 95.
230
Keesing's Contemporary Archives November 13-20, 1971, 24931.
231
O'Ballance, 128.
232
Beshir, From Conflict to Peace, 90.
233
April 28, 1971 memorandum, "News from Norway", World Council of Churches Archives, 2.
234
Ibid.
235
See the interview with Burgess Carr in chapter six.
236
Wai, African-Arab Conflict, 133.
237
Africa Research Bulletin, February 1-28, 1970.
238
Beshir, From Conflict to Peace, 91.
239
Tracy Early, "What's Going on in the Sudan?" New World Outlook (September 1971): 17.
240
Wai, African-Arab Conflict, 136.
241
O'Ballance, 13. For different estimates of the casualties of the war, see Leo Kemper, Genocide
(Penguine Books, 1981), 69-70.
Chapter 5
Early Mediation Efforts
Seventeen years of civil war in the Sudan came to an end in February
1972, when both conflicting parties, the Sudanese government and the
Anya Nya, signed the Addis Ababa Agreement on the Problem of Southern
Sudan at the end of a series of negotiations that lasted approximately two
years. Several organizations played a part in the series of negotiations, but
the World Council of Churches (WCC) and its affiliate, the All Africa
Conference of Churches (AACC) assumed the most important mediatory
role. This and the following chapter will examine the various mediation
efforts in order to fully understand the role of third parties in the Sudan
peace process.
Before the resolution was passed, however, the conference decided to hear
the points of view of the parties in the Sudan conflict. The Second Secretary
of the Sudan Embassy in London and Mading de Garang of the Southern
Sudan Association were invited to address the conference and present their
respective points of view. According to Haq, both guest speakers were
seated next to one another in the conference hall and during lunch, and
some informal contact took place between them. After the presentation, the
conference resolved that "the MCF should endeavour to use its good offices
to bring about some kind of rapprochement between exiled Southerners and
the Sudan [government]".249 Barbara Haq was mandated to explore the
possibilities.
The first steps taken were merely exploratory and the MCF served as a
mailpouch between the representatives of the conflicting parties. Haq
writes:
From the perspective of Joseph Garang and other communists, the Southern
politicians "were seen as an obtrusive petit-bourgeois elite, essentially
counter-revolutionary in class terms, and furthermore manipulated by the
imperialist forces who controlled the Anya Nya movement"259 Thus, it was
not clear that Joseph Garang was really interested in opening up any
discussion or negotiation with other Southerners about how to solve the
Southern problem. At a press conference after his first meeting with Haq,
Garang stated that his intention was to "simply encourage the Southerners
to join us in the implementation of regional autonomy."260 On the other
hand, the Southern elites and politicians considered Garang more of a
communist than a Southerner, and that might be why they insisted on
having an independent observer at their meeting with Garang.
Notwithstanding these suspicions and countersuspicions, Joseph Garang
and Mading de Garang met They agreed to allow six Southern
representatives, from various factions and groups inside the country, to
leave the Sudan so that they, along with Mading de Garang and Anya Nya
representatives could map out the future course of possible negotiations. Six
people were chosen by de Garang and a meeting was planned to be held in
either London or Kampala.261
On October 6, 1970, Haq wrote to Joseph Garang announcing the names
of the six people that Mading de Garang had suggested and "in whom they
[the Southerners in exile] have confidence." She also confides the fact that
Mading de Garang:
realises what an error it was to have brought Mr. McDermot, the
Chairman of the Southern Sudan Association Ltd., along with him when
he met you recently and has agreed not to involve him in any further
discussion. There is a possibility that he will break away from this
Association in any case, as he now realizes that they do not want any
settlement to be reached between exiled Southerners and Sudan.262
In October 1970, the second delegation, this time comprised of Members
of Parliament, who were also MCF members, visited the Sudan. This
delegation was acc-ompanied not only by Haq, but also by the Sudanese
Ambassador in London. Haq says that Mading de Garang was invited to go
with the delegation under a guarantee of safe conduct, but refused to go.263
However, he is reported to have asked the delegation to visit certain places
in the South and talk with certain Southern personalities there. The
delegation visited only two of the nine places it was requested to see, but
did manage to talk with most of the people suggested.264 According to
some observers, it was unlikely that the Sudanese government would have
taken the delegates to places where the military weakness of the
government was manifest, but, supposedly, that was the point that Mading
de Garang was trying to make.265
The delegation, on its return to London on October 28, 1970, issued a
press release:
From all our enquiries we were satisfied that this rebellion has virtually
come to an end in the provinces of Bahr el Ghazal and Upper Nile,
except for small sporadic outbursts. It persists mainly in certain
southern parts of Equatoria....This evidence convinced us that the
rebellion was being fomented and encouraged by external reactionary
forces which are anxious to prevent unity and progress towards a
socialist Sudan.266
The statement was signed by Barbara Haq and concludes by saying: "We
express our sincere hope that Sudan will advance along this path despite all
obstacles, and upon our return to Britain will strive to win solidarity in
support of this aim..."267
On November 5, 1970, Barbara Haq wrote an article in the Nile Mirror:
It is significant that the Southern problem had not attracted world
attention until May 1969; and that it is only since the Revolutionary
Council declared its aim that reactionary forces, including the CIA, are
throwing all their strength behind organizations like the Southern Sudan
Association Ltd., [of which Mading de Garang and other Southerners
were members] and the Minority Rights Group in London, whose aims
are in direct opposition to those of the people of the Sudan. We
therefore feel it of great importance that our organization [MCF] should
be in a position to oppose the falsehoods emanating from those sources,
by obtaining first hand information such as the British delegation has
been able to acquire during their tour of the South.268
Mading de Garang is reported to have been furious when he saw this
article, and refused to do anything more with the MCF. This seems to have
ended the MCF's involvement in the peace process between the conflicting
parties in the Sudan Civil War.
Describing this situation in a letter dated December 18, 1970 to the
World Council of Churches, who took up the role of the third party after the
MCF involvement was terminated, Mading de Garang wrote: "We have had
the MCF as a go-between in London, but we are finding them to be
committed to the Numeiri Government It is therefore very difficult for any
progress to be made."269
242
Edgar O'Ballance, The Secret War in the Sudan: 1955-1972 (Hamden, Conn.: Archon Books, 1977),
92.
243
Mading de Garang also makes note of this attempt by President Obote in his letter to the
Commission of the Churches on International Affairs of the World Council of Churches on
July 30, 1971, WCC Archives, Geneva.
244
O'Ballance, 85.
245
After many former colonies became independent, the Movement for Colonial Freeedom
changed its name to Liberation to signify its role and its general concern in the early 1970s.
246
Barbara Haq, interview with author, London, April 17, 1982.
247
This might have been as a result of the publication of the Grass Curtain which had just started
widely publicizing the plight of the Southern Sudan in England.
248
Barbara Haq, "Statement on Activities of Liberation (MCF) on the Question of Resolving the
Problem of Southern Sudan," April 1972.
249
Ibid.
250
Ibid.
251
Ibid.
252
M. Louise Pirouel, "The Achievement of Peace in the Sudan," Journal of East African Research
and Development 6 (1976): 117.
253
Barbara Haq, letter to Joseph Garang, August 10, 1970.
254
Ibid.
255
Mohamed Omer Beshir, The Southern Sudan: From Conflict to Peace (New York: Barnes &
Noble, 1975), 103.
256
Pirouet, 119.
257
Barabara Haq, interview. Haq does not seem to be alone in this perception. Tracy Early writes in
the New Worid Outlook: "If people in London are backing the Southern Sudan Association,
they are perhaps influenced by the fact that the Soviet Union is taking Britain's place as the
main trading partner of the Sudan and that the Sudan Government has seized British banks
and other commercial interests." Tracy Early, "What's Going on in the Sudan," New World
Outlook (September 1970): 16.
258
President Gaafar Mohammed Numeiri, "June 9th Declaration," in A Revolution in Action:
Regional Autonomy for the South (Khartoum: Government Printing Press, 1969), 6.
259
John Howell, "Horn of Africa, Lessons from the Sudan Conflict," International Affairs 54 (July
1978): 423. Howell points out that this view was never publicity stated explicitly, but it was
clearly stated by Joseph Garang in a talk at the University of Khartoum in March 1970. This
was just before he had his first conference with Barbara Haq in London.
260
Ibid. 424.
261
Barbara Haq, "Statement on Activities," 3.
262
Barbara H»q, letter to Joseph Garang, October 6, 1970.
263
It seems obvious that de Garang would have lost his credibility with the SSLM had he gone.
264
MCF, Press Statement, October 28, 1970.
265
Pirouet, 119.
266
MCF, Press Statement.
267
Ibid.
268
Barbara Haq, Nile Mirror (November 5, 1970), 4.
269
Mading de Garang, letter to Kodwo Ankrah of the WCC, December 28, 1970, WCC Archives,
Geneva.
Chapter 6
The WCC and AACC Mediation
As relations between the Movement for Colonial Freedom and Mading
de Garang deteriorated, communications between the SSLM and the Sudan
government came to a stand still until the task of "middle man" was
assumed by the World Council of Churches (WCC) and the All Africa
Conference of Churches (AACC). This chapter describes the activities of
these two organizations, and the evolution of the peace process under their
auspices.
It was around July 1970, that the WCC started to show signs of serious
concern about the situation in the Sudan. This was not, however, the first
time that this organization and its affiliate, the AACC, had acted as third
parties in the Sudan conflict For a better understanding of these
organizations' joint peacemaking effort, a brief look at the history of their
activities would be helpful.
Preliminary Negotiations
As planned in the Nairobi meeting in April, the WCC/AACC delegation
and the Sudanese government met in Khartoum on May 15, 1971. The
government was represented by the acting Minister of Foreign Affairs, the
Minister of Works, Abel Alier, and the Minister of Local Government
Joseph Garang, the Minister of Southern Affairs was not present In this
meeting, the WCC/AACC delegation was said to have been pleasantly
surprised that its study was well-received by the government. Even though
this study was somewhat critical of the government's handling of the
Southern problem, it was described as fair and objective by the government
representatives.306 According to Ankrah, it convinced the government that
the intermediaries "were not acting from ignorance."307
In this meeting, the WCC/AACC delegation first presented to the
government the purpose of their visit and offered their good offices as
outlined in their preparatory meeting in Nairobi. The discussion of this
proposal led to some agreements. Concerning reconciliation there was
agreement that: (a) the government was in favor of the delegates making
contact with Southern representatives in order to establish direct contact for
talks on reconciliation; (b) the government would be willing to talk with
groups who had influence on people in the South and among refugees; (c)
the talks could take place anywhere; (d) the government would agree to a
cooling off period if there were no danger to security; (e) the government
was willing to discuss the details of regional autonomy within the
framework of a united Sudan; and (f) the question of under whose auspices
the talks would take place would be discussed later. The government agreed
to the shipment of aid to areas that were in need only if the aid passed
through Khartoum and under government inspection.308
After the government's agreement to enter negotiations was obtained, the
WCC/AACC delegation thanked the government for its cooperation and
expressed the following view on the aid question. "While no promise could
be given as to the exact nature and extent of help, every effort would be
made to bring the resources of the churches of the world to bear on the
situation in the Sudan."309
After the meeting with the Sudanese government, the WCC/AACC
delegates began to map out their plan for contact and communication. It
was decided that: (a) the AACC in cooperation with groups in Uganda
would make contact with whatever groups were available in Kenya and
Uganda; (b) the WCC would endeavour to contact all groups and individual
Southern Sudanese who had interests and influence in the Sudan situation;
and (c) the General Secretary of the Sudan Council of Churches would visit
and make contact with Southern Sudanese groups and individuals in
Ethiopia with the authorization of the WCC and AACC. After all
reasonable contacts were made and influential people named, a meeting
would be held to discuss the conditions advanced by the government.310
On May 20, 1971, the CCIA Director wrote to Burgess Carr, the new
General Secretary of the AACC, outlining the plan for further action and
raising the suggestion that it might be desirable for the Director to secretly
go to Addis Ababa to seek "the personal feelings and advice" of "our OAU
friends" in order to prepare the diplomatic contexts for the contacts. He also
insisted that secrecy must be the modus operandi for the subsequent steps
towards the reconciliation effort, and proposed "a total publicity blackout",
with some exceptions which might be announced to the media. The
intention was to avoid any internal or external complications by opponents
of the peace process, and to forestall the chance that the conflict parties
might use the beginning of the mediation process to score propaganda
points against the other.311
According to the plan mapped out in Nairobi on May 15, 1971, the
AACC's General Secretary went to Kampala on May 25, to start making
contacts with the Southern groups. He met first the groups of SSLM
supporters, the Kampala Committee and the Makerere Group. The General
Secretary reported the results of the WCC/AACC delegation's visit to
Khartoum and requested help from these groups in contacting Southern
leaders "who had influence over the exiled Southerners and the fighters."312
At this meeting, Dr. Storrs McCall, on behalf of the Kampala Committee
and the Makerere Group, explained to the AACC representatives that the
various splinter fighting groups in the South had been united by the Anya
Nya under General Lagu's leadership; that the Anya Nya and its political
wing, the SSLM, were the only proper spokesmen for the South; and that
"contact [could] be made with them only through [the people] here in
Kampala."313 The Kampala Committee and Makerere Group then agreed to
contact Anya Nya leaders and arrange a meeting for the AACC on June 6,
1971.314
In June, Burgess Carr assumed the post of General Secretary of the
AACC. He was under tremendous pressure from the European and
American churches. "These churches, knowing how vociferous I had been
in battle with them over South African racism, in advocating the 'Program
to Combat Racism' and the debate I had with them over the plans of Joint
Church Aid in New York, that no sooner than my seat was half warm in
Nairobi, they began to innundate me with telegrams and letters saying that
'you were so opposed to white people oppressing black people, what are
you doing now as General Secretary of the AACC when Muslims are
killing Christians in the South Sudan?'" Thus, in early June, Carr said he
contacted the Sudan Ambassador to Kenya and requested the Ambassador
to arrange an interview for him with the President of the Sudan. The
Ambassador arranged the meeting and Can reportedly went to Khartoum to
meet with President Numeiri, Joseph Garang, and Dr. Bakheit, the Minister
of Local Government. He told them of his background, especially
highlighting the role he had played in helping to bring about the "Program
to Combat Racism", his recent confrontations concerning the Nigerian Civil
War,315 as well as his "battle" with Joint Church Aid concerning the
shipment of materials to Southern Sudan and his plea with this consortium
that the peace option must be given a chance before they began to transport
the aid. He then asked the government officials what they and the churches
could do to resolve the conflict before it was escalated further by foreign
involvement. He told the government representatives that his motives were
not entirely altruistic, since he also had to stand up to the challenges of the
European and American churches which were making his job as the
AACC's General Secretary very difficult. The meeting lasted about three
hours, and at the end, the President expressed his appreciation for Carr's
concern, and reiterated his sincere desire to discuss peace with any leader or
group that had "influence over those who were doing the fighting in the
South."316
On June 6, 1971, Carr and his assistant met in Kampala with some
members of the Kampala Committee and the Makerere Group and three
Southerners who claimed to be SSLM representatives appointed by General
Lagu. The AACC officials summarized the proposals made by the
government and asked the SSLM representatives for their reactions. The
minutes of this meeting show that the SSLM representatives were not
immediately cordial to the AACC delegation. They went back to the 1966
AACC report and started pointing out how biased the report was. They also
expressed their concern that the Sudanese government might again be using
this delegation for propaganda purposes. They accepted in principle the
offer for talks, but rejected the government's proposal as to who should be
represented in the talks. They also pointed out that the government's
suggestion that autonomy be the agenda for discussion would bias the
outcome of the talks before they began. They agreed with the government's
offer that the talks could take place anywhere outside the Sudan, since that
would guarantee the safety of their negotiators, and would give
international recognition to any agreements that might be reached. They
even suggested President Kaunda of Zambia and President Mobutu of Zaire
as possible mediators. They rejected any aid that might be sent through
Khartoum because they feared the government would use the material "to
perpetuate their atrocities against us." They argued: "if you want to give aid,
give it to us since we control the majority of the Southerners who are in
need."317
In the meantime, the WCC had been working on contacts in Europe.
Kodwo Ankrah got in touch with Mading de Garang, the SSLM
representative in London who was also the editor of their propaganda
publication, the Grass Curtain, and invited him to a meeting in Geneva on
May 26, 1971. At this meeting, de Garang was given a report of what had
transpired between the WCC/AACC delegates and the Sudanese
government on May 15, and the strategy laid out by the intermediaries for
contacting Southern leaders.
De Garang explained their previous contact with the Sudanese
government through the Movement for Colonial Freedom and said that
even after the relationship between the MCF and the SSLM had
deteriorated, he had sent a letter to the Sudanese Ambassador in London
explaining the SSLM's preconditions for talks with the government, but had
received no response. He produced copies of two letters, one that was sent
to the Sudanese Embassy and the other written by General Lagu to de
Garang giving him a mandate to represent the SSLM in London vis-a-vis
the Sudanese government. Lagu wrote:
We have been impressed that the enemy now feels our pressure and
would want to have a talk with us. This is the recognition of the
situation, our leadership and the organization...We welcome the idea to
prepare for talks...because we are a people struggling for a cause, and if
that can be achieved by talking we see no reason why we do not accept
to talk....Regard this letter as your mandate to start preliminary talks
with them, you may have one or two other Southerners with you to
assist you. Wol Wol or any other with some experience.318
Then Lagu set the conditions for talks with the Sudanese government as
follows:
(a) cessation of hostilities by the Sudanese army including the
establishment of new posts, construction of bridges and any military
preparations;
(b) that an African or OAU observer team be appointed to move freely in
the South to supervise the standstill;
(c) that all Southern Sudanese convicted of political offenses be set free;
(d) that the Sudanese government recognize the Anya Nya as the only
body with which to negotiate, and to make such an announcement over the
radio and in the daily papers; and
(e) that the negotiations take place only in an independent non-Arab
African state under an agreed African or OAU chairmanship.319
Although Lagu's letter mentions nothing about the question of autonomy
for the South or a unitary state for the Sudan, de Garang's interpretation of
this letter leads one to believe that the Anya Nya was willing to accept the
idea of one Sudan even though not necessarily a unitary government nor
just a simple autonomy as the government was promising.
One possible reason why the Sudanese government did not respond to the
letter de Garang sent to the Sudanese government through the London
Ambassador is that Joseph Garang, the Minister of Southern Affairs, might
well have withheld the letter because he had very different and specific
ideas on how to solve the Southern problem. He was unwilling to negotiate
with the SSLM before preparing his cadres to organize the South along
socialist principles. Therefore, he deliberately stalled on any talks.320
In the meeting with the WCC, Mading de Garang suggested that he get in
touch with General Lagu and provide the names of Southern representatives
who could be contacted by the intermediaries. The WCC representatives,
however, emphasized their concern that all parties and factions within the
Southern Sudan should be represented. They also urged the formation of a
consensus position within the Anya Nya camp by mending existing internal
problems among the various Southern groups. De Garang informed the
WCC officials that General Lagu was already aware of the visit of the
WCC/AACC delegation to the Sudan, that the WCC had the SSLM's
"complete confidence", and that the SSLM did not doubt the sincerity of the
intermediaries.321 At the end of the meeting, de Garang was given a copy of
the WCC's background study of the Sudan conflict to share with the SSLM
leadership for their reaction.
Contacts were also being made in Ethiopia. Samuel Bwogo, a Southern
Sudanese living in the North, was General Secretary of the Sudan Council
of Churches. Earlier in February, he visited Addis Ababa in his own
capacity to sample the opinion of Southern exiles in Ethiopia and to explore
possibilities for peace talks. He said that a hostel in Addis Ababa run by
missionaries accommodated Southern exiled politicians and Anya Nya
officials on their way to Israel for training and other activities. A meeting
was arranged for him at the hostel with the Southerners who lived in Addis
Ababa. According to Bwogo, it was very difficult to have any discussion in
this meeting because the other Southerners were denouncing him as a
"traitor" and were questioning his right to talk to them about peace. He said,
however, that he was able to get a few to listen.322 After the May 15 visit to
the Sudan, the WCC/AACC wanted to send Bwogo to Ethiopia again to
survey the specific reaction of the Southerners there with regard to the May
15 proposals of the Sudanese government However, de Garang objected to
Bwogo's mission on the grounds that Southerners did not trust Bwogo's
impartiality since he was working under the protection of the Sudanese
government.323
On June 28, 1971, de Garang wrote to the CCIA of the WCC reporting
his contacts with the Anya Nya and SSLM leaders concerning the
government proposals and the response he received. He stated that the
Southern leadership had welcomed the idea of negotiation and accepted the
good offices of the WCC. In response to the proposal made by the Sudanese
government, the SSLM made the following counter proposals: (a) that the
Sudanese government allow some Southerners under its control to leave the
Sudan and to confer with the SSLM so that they might express their views
on negotiations with the government; (b) that the meeting place be Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia, or Lusaka, Zambia; (c) that instead of a cooling-off
period, they were willing to go a step further and call a cease-fire with its
terms to be negotiated in advance. Mading de Garang also pointed out that
the Southern leadership would be receptive to discussing the details of
regional autonomy for the South as a starting point for talks. On the
question of relief, the Southern leadership rejected deployment of aid to the
South through government channels on the grounds that the government
would use it to encourage dissension between the Anya Nya and the
Southern civilians. The leadership proposed instead prereconciliation
negotiations be held between the Sudanese government and the SSLM to
determine how the aid should be sent.324
At the same time, Mading de Garang and the WCC were discussing the
question of how to coordinate all these contacts and how to form a common
negotiating stance for the SSLM. It was finally decided to send de Garang
and Lawrence Wol Wol, the SSLM representative in France, to Zaire,
Uganda, Kenya, and Ethiopia in order to try to formulate a consensus
among the exiled Southerners in these countries regarding the government's
proposal.
At this point, the WCC also began to explore the possibilities for an
acceptable African head of state to host the final negotiations between the
Sudanese government and the SSLM. The CCIA was making exploratory
contacts with the European representatives of President Kaunda of Zambia
and, with the help of the British Council of Churches, they were also
attempting to reach Kaunda directly.325
At this stage, events within the Sudan brought the process to a standstill,
at least for a short time. In July the communist coup to oust Numeiri and
Numeiri's counterattack to regain power took place. Joseph Garang was
accused of being a co-conspirator and was executed. Even though Joseph
Garang had not been too sympathetic towards the Southern movement, the
execution of the Minister of Southern Affairs reinforced many Southerners'
suspicions and fears of Numeiri's intentions. This was reflected in an article
entitled "An SSLM Official Statement" authored by Mading de Garang in
the Grass Curtain. Among other things, it stated that "Numeiri's messianic
delusions for the Sudan will probably know no end," and called upon "all
patriotic Sudanese from North, West, East-Central, and South Sudan to
work together to bring down the dictatorial regime of Numeiri and to
restore to the Sudan the independence and democracy which have been
betrayed by this gang of human butchers."326
Numeiri's actions were confusing also to the intermediaries. It was not
clear to them whether he was making a statement about his attitude towards
the peace process. As a result, it seems that the WCC was unsure whether to
continue the mediation, and whether they should send de Garang and Wol
Wol on the planned visit to East and Central Africa. The WCC was
unwilling to "make vain gestures to SSLM leadership" without assurances
that the Sudanese government still desired to negotiate.327 In the meantime,
however, Numeiri appointed Abel Alier to take the place of Joseph Garang
as Minister of Southern Affairs. Alier had more appeal and commanded
more respect among Southerners than Joseph Garang. This appears to have
encouraged the intermediaries because Alier had received them during their
visit to Khartoum in May, and they were familiar with his views on the
conflict Moreover, Samuel Bwogo of the Sudan Council of Churches
contacted Abel Alier and sent word to the WCC that, in fact, outlooks for
the peace process were even better now, since Alier was more committed to
the idea of reconciliation than Joseph Garang had been.
Thus, on August 6, 1971, the WCC decided to make money available to
de Garang and Lawrence Wol Wol to travel to areas in Central and East
Africa where Southern exiles and refugees lived. The following letter
outlined the details of their mission:
We are pleased that following several conversations with you as the delegated representative of
the Anya Nya in Europe, during which you informed us of the present situation of your
movement; and following the visit of a joint World Council of Churches/All Africa Conference of
Churches mission to Khartoum, where we were given the Sudan government's position on
reconciliation and relief, we are now able to help make your journey to Africa possible. This we
do out of our sincere interest that a peace be established in the Sudan which will make possible a
creative use of the relief assistance to the suffering Sudanese which the churches stand ready to
give as soon as it can be determined that such assistance can be properly supervised and
distributed.
You have been fully informed about our visit to Khartoum, where we were asked to enter into
conversation with you which might lead to negotiations between the two parties in the conflict. It
is our understanding that, despite the events which have occurred in the interim, these positions
remain firm and can be considered those of the Khartoum government We have a standing
invitation to return to Khartoum for further discussions in which we would hopefully be able to
faithfully represent the views of the Southern Sudanese leadership. We therefore look forward to
having a report of your visit on your return. We hope that it will include (a) the reaction of your
leadership to the positions stated by the Khartoum government; (b) the obtaining of a list of
Southerners whom Anya Nya leaders would want to be involved in any negotiations; and (c) the
obtaining of letters of credence stating whom in fact Col. Lagu wishes to authorize to deal with
the WCC/AACC on behalf of the Anya Nya. Allow me to repeat that the WCC has offered its
services to you and to the Khartoum government as a politically disinterested international
humanitarian organization. Our sole motive is to best serve the people of Sudan, North and South,
for which we understand that a lasting peace is indispensable. Please convey our greetings to Col.
Lagu and the other leaders of the Southern Sudan.328
The main demand of the Anya Nya is that the government should
negotiate directly with them. But direct negotiation seems
unlikely....Even President Numeiri's power might not be able to
withstand the shock of negotiating with the rebels.365
On the military front, both sides were quite active during December. The
dry season activities of the Northern troops began then, and the Anya Nya
bases on the border were attacked. Some Northern troops were even
reported to have crossed the Ugandan border in pursuit of the Anya Nya. As
a result, Uganda gave a strict warning to the Sudanese government that it
would use "maximum force" unless the Sudanese soldiers withdrew
immediately.366 At the same time, the SSLM was becoming very successful
in finding international aid. A few of the aid agencies met in Holland on
December 16, to draw up budgets and set up plans to help the SSLM.367
However, as the news of the attack by the goverment forces began to
reach Geneva, the WCC intermediaries, Niilus and Ankrah, immediately
sent a telegram to President Numeiri, stating that the attack was contrary to
the process of negotiation just started, and that if such military actions were
going to continue, the intermediaries asked to be relieved of their role as
"they could not render their services under such circumstances."368 In
response the Sudanese President sent a telegram on December 25, as
follows:
The President of the Democratic Republic of Sudan and Vice President Abel Alier want to assure
Mr, Niilus and Mr. Ankrah of the following:
1. The adherence of the Government of the Sudan to the terms of the agreement
2. Recent clashes should not be construed as an attempt on our part at escalating the fighting.
3. The Sudan Government highly values your constructive efforts and wish them to continue.
4. The Sudan Government would do nothing to impede these if forts.369
Thus, the SSLM asked for a two week extension of the ratification date.
Several factions of the SSLM accused the negotiating team of having
exceeded its authority, started to pick flaws in the agreeement, and to
suggest renegotiation. "Some who had not sat through the long process of
discussion and emendation were less realistic about what modification
could be attained."397 However, as soon as news of disagreement within the
ranks of the SSLM started to reach the outside, various church
organizations aided Lagu to travel to the dissident groups of Southerners
and to encourage support by explaining the agreement.398 Church leaders
also pleaded with Lagu himself to ratify the agreement. At the same time,
the Makerere Group pressed Southern opponents of the Addis Ababa
Agreement to support its ratification; they pointed out that the South would
be better helped through aid coming via legal channels rather than in the
ways it had been seeping in thus far.399
Meanwhile, Carr and the other intermediaires came back to Addis Ababa
on March 25, 1972, for the ratification ceremony, which was to take place at
noon on March 26. General Lagu had arrived in Addis Ababa on the 24th
and was staying in a hotel other than the one reserved for him by the
intermediaries. Carr said that Lagu appeared to have been desperately
awaiting his arrival because, immediately after Carr arrived at his hotel,
Lagu called him to ask for a meeting. Carr went to meet Lagu, who was
accompanied by another Southerner who did not participate in the
negotiations. He was also accompanied by an Israeli body guard who, it
appeared, was also his advisor, and who had followed Lagu from Kampala.
Lagu told Carr that he had come to Addis Ababa, not to ratify, but to
renegotiate the agreement. Lagu reportedly pointed out that the agreed
document was not acceptable, that the SSLM delegates who had negotiated
it had exceeded their mandate, that they had not consulted him on all the
phases and points of the agreement, and that he had brought with him a
negotiating document that he would like Carr to deliver to the Sudanese
government delegation. Carr said that he was shocked to hear this and tried
to convince Lagu that it was by this time too late to change the agreement.
But, he said, Lagu was adamant.
In hindsight some writers point out the reasons why General Lagu was
reluctant to ratify the Addis Ababa Agreement on March 27, 1972.
According to O'Ballance, General Lagu was reported to have been quite
satisfied with what had been achieved.400 But, later on, a small but vocal
group of dissidents reportedly started to point out defects in the agreement,
centering on two points. First, the agreement provided for regional
autonomy instead of federation. However, according to Sir Dingle Foot, the
legal advisor of the SSLM delegation, "the effect of certain clauses was
virtually to create a federal status although the word federation was not
used." and in fact he was reported to have been surprised that the SSLM
was able to win so many concessions in the negotiation.401 The second
dissatisfaction regarded security and fear of retaliation on returning exiles
and Anya Nya soldiers. The SSLM negotiators had reportedly tried to
persuade their critics that the parity arrangement for troops to be stationed
in the South and the personal guarantee of the Ethiopian Emperor were
adequate safeguards.
Despite these protests and opposition voiced by some, "there was no
evidence that the mass of the people felt like this--most, including the Anya
Nya, were sick of war, and though extremely cautious to begin with, were
also overjoyed at the thought of peace returning."402 By the time Lagu went
to Addis Ababa, "the dissidents were eventually reduced to a minimum as
several men, who originally opposed the agreement, decided to return to
Sudan and give things a try."403
Carr took the new document submitted by Lagu and tried to learn from
the SSLM delegates who had negotiated the agreement what had caused
Lagu to change his mind. Mading de Garang and Lawrence Wol Wol told
him that confusion had arisen in the Anya Nya camps, and that some
extreme elements within the Anya Nya and the Israeli Embassy in Kampala
had exerted a tremendous influence on General Lagu to repudiate the
agreement and to renegotiate it.
In frustration and anxiety, Carr passed Lagu's new proposal to Abel Alier
and the rest of the government delegation. Alier was reportedly dejected
and expressed his conviction that any further action was useless. At the
same time, Carr contacted the Ethiopian Foreign Minister, Minassie Haile,
and Emperor Haile Selassie's personal representative in the negotiatons,
Nebiyelul Kifle, to inform them of what had happened. Carr said that they
spent several hours thinking of various ways to deal with this new and
unexpected problem. It happened that the Emperor's personal representative
in the negotiations was also Chief of the Ethiopian Intelligence Agency. It
must be remembered that during the negotiations the good offices of the
Emperor and the Israeli Embassy had provided the secret communication
links between General Lagu and his delegation in Addis Ababa. Thus,
Nebiyelul Kifle had access to copies of the telex and other messages that
were being secretly exchanged between Lagu and the SSLM
representatives. They finally decided to confront Lagu with the copies of
the messages and to challenge his claim that the SSLM delegates did not
consult him on the issues of the agreement and that he did not authorize
them to agree.
The signing ceremony was scheduled for noon of March 27, but, because
of the latest problem, it was not possible to keep to that schedule. The
international press corps was waiting to witness the signatures to the
agreement. When the schedule was not kept, rumors started flying that the
agreement had failed. At 1:00 o'clock on the 27 th, Carr and Kifle went to
meet Lagu at his hotel where they told him that the Emperor was very much
disappointed by the last-minute obstacles created by the SSLM and that the
Emperor did not believe that the SSLM delegates had exceeded their
mandated authority. Then Kifle reportedly opened his briefcase and showed
Lagu the telex copies of the messages exchanged between Lagu and the
SSLM delegation, demonstrating his awareness of what was happening
during the negotiations and that Lagu had given it his blessings. Carr said
that Lagu immediately abandoned that argument. Instead, he began
reiterating the inadequate provision for security in the agreement and
demanded to see the Emperor on this issue.
A meeting was arranged for 4:30 that afternoon. In that meeting Lagu
told the Emperor that he wanted to clarify that the agreement had the
Emperor's total backing and whether the Emperor also gave his personal
guarantee for the security of Anya Nya troops and other Southerners after
their repatriation. The Emperor repeated his promise. After this, the Foreign
Minister of the Sudan, sent by President Numeiri to represent him at this
ceremony, was called to the Emperor's palace. At 5:00 o'clock that
afternoon, the ratification ceremony took place and General Lagu and
Mansour Khalid signed the ratification document "In a radio broadcast
afterwards General Lagu had special praise for the Emperor 'under whose
wise and determined guidance' peace had come."404 Carr said that that very
day General Lagu's Israeli escort was expelled from the country by the
government of Ethiopia
After the ratification there was considerable press coverage and publicity
congratulating the parties and praising what had been attained. But, as the
intermediaries were packing to leave, they received a message from Foreign
Minister Khalid informing them that another dispute had arisen between
Lagu and the government representatives about the next destination of
General Lagu. Lagu wanted to go back to Kampala while everybody else
wanted him to go to Khartoum with them.405 Carr again got in touch with
the General to persuade him that going to the bushes after the ratification
would indicate that he did not take the peace agreement seriously, and that
the proper thing for Lagu to do was to go to Khartoum since the war was
over. After a flurry of consultations and meetings, Lagu agreed to go to
Khartoum only if the intermediaries went with his delegation, to which they
agreed.
Thus, on April 1, 1972, the intermediaries, Lagu and his entourage, and
the representatives of the Sudanese government all flew to Khartoum.
President Numeiri came to the airport to meet them. Numeiri and Lagu
embraced and started joking with each other. Lagu told Numeiri how well
he looked and Numeiri told him that he felt sorry that Lagu had been living
the hard life and that he would like to send him to his personal physician in
Europe for a medical checkup. At a state banquet held the next day Lagu
was promoted to the rank of Major General, and the intermediaries were
decorated with the Order of the Two Niles, a first-rank medal, by the
Sudanese government in recognition of their role in bringing about
peace.406
The role of the intermediaries, however, did not end at the signing of the
agreement They continued participating in the first stages of the
implementation of the peace settlement. At a press conference on March 3,
1972, the Sudanese government had announced that a joint committee of
delegates from neighbouring countries accommodating refugees, the
International Committee of the Red Cross, the World Council of Churches,
and the UN High Commissioner for Refugees was established to supervise
the enforcement of the cease-fire and "to supervise the process of bringing
to the country the refugees and also those who had fled to the bush [the
Anya Nya]."407 Burgess Carr said that they had to fly by helicopter to many
parts of the South to supervise the disarming of the Anya Nya and their safe
return to the government-controlled areas. Moreover, the WCC participated
in the conference held in Khartoum for the coordination of all aid donor
agency efforts in repatriating and rehabilitating the massive number of
refugees who were returning to the Sudan. 1
270
Stephen Whittle, "A Peaceful Prospect for the Sudan," Ecumenical Feature Service (Geneva:
WCC, 1972), 2.
271
Dunstan M. Wai, The African-Arab Conflict in the Sudan (New York: Africana Publishing Co.,
1981), 142.
272
Theresa Scherf, "The Sudan Conflict: Its History and Development," A document prepared for
the CCIA of the WCC (Geneva: WCC, May 1971), 31.
273
Ibid.
274
Wai, The African-Arab Conflict, 143.
275
Scherf, 31
276
AACC, Mission to the Sudan," A report on the AACC goodwill mission to the Sudan, (Nairobi,
Kenya, 1966), WCC Archives, Geneva, 25-27.
277
Kodwo Ankrsh, "In Pursuit of Peace in the Sudan," Study Encounter 8 (1972), 4.
278
Wai, The African-Arab Conflict, 14J.
279
Ibid.
280
Ankrah,"In Persuit of Peace," 4.
281
Burgess Carr, interview with the author, Cambridge, Mass., April 29, 1981.
282
The Proceeding of the AACC Conference in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, 1969, quoted in Wai, The
African-Arab Conflict, 210.
283
Kodwo Ankrah, Memorandum to Alan Brash, July 2, 1970, WCC Archives, Geneva.
284
S.H. Ammissah, AACC General Secretary, letter to Alan Brash, Director of Interchurch Aid of
the WCC, August 24, 1970, WCC Archives, Geneva.
285
Kodwo Ankrah, Memorandum to Alan Brash, December 17, 1970, WCC Archives, Geneva.
286
Mading de Garang, letter to Kodwo Ankrah, December 1970, WCC Archives, Geneva.
287
Canon Burgess Carr, speech made at the initialling of the Addis Ababa Agreement, in Peace and
Unity in the Sudan, an African Achievement, Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Khartoum:
University of Khartoum Press, 1973), 119.
288
CCIA Document no. 49, January 10-21, 1971, WCC Archives, Geneva.
289
M. Louise Pirouet, "The Achievement of Peace in Sudan," Journal of East African Research and
Development 6 (1970): 122.
290
Mohamed Omer Beshir calls Allen Reed a missionary "known for his hostility to the Sudan."
Beshir, The Southern Sudan: From Conflict to Peace (New York: Barnes & Noble, 1975), 69.
291
Allen Reed, Report to the Church World Service, January 1971, WCC Archives, Geneva.
292
Minuts of the Meeting, April 2, 1971, 1 & 3., WCC Archives, Geneva.
293
Pirouet, 121.
294
Ibid.
295
Jan Orner, letter to Dr. Louise Pirouet, March 24, 1971, WCC Archives, Geneva.
296
Pirouet, 124.
297
An observer described the kind of operation that the JCA was undertaking as a: "very
considerable strength of organized Christian compassion, capable of buying airplanes and
defying national sovereignties [and as] a political development which churches must begin to
take at least as seriously as the politicians." Canon Taylor, Church Missionary Society, letter
to Dr. Niilus, Director of CCIA, 16 June 1971. WCC Archives, Geneva.
298
Tracy Early, "What is Going on in the Sudan?" New World Outlook (September 1971): 15.
299
Burgess Carr, interview with author, Cambridge, Mass., April 29, 1981.
300
Ibid.
301
Ibid.
302
Beshir, From Conflict to Peace, 83.
303
Ibid.
304
Kwodo Ankrah, interview with author, Kampala, Uganda, May 5-10, 1982. See also Dwain
Epps, letter to Olle Dahlen, Chairman of CCIA, April 21, 1971, WCC Archives, Geneva.
305
Dwain Epps, interview with author, New York City, August 10, 1981.
306
Dwain Epps, interview. Niilus, also reflecting on this reaction, writes: "Surprisingly
enough...both sides in the conflict...read it... [and] both recognized the validity and relevance
of our basic description and thesis - although both of them had different detailed criticism to
offer. I even have the suspicion that it was more appreciated by the parties in the conflict than
by a few outside parties." Leopoldo Niilus, Peace in the Sudan, Reflections on Questions for a
Written Interview, (Geneva: March 12, 1973), 9-10. WCC Archives, Geneva.
307
Kodwo Ankrah, interview.
308
Summary of the Proceedings of the Meeting, May 15, 1971, WCC Archives, Geneva
309
Ibid.
310
Ibid.
311
Leopoldo Niilus, interview with the author, Geneva, May 22, 1982.
312
Report of the Meeting, Kampala, May 25, 1971 WCC Archives, Geneva.
313
Ibid.
314
Ibid.
315
According to Carr, as the Africa Secretary of the Interchurch Aid of the WCC, he was in charge
of organizing and transporting relief to Biafra during the Nigerian Civil War. During that war
also, there was a dispute between the consortium called Joint Church Aid and the WCC on
the question of what channels to use to send relief to Biafra. JCA had negotiated with
Portugal to use its colony as a launching place to fly relief to Biafra. At that time the Nigerian
government was able to show evidence that South Africa and Portugal along with France
were involved in the civil war by supplying arms and sending mercenaries to Biafra. Also
during this period, Portugal was heavily involved in its colonial wars in Mozambique,
Angola, and Guinea Bissau. Therefore, in addition to the antipathy of the OAU for the
secessionist movement in Biafra, this liaison between the churches and Portugal was very
much resented by many African governments. In fact, there was a suspicion that arms were
being transported to Biafra under cover of the relief of the Joint Church Aid. It was not clear
whether the churches were cooperating to provide the cover, or whether Portugal and South
Africa were camouflaging their airplanes with the colors and marks of the churches. Carr said
that he realized how this identification with declared enemies of many African states was
dangerous for the image of the WCC in Africa. So he was able to negotiate on behalf of the
WCC, with the government of an independent African country, the Cameroon, so that the
WCC would be able to send its relief aid from there. He said that even though the idea of
sending relief to Biafra was not popular with the Nigerian government, at least the WCC was
not collaborating with Portugal and South Africa to do it. This, Carr said, improved the
prestige of the WCC in the eyes of many African governments. Burgess Carr, interview.
316
Ibid.
17
Reports of the Meeting, Kampala, Uganda, June 6, 1971, WCC Archives, Geneva.
318
Joseph Lagu, Commanding Officer, Anya Nya Armed Forces, letter to Mading de Garang, 30
October 1970, Owiny-ki-bul, South Sudan. WCC Archives, Geneva.
319
Ibid.
320
Pirouet, 123.
321
Minutes of the Meeting, May 26, 1971, Geneva. WCC Archives, Geneva.
322
Samuel Bwogo, interview with author, Khartoum, Sudan, May 13-16, 1982.
323
Minutes of the Meeting, May 26, 1971, Geneva. WCC Archives, Geneva.
324
Mading de Garasg, letter to Dr. Leopoldo Niilus, CC1A, June 28, 1971, London. WCC
Archives, Geneva.
325
R. Eihot Kendall, letter to Kodwo Ankrah, July 9, 1971, London. WCC Archives, Geneva.
326
"An SSLM Official Statement," Grass Curtain August 4, 1971.
327
Dwain Epps, memorandum to Allan Brash, July 20, 1971. WCC Archives, Geneva.
328
Dwain Epps, letter to E, Mading de Garang and Lawrence Wol Wol, August 6, 1971, Geneva.
WCC Archives, Geneva.
329
Dwain Epps, interview.
330
Keesing's Contemporary Archives November 13-20, 1971, 24931.
331
Report on Messrs de Garang and Wol Wol's Mission to Africa, August 30, 1971, Geneva. WCC
Archives, Geneva.
332
Dwain Epps, interview.
333
"Sudan, Secret Southern Talks," Africa Confidential (February 4, 1972).
334
Wai, The African-Arab Conflict, 152.
335
Leopoldo Niilus, memorandum about appraisals of the present situation in the Sudan,
September 20, 1971, Geneva. WCC Archives, Geneva.
336
Leopoldo Niilus, letter to Burgess Carr, September 20, 1971, Geneva. WCC Archives, Geneva.
337
Kodwo Ankrah, aide memoire on presentation of documents on regional autonomy to Mr. de
Garang, September 24, 1971, Geneva. WCC Archives, Geneva.
338
Leopoldo Niilas, interview.
339
Report on the Second WCC/AACC Mission to the Sudan, October 13-23, 1971. WCC
Archives, Geneva. In view of the constant skepticism expressed by Southerners about the
intentions of the government and the expressed fear that the government might be trying to
divide the exiled Southerners from the ones within the Sudan, there might be some grounds
for the caution of the intermediaries.
340
Leopoldo Niilus, interview.
341
Report on the Second WCC/AACC Mission to the Sudan, October 13-23, 1971. WCC
Archives, Geneva.
342
Ibid. The Nigerian civil war was a very divisive issue among African states, and this division
was allegedly exploited by countries like South Africa to deflect pressure on them from
African slates for their policies such as Apartheid.
343
Ibid.
344
Ibid.
345
Hatchel, Jones & Co., "Memorandum (or Submission to the Conflict Research Society,"
November 21, 1973.
346
Pirouet, 130.
47
Leopoldo Niilus and Kodwo Ankrah, interviews.
348
Samuel Bwogo, interview.
349
ibid.
350
Pirooet, 131.
351
Report of the Meeting, November 10, 1971, Addis Ababa. WCC Archives, Geneva.
352
Ibid.
353
Abel Alier, letter to Joseph Lagu, November 11, 1971, Addis Ababa. WCC Archives, Geneva.
354
Wai, The African-Arab Conflict, 155.
355
Ibid.
356
Ibid.
357
"Memorandum of Understanding" between the Sudan Government and the SSLM delegates,
November 9-10, 1971, Addis Ababa. WCC Archives, Geneva.
358
Ibid.
359
The SSLM already had the two detailed versions of autonomy in their possession.
360
Wai, The African-Arab Conflct, 155.
361
Pirouet, 131.
362
Leopoldo Niilus and Kodwo Ankrah, letter to Abel Alier, November 17, 1971, Geneva. WCC
Archives, Geneva.
363
Philips Bowring, "The Southern Sudan, Anya Nya Now Holds the Key," Financial Times
November 26, 1971, 9.
364
Ibid.
365
Ibid.
366
Cecil Eprile, War and Peace in the Sudan, 1955-1972, (London: David & Charles, 1974), 142-
143.
367
Pirouet, 132.
368
Leopoldo Niilus, interview.
369
Quoted in a letter by Leopoldo Niilus to Mr. Mohammed Taha, Sudan Government Liaison in
Geneva, December 30, 1971, Geneva. WCC Archives, Geneva.
370
Eprile, 150.
371
Beshir, From Conflict to Peace, 106.
372
Wai, The African-Arab Conflict, 156.
373
Kodwo Ankrah, memorandum to Alan Brash, December 22, 1971, Geneva. WCC Archives,
Geneva. The implication of this statement seems to be that if the Sudan Goverment and the
SSLM did not succeed in reaching an agreement in January, member bodies of the WCC
might start giving aid directly to the Anya Nya and that the WCC couldn't do anything to stop
it.
374
Wai, The African-Arab Conflict, 156.
375
Ibid.
376
Samuel Bwogo, interview.
77
Pirouet, 133.
378
Burgess Carr, interview.
379
See Wai, The African-Arab Conflict, 157,
380
Burgess Carr, interview.
381
Leopoldo Niilus, interview.
382
Some point out that Mading de Garang bad crossed swords with Carr in a couple of instances
before; thus, be did not find the title "chairman" acceptable and agreed to the term
"moderator",
383
Leopolds Niilus, interview.
384
Samuel Bwogo, interview.
385
Kodwo Ankrah, interview.
386
Samuel Bwogo, interview.
387
The substance of this sermon was recited to the author by Can- and is interesting for its
emotional end inspirational appeal.
388
Pirouet, 135.
389
Burgess Carr, interview.
90
Africa Research Bulletin, February 1-29, 1972, 2382.
91
This seems an obvious reference to the Eritrean problem, and the aid the Sudanese government was
giving the Eritreans as a retaliation to Ethiopia's aid to the SSLM.
92
Burgess Carr, interview.
393
Carr's judgement and caution seem to have been timely and justified in view of the notions
entertained by some influential Northerners. O'Ballance, for example, reports a conversation
with the former Permier Mahgoub and points out that: "He [Mahgoub] told me that Abel
Alier was the architect of the agreement, and that he bad made it to suit the South and not the
North." Edgar O'Ballance, The Secret War in the Sudan: 1955-1972 (Hamden, Conn.: Archon
Books, 1977), 159. Given this perception, it seems indeed wise that Alier did not sign the
document.
394
See for example, Wai, The African-Arab Conflict, 160; and Eprile, 154 & ff.
395
Wai, The African-Arab Conflict, 160.
396
Ibid.
397
Pirouet, 138.
398
Ibid., 142.
399
Ibid.
400
O'Ballance, 143.
401
Pirouet, 138.
402
Ibid., 140.
403
Ibid., 142.
404
Ibid.
405
It seems that the government representatives were trying to avoid the situation where Lagu
might go back and be persuaded by one group or another not to terminate the fighting.
406
Elfan Rees, "Exercises in Private Diplomacy," Unofficial Diplomats, Maureen and Joseph
Johnson, eds., (New York: Columbia Univ. Press, 1977), 126. Carr said that he had received
medals from many other African governments for his role in the Sudan mediation.
407
Republic of the Sudan, Ministry of Information and Culture, "Press Conference held by Sayed
Abel Alier, Vice President, about the Addis Ababa Agreement for the Southern Region,"
March 3, 1972, 20.
Part Three
Theory and Practice
Chapter 7
Analysis of the Conflict Resolution
Process
In this chapter, the two major mediation efforts presented in Part Two
will be examined and the reasons for their success or failure analyzed.
What both sides have in common is weariness with a war that does not
lead to decisive victory for either side, and if it did, would not lead to a
stable political settlement The Sudanese army claimed in January to
have overrun two important Anya Nya base camps near the Uganda
border. But, the Anya Nya now claim that they retook the camps,
causing heavy losses to the Government troops and winning some
defectors. The war does not progress but rather sways on.410
By 1971, it appears that the Numeri government was aware that it could not
totally defeat the Anya Nya without a very prolonged war and constant
repression of the South. As more and more refugees left the country, the
Anya Nya had fewer and fewer problems in maintaining, and in fact
increasing, its recruitment of young Southerners. According to Bell:
The Northern Sudanese did not for a long time believe that they had to
accommodate to the needs and demands of the Southerners. Most
importantly, they did not accept that they must accommodate
themselves to Southern fears because they had to do so rather than
because they chose to do so....For Khartoum, for a decade, the
Southerners were not equals but ragged guerillas, natives, abeeds
[slaves] of the bush, who would in time accept the logic of events and
the decent intentions of Khartoum, who would be coopted or
intimidated. Finally, the penny dropped in Khartoum with the
realization that simply as ragged guerillas in the bush, the Anya Nya
could continue forever to ruin Sudanese prospects. The Southerners had
compensating assets that offset the power and prestige of the legitimate
government.411
By the time mediation activities began, the government had recognized
that there was never going to be a military solution to the Southern
problem. All they could do "was not more than contain the rebels in the
wilds and to do less would permit an escalation and expansion of disorder
that could not be permitted. Khartoum could not win, but could not afford
to lose either."412
It also seems that the stalemate was becoming apparent to the Anya Nya,
who were growing stronger and more effective over time, but could not
even dream of final victory over the government forces. Assessing the Anya
Nya's prospects to attain its objective of an independent South, an observer
noted, "the Anya Nya had made the South virtually ungovernable, but an
internationally recognized secession was as far away as ever."413 The Anya
Nya could not rely indefinitely upon the provision of arms and weapons
from outside sources, nor could it afford to buy them in large quantities. It
might have been able to overrun a major Sudan army garrison or take over
some towns, but was unable to sustain control for any length of time. The
Anya Nya had the power to continue the war but not to win it, and had to
limit itself to "steer a middle course of protracted guerilla warfare.414
In addition to the existence of stalemate, or as a result of it, both parties
were encountering difficulties in running the war. The cost had become
exorbitant in terms of human lives and in economic terms. The Vice
President admitted that the government was spending a large portion of its
defense budget to maintain security in the South, and that the administration
was running at a deficit.415 Some estimates indicate that the government
was spending about twenty percent of its total revenue on the war, without
including the contributions of Russian and Egyptian military aid.416 As a
result, economic development projects had to suffer in both the North and
the South. Moreover,
Aid from other countries for economic and social development was not
forthcoming. Western European countries, traditional sources of
assistance, were not enthusiastic in helping the Sudan out of its
difficulties as long as the war continued. The instability caused by the
war in both the North and the South reduced the potential aid from these
countries and from international organizations. The solution of the
Southern problem, the Government hoped, would remove some of the
restrictions on aid and assistance.417
Thus, it was clear that the government did not have the resources it
would need to win the war, and, even if it had, the costs were unacceptable.
Similar resources and economic limitations also deterred the Anya Nya
from winning the war. It seems, therefore, that by the time the WCC and
AACC had intervened, and face-to-face negotiations had started between
the SSLM and the Sudanese government, the continuing stalemate might
have removed from both sides the lure to fight for victory, and have pushed
them to try seriously for a negotiated settlement.
Other factors relating to the personalities of key role players in the North
and the South also contributed to the success of the conflict resolution
process. Particularily significant was the coming to power of Numeiri,
Alier, and Lagu.
When Numeiri took over the government, one of his announced
objectives was to solve the Southern problem. He had served in the South
as officer in charge in Equatoria province from November 1966, to
December 1967.437 His own experience in the conflict made him realize the
war had become intractable and that there was probably no military
solution. Thus, unlike previous government leaders who saw the war only
from Khartoum, Numeiri had a more realistic view of the conflict. As a
means of dealing with the Southern problem, he made the June Declaration
of Autonomy for the South. At the time of the declaration, many people
believed in the sincerity of his intentions. However, from June 1969, until
the coup and countercoup of July 1971, Numeiri did nothing to make his
promise credible.
Notwithstanding the delay, the fact that Numeiri had a firsthand view of
the war, and that he took the initiative to announce the autonomy proposal,
caused many Southerners, and even the Anya Nya, to believe that Numeiri
was a more realistic and fair person than other Northern leaders and that he
might be the only one who would grant Southerners any concessions.
Another factor contributing to the success of the resolution process of the
Southern conflict was the appointment of Abel Alier as the Minister of
Southern Affairs. Alier was dedicated to the peaceful settlement of the civil
war. He also enjoyed tremendous respect both in the North and the South,
among insiders and those in exile. Before accepting the cabinet
appointment, he set conditions, one of which was that the government
search seriously for a peaceful means of resolving the conflict. He extracted
a guarantee from the government affirming that concrete steps would be
taken to detail and implement the idea of regional autonomy.438 As soon as
he assumed his position, Alier saw to it that a draft proposal for an
autonomous South was worked out by a special committee comprised
mainly of educated Southerners living within the Sudan. This document
indicated to the SSLM that the government was serious in its search for a
solution, and was used as the basis for the negotiations in Addis Ababa.
Compared to Joseph Garang, the previous Minister of Southern Affairs,
Alier was described as a very reasonable, persuasive, and patient man. Alier
must have impressed Southern leaders because he was not only "ready to
admit the previous mistakes in the approach of the Numeiri policy toward
the South but also emphasized candidly the need for a conference between
the government and the SSLM to discuss the nature of regional autonomy
for the Southern provinces."439
On the Anya Nya side, the eventual control of the fighting forces by one
leader, General Lagu, was a positive factor towards the attainment of peace.
Lagu was considered a "born leader" by many, and had had a personal
friendship with President Numeiri. Both men received military training in
the same class at the Sudan Military College in Khartoum in the early
1950's where they were on a first name basis. Both were reportedly in the
same barracks in Juba in 1960.440 That kind of personal relationship and
common background could have created a sympathetic attitude between the
two leaders which may have contributed to a congenial atmosphere for the
negotiations. This could be illustrated by the understanding attitude which
Lagu manifested to reporters when asked about the intensification of
Northern military activity in the South in December 1971, just before the
February peace talks began in Addis Ababa. Lagu responded that "it was
possible that Khartoum's motivation was to come to the peace table with as
much military advantage as it could get;" and he described General Numeiri
"as the most reasonable leader Khartoum had had."441
Moreover, for the first time, both sides were led by people with sufficient
political weight to implement whatever agreement they might negotiate. "It
was Sudan's good fortune to witness the emergence of Joseph Lap as the
Anya Nya strongman at a time when President Numeiri's power position in
Khartoum had become firmly consolidated."442
The mediators
Less well known, the Israelis were also operating from Ethiopia into the
Upper Nile Province where the fierce Nuer, Anuak, and Murle tribes
were fighting a vicious open campaign against Sudan Government
forces right up to last February [the date of the start of the Addis Ababa
negotiations].468
The Sudanese government did not respect its treaty with Ethiopia either. For
many years, even after 1971, it had continued to support the Eritrean
liberation movement.
Concerning agreements with Uganda and the restrictions on Anya Nya
and Israeli activities, Howell indicates that the "Anya Nya and their
supporters had managed to evade such restrictions in the past."469 President
Obote, the predecessor of General Amin, is reported to have been
unsympathetic to the SSLM. "In Uganda, the Southern Sudanese had never
been afforded recognition...and had often been harassed by the Ugandan
Government"470 President Obote of Uganda was reportedly uneasy about
the escalation of violence along Uganda's northern border because it could
worsen the tensions within northern Uganda itself;471 therefore, he had an
interest in curtailing those military activities. However, against all these
odds, the Anya Nya was still able to operate from across the Ugandan
border. Even if one assumes that the agreement to cutoff external access of
the Anya Nya through Uganda could have been totally effective, the Israelis
were still operating in Ethiopia, Kenya, and Zaire. According to Beshir,
arms and military equipment for the Anya Nya were reported to have come
"in large quantities" through the Central African Republic and Zaire as well
as through Uganda and Ethiopia.472 Thus, even if Uganda were closed,
other neighbouring countries could have easily been used as relay stations
or launching pads for any aid to the Anya Nya by Israel or other supporters.
Even if one assumes that the Anya Nya would have had difficulty in
gaining access through the neighbouring countries, it might not have meant
the sudden death of the Anya Nya. There were many reports that some of
the Anya Nya camps were equipped with landing strips and that arms and
supplies were being dropped from airplanes.473 The Anya Nya had
managed to fight and grow against tremendous odds in the past decade and-
a-half, and so it would have been difficult to "snuff it out" in 1972.
O'Ballance, at the conclusion of his study of the Sudan war, asks whether
the war would have "dragged on interminably" had there not been a
negotiated settlement in Addis Ababa. His answer was, "Pride and poverty
are characteristics of the Sudanese people, so one must assume that it could
have carried on endlessly."474
By the same token, examination of the third group, the internal political
factors, which included the coming to power of the communists, the July
1971 coup d'etat, the rebellion of various tribal groups within Northern
Sudan, the growing strength of the Anya Nya, and the divisions within the
ranks of the Southern movement, also shows that these factors, in and of
themselves, could not have produced a negotiated settlement The same
could be said about the fourth group, the idiosyncratic factors of the key
personalities in the conflict, such as the coming to power of Numeiri, Alier,
and Lagu. Each of these leaders had different solutions to the Southern
problem and it is unlikely that a meeting of minds would have occurred and
a negotiated settlement been reached without the aid of the intermediaries.
It cannot be doubted that the four clusters of factors would have created a
great incentive to negotiate; they were admittedly significant reasons why
the Sudanese government and the SSLM were persuaded to attempt
negotiation rather than to continue the armed confrontation. However, the
point is that having a desire to negotiate is different from reaching a
settlement with a spirit of compromise and reconciliation, even though it is
obviously the first step. From what is known about the conflict and the
parties, even if the two parties were willing to negotiate, it would not be
difficult to foresee that many deadlocks and impasses would have made an
amicable settlement practically impossible, at least at the time that the
Addis Ababa Agreement was signed. Even with the active involvement of
the intermediaries many deadlocks seriously endangered the negotiations
and the intermediaries had to struggle to break them. Therefore, it would
not be difficult to imagine that the problems would have been greatly
compounded if the negotiations were unmediated.
The problems inherent in "unmediated negotiation" hindering its
usefulness as a conflict resolution mechanism were pointed out in chapter
one. Particularly, in unmediated negotiations, communications tend to be
discreet and implicit instead of frank and open, and, as a result, reinforce
misperceptions instead of rectify them. Threats, warnings, bluffs, and
sometimes outright misinformation are some of the strategies employed to
send messages to each other. Concessions could imply weakness. The
hostility, stereotypes, the fears and prejudices about each other, and the
absence of an external source of information free from such psychological
constraints, tend to limit the range of alternatives that might be open to the
negotiators to resolve the conflict The parties tend to get locked into a
"contest of wills" where they aim towards the extraction of maximum
advantage from the other party rather than towards an exchange in the spirit
of compromise and reconciliation.
Now if one looks specifically into the Sudan conflict, where there had
been decades of hostility, stereotyping, suspicions, and fears, one would
seriously wonder if the two parties would have been able to reach a
negotiated settlement unaided by third parties. Given the history of
Southern suspicion of Northern intentions and their constant fear of "Arab-
trickery," a question arises as to whether there would ever have been very
serious negotiations had the intermediaries not vouched on various
occasions to the Anya Nya leadership for the earnestness of Northern
intentions. It is questionable whether a negotiated settlement would have
been achieved had the intermediaries not, among other things, translated,
reinterpreted and made palatable some of the government's terms to the
SSLM; had not opened ways to get beyond serious deadlocks by utilizing
their own as well as external resources; had not rectified information and
perception distortions by controlling the pattern of communication; had not
provided inducements and sweeteners for reaching agreement; had not
influenced, possibly, the psychological atmosphere of the negotiations in
order to focus on the real issues of the conflict rather than on the peripheral
and distracting ones; had not empowered the SSLM and created an
impression on the SSLM that a fair and just settlement could be attained
under their auspices; and had not attempted to insulate the negotiation
process from external complicating factors such as aid-givers, the media,
and opponents of the negotiation process. One would wonder whether an
unmediated negotiation could have produced the requisite atmosphere for a
spirit of compromise and for the willingness not to get bogged down in
blame and recrimination had it not been for the intermediaries who not only
kept stressing the urgency for reaching agreement, but also kept making
moral appeals for compromise and reconciliation.
It was important that the peace process was referred to as
"reconciliation," because the connotation of this term is different from that
of the mere hard bargaining implied by the word negotiation. Reconciliation
implies a willingness to forget and forgive, to accept compromise not
through weakness, but because doing so is considered worthy, judged by
higher principles. Reconciliation implies that one does not necessarily
expect the quid pro quo expected in hard bargaining. This was the spirit in
which the Addis Ababa negotiations took place, and undoubtedly, this spirit
would not have existed in the absence of the third party mediation. The
Sudan Minister of Foreign Affairs, a participant in the negotiations,
captured the essence of the peace process by saying: "We believe that it
needed charity of thought, if we are at all to achieve national reconciliation.
(Emphasis added.)"475
In fact, this spirit of reconciliation is one of the most interesting aspects
of the Sudan peace process. The mediators were able to create this
atmosphere perhaps because of the moral authority ascribed to them by
their representing religious rather than political organizations, and because
they were perceived as legitimate organizations to be concerned about
reconciliation and compromise. Through their sermons and prayers and
their behind-the-scenes diplomacy, they were able to appeal to the
fundamental humanity of the parties. These appeals had such an impact that
they were able to make some of the "granite faced" participants cry and
confess their remorse at having fought and killed their "brothers," and to
make others exuberant about the spirit of compromise that prevailed. The
spirit of reconciliation and empathy generated during the negotiations, was
so great that members sometimes took sides with their adversaries against
their own delegation on certain issues. All these illustrate the unusual
features of the Addis Ababa process, which occur rarely in ordinary
negotiations and mediation.
The methods employed by the intermediaries seem to have had the effect
of what Walton calls "socio-therapy," a process in which an attempt is made
to remedy dysfunction in the social relationships between the negotiators, in
order to terminate persistent disagreements and emotional antagonisms that
distract the parties from the productivity of the negotiations.476 The
intermediaries seem to have attained this objective by making the parties
aware of their common values, and by impressing upon them that the values
they shared were more important than the those that divided them. It can be
said that this peacemaking process was able to elevate conciliation from a
mere pragmatic and mundane level to a more transcendental level of
searching for closer understanding between the parties.
Most conflicts comprise both substantive and emotional components. The
substantive issues tend to be disagreements over more or less objective or
ascertainable situations, while emotional issues involve negative feelings
such as anger, distrust, scorn, resentment, fear, rejection, etc.477 Substantive
issues are usually not as difficult as emotional ones because they can be
handled through cognitive and rational processes such as bargaining,
problem solving, or consulting the opinion of experts or judges. On the
other hand, emotional issues call for an affective process aimed at
restructuring the parties' perceptions and altering the feelings that hinder the
bargaining process. So far, no methods have been developed to deal
effectively with emotional issues in large-scale conflicts such as the one
under study. In smaller scale conflicts, such as interpersonal or small
intergroup conflicts, methods like interpersonal counseling, sensitivity
training, and lately, in conflicts within organizations, human relations
counseling or socio-therapy are being used. However, even for such small-
scale conflicts, these procedures are infrequently utilized, although, so far,
they seem to be the only effective ways at hand to deal with conflicts where
emotional issues predominate. But when it comes to large-scale conflicts,
the luxury of utilizing these methods does not exist. In the Sudan case,
however, through the constant inspirational appeals to the higher moral
principles and values of the parties, the peace process seems to have
benefited, perhaps by accident, from an affective process which appears
similar to the emotional atmosphere that counseling and socio-therapy
sometimes manage to create.
For all these reasons it is argued that the first four clusters of variables
alone would not have succeeded in resolving the Sudan Civil War; and that
the fifth cluster of factors, "the mediators and the mediation process," was a
significant factor in bringing about the success of the negotiations.
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Index
AACC. See All Africa Conference of Churches
Abboud, Ibrahim, 58, 61, 96
Adawalla, Babiker, 71, 73
Addis Ababa Agreement, 87-148, 156-157, 160-161, 180-183
Adier, Job, 122, 131
Adjudication, 3, 7
Ahmed, Mohammed el Baghir, 122, 131
Aid
development, 154
educational, 168
military, 24, 157, 182, 194, 198-199
relief, 95-96, 99, 103-104, 113, 115, 125, 168-169, 195, 197-199, 207
Albino, Oliver, 131
ALF. See Azania Liberation Front
Algeria, 62, 64, 80, 83
Alier, Abel, 73, 79, 105-106, 114, 117-120, 122-126, 128-131, 134-135, 139, 142-143, 146, 148, 157,
162-163, 173, 193, 204
All Africa Conference of Churches (AACC), 95-131, 208
Amin, Idi, 82, 160, 181
Animist, 37, 43
Ankrah, Kodwo, 99-100, 103, 106, 110, 118-120, 126, 128, 130-133, 135-138, 168, 170-172, 175
Ansars, 39
See also Mahdists
Anuak, 181
Anya Nya, 59-92, 97, 101-105 108, 111-113, 115-120, 123-132, 138-142, 145-148, 152-155, 158-
163, 167-168, 175, 177, 180-183, 186-188, 204
Anya Nya High Command Council, 75
Anyidi Provisional Government, 71, 75
Arab Federation, 78
Arabi, Ahmed, 41
Arabic, 31, 37-40
Arabization, 58
Ashikha party, 47
Autonomy, Southern, 72, 91-92, 98, 101-106, 110-113, 116-118, 121, 123, 125-129, 134-135, 145,
155-156, 162-163, 188, 196
Azania Liberation Front (ALF), 64
Azhari, Ismail el, 51
Bahr el Ghazal, 35, 40, 65, 93
Baker, Samuel, 39
Bakheit, Ali, 108, 117-118, 131, 134
Bargaining, 7, 20, 176, 184
Belgium, 64
Britain, 40, 42, 44, 46-48, 56, 88-91, 94
British Council of Churches, 177, 195
Burundi, 204
Bwogo, Samuel, 112, 114, 118, 122, 130-131, 133-134, 138, 142, 173
Carr, Burgess, 100, 103-104, 108-109, 122, 131-148, 167, 170-171, 174-175, 178, 197
Catholicism, 43, 96, 127
See also Christianity
Cease fire, 113, 123, 144
Central Intelligence Agency, 91, 189
Central African Republic, 67-68
Christianity, 37, 43-45
See also Catholicism
Church World Service, 101, 104
Civil Administration, SSLM, 102, 158
Civil war
definition, 4
internationalized, 3, 5
settlement of, 6
significance, 5
See also Insurgency; Internal war
Commission of Inquiry report, 54, 56
Communist Bloc, 72
Communist Party, 61, 69, 70-72, 77-80, 114, 155
Compromise, 7-8, 13-16, 21, 158, 169, 176-178, 183-184
Concession, 7-8, 22-23, 155, 162, 174
Condominium Agreement, 42, 46, 50
Condominium Rule, 42-44
Conflict
analysis of, 26, 169
belligerency, state of, 29
analysis of, 26, 169
cost of, 18, 26-30, 175, 180, 195, 199
duration of, 15-16, 194
dynamics of, 169, 202
escalation of, 174, 181
impasse, 26-27, 174-175, 183
intensity of, 16, 20, 30, 194-195
international, 11
internationalization of, 12
labor-management, 11
territorial, 21
value conflict, 21
See also Issues; Parties; Stalemate
Congo, 40
See also Zaire
Constantinople, 39
Counselling, human relations, 185
Crisis management, 26
Darfur, 39, 40-41
De Garang, Mading, 87-94, 100, 105, 110-118, 121-124, 130-133, 146
Deadlock, 18, 27-28, 133, 139
See also Stalemate
Deng, William, 63
Egypt, 35-42, 44, 46-51, 56, 62, 64, 74, 78, 80, 154, 160, 193
Egypt, Viceroy of, 37
Empathy, 26, 175-176, 184, 201
Empowerment, 19-20, 31, 176, 178, 186, 195, 202
Epps, Dwain, 102, 105-106, 114-117, 172
Equatoria, 35, 40, 48, 93, 162
Equatoria Corps, 55, 59
Eritrea, 69, 79, 122, 132, 140, 180-181
Ethiopia, 35, 40, 44, 59, 67-69, 74, 76, 79, 81, 83, 95, 104, 107, 112-113, 116, 121-122, 132-133,
136, 139, 140-141, 146-147, 159, 171, 173, 180-182
Faud, Ahmed, 46
Federation, 58, 62-63, 70, 116, 121, 123, 135, 145, 158
Foot, Dingle, 121, 133, 145, 177, 187
Frei, Daniel, 15-16, 22
Fung, 37
Garang, Joseph, 71, 73, 78-79, 89-93, 106, 108, 111, 114, 117, 155, 163, 187-188, 204
Germany, 46, 103
Ghana, 62, 164, 170
Good offices, 3, 203
Gordon, General, 39, 40
Graduates General Congress, 46-47
Grass Curtain, 76-77, 79, 99, 110, 114, 158, 161, 187
Gregory XVI, Pope, 43
Guerilla war, 58-61, 65-66, 70, 81-83, 151, 153, 168, 179
See also Insurgency
Hamito-Semites, 35
Haq, Barbara, 88-94, 187-188, 203
House of Commons, British, 90, 187
Humanitarian organizations, 207
Imam, 73-74
Inquiry, 3-4
Insurgency, 13-14, 151, 179
See also Guerilla war
Internal war, 4
Iraq, 74, 78
Islam, 37, 40, 43, 47-48, 134
Islamization, 96
Ismael, Khedive, 39, 41
Israel, 78-83, 112, 116, 120, 127, 141, 145-147, 157, 160, 181-182, 193-196, 199
Issues
affective, 185
agenda, 175, 196, 201-202
arrangement of, 22
cognitive, 185
complexity of, 22, 196
emotional, 206
internal affairs, 25, 29, 101, 137, 164
multidimensionality, 22, 196
positive-sum, 21
substantive, 206
territorial, 21
zero-sum, 21, 196
Joint Church Aid (JCA), 104, 108-109, 167
Juba, 48-50, 52
Juba Conference, 48, 50
June Declaration, 72, 91, 98, 162
Kampala Committee, 102, 108, 161, 196
Kenya, 35, 45, 59, 67, 81, 83, 95-97, 107-108, 113, 118
Kenyatta, Jomo, 88, 177
Khalid, Abdullah, 58
Khalid, Mansour, 126, 131, 142-143, 147, 173
Kitchener, Lord, 42
Kordofan, 39-41
Labour Party, British, 88
Lagu, Joseph, 75-76, 82, 89, 108-112, 115-128, 144-148, 156-157, 161 161-163, 174, 193, 204
Liberation, 88
Liberia, 170, 198
Libya, 35, 44, 74, 77-80, 160
McCall, Storrs, 102
McDermot, Brian, 91, 93
Mahdi, 39-41
Mahdi, Sadiq al, 68-70, 79
Mahdi, Second, 40-41
Mahdist, 40-43, 46-47, 71, 73-74
Mahgoub, Mohammed Ahmed, 64-71, 88, 164, 180
Makerere Group, 102-103, 108, 144, 161, 196
MCF. See Movement for Colonial Freedom
Mediation
communication patterns, 8, 174
definition, 4
dilemmas of, 29
feasibility of, 207
international, 11, 12
labor, 11
pessimism about, 31
secrecy, 174, 205
team, 170, 206
theory of, 11-12, 204
timing, 16, 26-28, 203-204
transferability, 11
utility of, 204
Mediator
advocate, 186
characteristics, 22
facilitator, 186
impartiality, 173, 186, 195-197, 202
international support, 23, 24
leverage, 23-24, 30, 198-199, 208
mail-bag, as, 205
personality of, 170, 171
skills, 14, 20, 26, 30, 193, 197, 199
physical resources, 197
Mercenaries, 101, 109
Military College, Sudan, 55, 57, 163
Minority Rights Group, 94
Missionaries, 43, 44, 58, 61, 84-85, 96-97, 112, 166-167
Missionary Act of 1962, 97
Modelski, George, 13, 19-20, 28, 30
Mohammed, Ali, 37-38
Morocco, 204
Movement for Colonial Freedom (MCF), 88-90, 93-95, 186-189, 203
Muslim Brothers, 71-72, 156
Mutiny of 1955, 52, 56, 59
Nairobi, 97, 102, 106, 108, 118-119
Nasser, Gemal Abdel, 56
National Legislative Assembly, 49, 50-53, 55, 57-58
National Unionist Party (NUP), 51, 52
Neguib, Mohammed 50
Nigeria, 62, 83
Nigerian Civil War, 98, 103-104, 160-161, 166, 171, 180, 197, 198
Niilus, Leopoldo, 106-107, 118-120, 122, 126, 128, 131, 133, 136-137, 139, 142, 164-166, 170-172,
175, 184, 198, 205
Nile Mirror, 94
Nile Provisional Government, 71, 75
Nilo-Hametic, 37
Nilotic, 37
Nkrumah, Kwame, 67, 88, 164, 177, 186
Nuer, 181
Numeiri, Gaafar al, 69-74, 77-82, 92, 94, 98, 100-101, 105, 108, 114, 117, 120-129, 143-144, 147-
148, 155-163, 167, 178, 180, 186, 192-194, 204
NUP. See National Unionist Party
OAU. See Organization of African Unity
Obote, Milton, 87, 160, 181, 186
October Revolution, 61
Organization of African Unity (OAU), 101, 107, 091, 111, 133, 136-137, 145, 161, 146, 197
Ott, Melvin, 30, 198, 204-205
Ottoman Empire, 37
Parties, conflict
cohesiveness, 13, 191
dependency, 15, 194
identity, 11-12, 31, 193-194
personality conflict, 14, 29
Paul VI, Pope, 105
Permits to Trade Order, 45
Portugal, 91, 197
Power parity, 17-20, 203
Racism, Program to Combat, 98, 101, 108, 166-167
Red Cross, International Committee of, 130, 148, 207
Reed, Allen, 101
Refugees, 60-63, 68-69, 74, 79, 83-84, 95-99, 105-106, 115, 126, 129, 148, 152, 159, 170
Regional Self Government, 157
See also Autonomy, Southern
Revolutionary Council, 71, 77, 94
Round Table Conference, 62, 65, 69, 157, 174
Rwanda, 204
Sahnoun, Mohammed, 137, 139
SANU. See Sudan African National Union
Saudi Arabia, 44
Scherf, Theresa, 44, 102
SDF. See Sudan Defence Force
Selassie, Haile, 122, 131-132, 139-140, 146, 159, 178, 198-199, 207
Sennar, 37
Sensitivity training, 185
Simba, 64
Slave trade, 37-40, 42, 52
Socialist Party, 70-71, 77, 91, 93
Socio-therapy, 185
Southern Corps, 55
South Africa, 104, 108, 091, 120, 197
Southern Armed Forces, 138
Southern Bloc, 53
Southern Party, 51-52
Southern Policy, 46
Southern Sudan Association, 89, 91, 93-94
Southern Sudan Liberation Movement (SSLM), 71, 75,
76, 81, 91, 95, 100-147, 154-158, 161, 163, 165, 168, 170-184, 187-189, 204
Southern Sudan Provisional Government (SSPG), 70-71
Sovereignty
equality, 14, 25, 164, 192
infringement of, 29
interference in, 164
recognition of, 25, 164
sensitivities, 24
threat to, 15
Soviet Union, 77-78, 80-82, 154, 160, 193-194, 199
SSLM. See Southern Sudan Liberation Movement
SSPG. See Southern Sudan Provisional Government
Stalemate, 17-20, 27-31, 151, 153-154, 189, 195
See also Conflict; Deadlock
Steiner, Rolf, 116
Sudan African National Union (SANU), 59, 61-46, 70, 72-73
Sudan Council of Churches, 98, 107, 112, 114, 118, 122, 131, 173, 208
Sudan Defence Force (SDF), 55, 56, 60
Sudan Unity Party, 70
Sudan-Azania Government, 71
Sudanic, 37
Sudanization, 51, 55
Sue River Revolutionary Government, 71
Taffeng, Emilio, 59
Tanzania, 62, 90
Turkish-Egyptian regime, 40
Torit, 56-57
Tschombe, Moise, 64
Tubman, William, 198
Twelve Man Committee, 69, 157
Uganda, 35, 39, 44-45, 59-62, 67-68, 76, 79, 81-83, 90, 92, 95, 102-107, 110, 113, 121, 126, 127,
152, 160, 172, 180-182
Umma Party, 47, 51, 52, 58
United Nations (UN), 24, 60, 84, 164-165
United Nations Commission on Human Rights, 83
United States, 64, 101, 103, 104, 127, 194
United Sudan African Liberation Front, 156
Upper Nile, 35, 93
Verona Fathers, 97
Walton, Robert, 24, 185
Wau, 60, 65-66
WCC. See World Council of Churches
Wehr, Paul, 19-20, 26, 30
Wol Wol, Laurence, 89-91, 111-117, 122, 124, 130-131, 146
Wolseley, General, 41
World Council of Churches (WCC), 87, 94-131, 148, 207
Yarrow, C.H., 23, 198-199, 205
Young, Oran, 30, 198, 204
Zaire, 35, 59, 64, 67, 81, 83, 95, 110, 113, 116, 181-182
Zambia, 90, 110
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