which runs the semi-autonomous south -- have been building up their armies ahead of the 2009 elections or the 2011 referendum when the South will choose whether to secede from the north. There have been reports that Khartoum has been purchasing arms from China and North Korea, including fighter jets and tankers, while the South, suspecting that Khartoum is bent on scuttling the 2005 Comprehensive Peace...
25 Oct 2008
Sudan Kidnappers Want Chinese Oil Firms Out
DUBAI - Kidnappers of nine Chinese oil workers seized near a disputed oil district in Sudan said they want Chinese oil firms to leave the area in return for the hostages' release, a newspaper reported on Friday.
"We don't have any material demands. We want Chinese companies to leave the region immediately because they work with the government," the pan-Arab Asharq Al-Awsat quoted the alleged leader of the group as saying. The Saudi-owned newspaper identified the man as Abu Humaid Ahmad Dannay, and said he commands the rebel Justice and Equality Movement in the Kordofan region.
Three Chinese engineers and and six other workers employed by the China National Petroleum Corporation in South Kordofan, a state which includes the disputed oil district of Abyei, were kidnapped on October 18.
Dannay, who Asharq Al-Awsat said belongs to the Arab Messeria tribe, said the hostages were in good health and being well treated. "We treat them according to the ethics of Muslims and serve them despite the language barrier. I can affirm that they are in good health now," he was quoted as saying.
The Chinese workers were snatched in Heglig, which is adjacent to the flashpoint Abyei area, according to a diplomatic source in Khartoum. Heglig lies near the line separating the former warring parties of north and south Sudan, in the Muglad Basin where most of Sudan's proven oil reserves are found.
The Messeria were also blamed for the kidnapping of four Indian oil workers and their Sudanese driver in the same area in May. All five managed to escape or were released unharmed.
In the past, Darfur rebels have kidnapped foreign oil workers from Sudanese oilfields, often targeting Chinese companies because of their strong ties with Khartoum, although all of those abducted eventually emerged unscathed
In October 2007, Darfur rebels from the Justice and Equality Movement attacked an oilfield run by the Greater Nile Petroleum Operating Company, a consortium involving China's CNPC.
Asharq Al-Awsat said a high-ranking JEM source neither confirmed nor denied that the kidnappers belong to the movement.
The newspaper quoted Dannay as admitting that the abduction was aimed at drawing attention to the lack of development in the region and the failure of oil companies operating there to help provide services or jobs for natives.
Abyei and surrounding areas are prey to sporadic violence between tribes aligned either with the Arab-dominated government in Khartoum or with the administration in the south despite a 2005 peace deal that ended the civil war.
India To The Moon
NEW DELHI (AP) – India launched its first mission to the moon Wednesday, rocketing a satellite up into the pale dawn sky in a two-year mission to redraw maps of the lunar surface.
Clapping and cheering scientists tracked the ascent on computer screens after they lost sight of Chandrayaan-1 from the Sriharikota space center in southern India. Chandrayaan means “Moon Craft” in ancient Sanskrit. Indian Space Research Organization chairman G. Madhavan Nair said the mission is to “unravel the mystery of the moon.” “We have started our journey to the moon and the first leg has gone perfectly well,” he said. Chief among the mission's goals is mapping not only the surface of the moon, but what lies beneath. If successful, India will join what's shaping up as a 21st century space race with Chinese and Japanese crafts already in orbit around the moon. To date only the U.S., Russia, the European Space Agency, Japan and China have sent missions to the moon. As India's economy has boomed in recent years, it has sought to convert its newfound wealth — built on the nation's high-tech sector — into political and military clout. It is hoping that the moon mission — coming just months after finalizing a deal with the United States that recognizes India as a nuclear power — will further enhance its status. Until now, India's space launches have mainly carried weather warning satellites and communication systems, said former NASA associate administrator Scott Pace, director of space policy at the George Washington University. “You're seeing India lifting its sights,” Pace said. While much of the technology involved in reaching the moon has not changed since the Soviet Union and the U.S. did it more than four decades ago, analysts say new mapping equipment allows the exploration of new areas, including below the surface. India plans to use the 3,080-pound lunar probe to create a high-resolution map of the lunar surface and the minerals below. Two of the mapping instruments are a joint project with NASA. In the last year, Asian nations have taken the lead in moon exploration. In October 2007, Japan sent up the Kaguya spacecraft. A month later, China's Chang'e-1 entered lunar orbit. Those missions took high-resolution pictures of the moon, but are not as comprehensive as Chandrayaan-1 will be or NASA's half-a-billion-dollar Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter scheduled to be launched next year, Pace said. The most comprehensive maps of the moon were made about 40 years ago during the Apollo era, he said. “We don't really have really good modern maps of the moon with modern instrument,” Pace said. “The quality of the Martian maps, I would make a general argument, is superior to what we have of the moon.” NASA has put probes on Mars' frigid polar region, but not on the rugged poles of the moon. Yet the moon's south pole is where NASA is considering setting up an eventual human-staffed lunar outpost, Pace said. The moon's south pole is “certainly more rugged than where Neil Armstrong landed. It's more interesting. It's more dangerous,” Pace said. “We need better maps.” Beijing in 2003 became the first Asian country to put its own astronauts into space. It followed that last month with its first spacewalk. More ominously, last year China also blasted an old satellite into oblivion with a land-based anti-satellite missile, the first such test ever conducted by any nation, including the United States and Russia. The Indian mission is not all about rivalry and prestige. Analysts say India stands to reap valuable rewards from the technology it develops and, according to Pace, it already shows increased confidence in difficult engineering and quality control. The $80 million mission will test systems for a future moon landing, with plans to land a rover on the moon in 2011 and eventually a manned space program, though this has not been authorized yet. And the Indian space agency was already dreaming of more. “Space is the frontier for mankind in the future. If we want to go beyond the moon, we have to go there first,” said Indian space agency spokesman S. Satish. ___
Economic Crisis: OPEC cuts oil output by 1.5 million barrels
Vienna, 24 Oct. (AKI) - The price of oil fell to 64 dollars a barrel on Friday - its lowest level in 16 months - despite a move by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to cut oil production.Oil ministers from the 13 OPEC nations agreed on Friday to reduce output for the first time in two years by 1.5 million barrels a day at an emergency meeting in Vienna. Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said in an interview after Friday's meeting that the cut in output would take effect from 1 November.The cut will be from the existing quota of 28.8 million barrels a day. Crude oil has fallen 57 percent from a 11 July record of 147.27 dollars a barrel with the impact of the global financial crisis and a gloomy world economic outlook for 2009.The International Energy Agency recently predicted that demand among industrialised nations would fall 2.2 percent this year, reducing overall world demand growth to 0.5 percent. On Friday, US light crude - a standard benchmark - for December delivery was down 3.23 dollars and trading at 64.61 dollars a barrel in early trading.
Sudan: Top UN official meets with rebel leader
Darfur, 10 Oct. (AKI) - A top United Nations peacekeeping official met with a Sudanese rebel leader in a bid to bring peace to the war-torn region.Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations Alain Le Roy met in El-Fasher, North Darfur, with Minni Minawi, leader of the Sudan Liberation Army, one of the rebel factions that have been fighting Government forces and allied Janjaweed militiamen for the past five years.The UN-African Union peacekeeping mission in Darfur or UNAMID gave no details of Le Roy’s talks with Minnawi, who met with Sudanese Vice President Ali Osman Taha last month, announcing they were turning a new page in their commitment to full implementation of the Darfur Peace Agreement, and the formation of a joint military committee to ensure an end to all hostilities.Le Roy is on his first official visit to Sudan’s Darfur region, where the world body is slated to field its largest mission in an effort to stem a conflict that has already killed some 300,000 people directly or from resulting disease and malnutrition, and uprooted than 2.7 million others.The SLA signed the Darfur Peace Agreement with the Government two years ago but other rebel factions have yet to do so. In August the military chief of UNAMID, General Martin Luther Agwai warned that the splintered rebel movements must unite at the negotiating table if there is to be a lasting solution to the conflict. UNAMID was deployed at the beginning of 2008 and will become the largest UN peacekeeping operation with some 26,000 personnel at full strength.Le Roy has already visited Southern Sudan where the Organisation is fielding a separate operation – the 10,000-strong UN Mission in Sudan monitoring a 2005 peace agreement that ended the 21-year-long north-south civil war, which killed at least 2 million people and displaced 4.5 million others.
Top international military officials meet in Adirondacks
Men in military uniforms work around a Boeing 757 airplane with “United States of America” printed on its fuselage, parked at the Adirondack Regional Airport in Lake Clear Friday.(Enterprise photo — Lou Reuter)
By PETER CROWLEY, Enterprise Managing Editor(adirondack daily)
SARANAC LAKE - Powerful generals and admirals from some of the most powerful nations on Earth are reportedly meeting somewhere in the local area this weekend after flying into the Adirondack Regional Airport in Lake Clear on Friday.
Among the passengers of a large Boeing 757 airplane with "United States of America" printed on its fuselage were top members of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff and their counterparts from France, Germany and another country, possibly Great Britain, according to Barry DeFuria, a town of Harrietstown councilman and Airport Committee member who was there when the plane landed. A top military delegation from Italy flew in on a separate Falcon airplane, DeFuria said.
Town Supervisor Larry Miller, also on the Airport Committee, was also there and confirmed which nations' officials were on which planes, but he said he did not know what kind of officials they were or where they were going from the airport. He said he and DeFuria had to get security clearances to be present and that soldiers were guarding the 757 around the clock at the airport.
The Joint Chiefs of Staff is the leadership council of the U.S. military, comprised of the top general or admiral of each branch of the armed services. Its current chairman is Admiral Michael Mullen.
23 Oct 2008
Open Letter to ICC Chief Prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo
Jurgen Todenhöfer is the manager of a German media group and for 18 years was a Christian Democrat representative in the Bundestag. He has studied the situation in the Middle East extensively and has traveled frequently throughout the region. His book on Islamic extremism - Warum tötest du, Zaid? (Why do you kill, Zaid?) - will shortly appear in English translation.
His open letter to Luis Moreno Ocampo, Chief Prosecutor to the International Criminal Court, appeared in the Berliner Zeitung on July 19, 2008.
the translation is
Dear Mr Moreno Ocampo,
Like many who believe in the universal validity of human rights, I welcome your intention to investigate the actions of the Sudanese President Omar Hassa al Baschir in court. Crimes against humanity must in any case be prosecuted. As you have correctly made clear, it does not make a difference if the perpetrator is an acting head of state. Once you have the evidence you must indict.
As a former justice, however, I have to ask why you are not exercising the same perserverence and the same demand for justice against those who are responsible for the Iraq War - namely US President George W. Bush or the former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair.
The justifications for the Iraq War were untrue and therefore the war itself, according to the then General Secretary of the United Nations Kofi Annan was "illegal"; it was a violation of international law. It was apparent to everyone that there were no issues of national security involved. There was no resolution of the UN Security Council. Even the Federal High Court in Germany declared the Iraq War a violation of international law in 2005.
According to the results of an independent American-Iraqi "Lancet Study" more than 600,000 civilians have died from this war aggression - the majority killed by US troops. The independent British institute ORB has likewise determined that over one million people have lost their lives so far in this conflict. One million have been wounded, nearly five million are refugees. Their suffering and their deaths must not go unpunished.
The international Criminal Court needs to ask itself it wants to be a court for the entire world based on laws that apply to all, or whether it shall choose to just be Criminal Court of the West against rest of the world - a court of the most powerful against weaker nations. The fact that so far only political leaders of smaller nations have been prosecuted raises some doubts.
You could make the formal argument that the US, in contrast to Great Britain, never ratified the law establishing the International Criminal Court, and that therefore it is not possible to bring charges against the US president. But in that case you also couldn't charge the Sudanese president, since his country also does not recognize the International Criminal Court.
In the court opinion of the Nuremberg Trials it was stated that "To initiate a war of aggression, therefore, is not only an international crime; it is the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole."
The American Chief Prosecutor Robert Jackson - your predecessor to some extent - stated then "We must never forget that the record on which we judge these defendants is the record on which history will judge us tomorrow. (...) Justice in war does not only apply to criminals of the vanquished nations."
A young Muslim woman recently asked me how many hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians a western head of state could kill with impunity. How should any believer in universal values such as human dignity and justice answer this question? I would be grateful if you could tell me on what grounds you refuse to bring charges against George W. Bush and Tony Blair.
Respectfully,
Jurgen Todenhöfer
SPLA Air Force: Hope for South Sudan independence
SudanTribune
By James Okuk
June 26, 2008 — The White Paper on Defense, which established South Sudan Air Force (SSAF) under the historic name of the Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) heightened my spirit and gave me the necessary motivations for the future of South Sudan; the awaited richest African State in the heart of the continent. This is the best Bill that has been ever passed by the Interim Southern Sudan Assembly (ISSA) since its inception in 2005.
Congratulations to our unforgettable hero, Oyay Deng Ajak and his team in the SPLA Affairs for drafting the White Paper and presenting it to the Parliament of Southern Sudan in the right time. Congratulations to the MPs of Southern Sudan for passing this Paper as a Bill without any delay. Thanks to the MPs for authorizing the GoSS Ministry of Finance to fund the implementation of this Bill as stipulated in the CPA. Though very highly expensive to pursue, this Bill is a great step forward for protecting the territory of Southern Sudan from the invaders and internal colonialists who have been envying the Greenness, the Wetness and the Oil Lucrativity of this beloved land of African people.
Dear SPLA heroes and the People of South Sudan do not worry about unhappiness of the National Congress Party (NCP) and their Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) about the establishment of the Air Force of South Sudan. After all, the NCP were opposed to the idea of independent status of the SPLA during the negotiations in Machakos, Nairobi, Nanyuki and Naivasha from 2002 - 2004. Even when they accepted at the end that the SPLA can be independent but only in the South, they denied it any budget from the national coffers. They thought that by this denial the SPLA will automatically run into troubles of how to pay its files and ranks, and then weather away with time. They got it incorrect totally!
The NCP and their SAF were wrong in their evil wish for the South. They forgot that the Southerners are known for endurance, given the history of their continuous struggles with both the external and internal colonialists in the Sudan without regretting of not being rewarded with money. Though most of this history is unrecorded by the biased historians of Northern Sudan who have been writing on the history of the Sudan with exclusion of the South, the people who lived it value the meaning of Southern struggle very much.
During the struggle, Southerners were ready to eat, drink, wear, sleep and use all kinds of dirty substances that can make them survive and defeat the paid and well-fed enemies of independence. The freedom fighters of South Sudan saw their reward to be in their dignity and pride as a liberated and a free people who cannot accept to be treated as second or third class citizens on their own black soil. You can feel the dignity, pride and courage in their liberation songs and dances even when bombs dropped on them from the sky and from the long-range missiles used by Jellaba’s recurring Regimes in Khartoum.
Even if the coffers of the GoSS get dried up for the sake of rightly implementing the White Paper on Defense, let it be. The South needs a strengthened and well-organized armed protection capacity to ensure that the development is secured from the looters. After all what is the use of building schools, hospitals, roads and other infrastructure if they are not protected in the first place.
Southerners have witnessed during the time of war how SAF used to drive heavy tanks on the tarmac roads in the towns of Southern Sudan and making round turns on these roads, leaving them to look like dry rivers with grabbles and sand. The Southerners have also witnesses how the SAF and their militias carried away windows, doors, zincs, timbers, breaks, and iron poles of the buildings of Southern Sudan; leaving the infrastructure as ruins that cannot be described as any human work. Not to forget, many buildings in the towns of Northern Sudan were constructed from the carried-away materials of the ruined Southern infrastructure. All these looting happened because there was no regular military protection for the development projects and infrastructure in Southern Sudan. But this time, Southerners have rightly learned from the past. They have seen the need for providing proper military protection before development projects like schools, hospitals, government offices, shops, and roads could be constructed. With South Sudan Air Force in place, no looter will carry away (unchallenged) any construction material from the infrastructure of the South to be used in developing the North. Even the armed Arabs nomads will be careful and respectful when they come to South for green and watery pasture, for they and their cattle will risk terrible deaths if they temper with the people of the land.
Let the SPLA go ahead to train the bright and courageous South Sudan young men and women in the Air Force techniques and management. Let the SPLA go a head to buy Antinovs, Fighter Jets, and Fighter Choppers – even with loans from abroad – to deter the enemies of the independence of the South Sudan and make them cooperate in the implementation of the CPA to its logical end. This is the only guaranteed protection the GoSS can have for its people and their properties. It is a known fact that the Less Developed Countries are never fair in democratic process (including the referenda) because the ruling parties are so often seen to be good at rigging the results using the threats of military apparatus of the State. It is highly probable that the South Sudan Air Force will guarantee the independence of South Sudan, comes 2011.
If the South wants a lasting peace, it has to get prepared for war, a serious one this time. The best war to prepare for will be the war from the sky with bombs dropping on tall buildings of the enemies (if need be). No more jokes of cat and mouse tricks around the CPA implementation. The Jellaba should become serious (even if they are SPLM members like Dr. Monsour Khalid and Yassir Arman) on how the South should become independent peacefully in 2011 so that good neighborhood can be possible. No Southerner is dreaming to go back to Bilpam for AK 47 guerrilla training this time if war break out again. If the South is re-disappointed, missiles will just fly from RamChiel followed by Jets, Antinovs and Choppers from anywhere around South Sudan to smoke the enemy targets in the North. Those who use to watch warfare in the action movies will have the rare dangerous chance to see and smell it live in their midst. Saudi Arabia shall become very far to reach by the rich traders who have been funding the destruction of the South Sudan during the time of struggle.
Not only the Jellaba, but also the LRA in Equatoria should get warned that the SPLA does not joke around with those who temper with the Security and Stability in the South. The bandit Joseph Kony (with is his wrong vision of ruling Uganda with Moses’ Ten Commandments) will be advised to come out from the bush hidings in any spot within Southern Sudan and sign the Peace Agreement with Uganda Government before he can hate the day he was born, and before his mother could shed tears of sorrow. Long Live SPLA and long Live Southern Sudan on its way to untouchable independence!
James Okuk is a PhD student in the University of Nairobi. He can be reached at okukjimy@hotmail.com
ICC prosecutor says decision on Bashir warrant unlikely in October
September 12, 2008 (WASHINGTON) – The prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) Luis Moreno-Ocampo downplayed speculations that judges will reach a decision on an arrest warrant for Sudanese President Omer Hassan al-Bashir.
The International Criminal Court (ICC) Prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo speaks during a meeting with Colombian judiciary on August 27, 2008 (AFP) Ocampo announced in mid-July that he requested an arrest warrant for Al-Bashir.
Ocampo filed 10 charges: three counts of genocide, five of crimes against humanity and two of murder and accused Al-Bashir of masterminding a campaign to get rid of the African tribes in Darfur; Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa.
Based on the timeframe that ICC judges took in other cases it was widely expected that a decision would be forthcoming within 3 months of the prosecutor’s application.
However Ocampo told Reuters in an interview today that he does not see this coming.
“Normally, when the judges start to analyze [a case] they call us for hearings and they ask for more information. They have not yet done that” he said.
“I don’t know how long it will take, the judges will decide, but I don’t think October would be possible” he said.
The ICC Judges has been in a month long recess from July 18 to August 18.
This week the US Ambassador to the United Nations Zalmay Khalilzad told the Egyptian Middle-East news agency (MENA) that he expects the ICC judges to make a ruling on Ocampo’s application by mid-October.
Khalilzad sparked an angry response from Khartoum who said it proved the link between the ICC move and Washington.
The ICC prosecutor also told Reuters that his office is looking into a raid by Sudanese by soldiers and security officers on Kalma IDP camp in South Darfur that took place in late August killing at least 30 people and injuring many more.
Ocampo said he asked the Sudan and the Arab League for an update on investigations launched into the incident by local authorities. He said that his office is trying to determine whether it was an isolated incident or the start of a new wave of violence against civilians.
“The Kalma camp attack had to be highlighted because it’s a case in which allegations are that al-Bashir forces killed civilians directly in the camp” Ocampo told Associated Press in a separate interview today.
He revealed that his investigation into rebel attack on peacekeepers is almost complete and challenged the Darfur rebels to cooperate.
“It will be a challenge for the rebel forces to comply” the prosecutor said.
“Some of them say ‘we are ready to go to court if the court calls us’. OK the time will come, very soon." he added.
Sudan has said it will not accept any of citizens standing before the ICC even the rebel groups.
Sudan has not ratified the Rome Statute, but the UNSC triggered the provisions under the Statute that enables it to refer situations in non-State parties to the world court if it deems that it is a threat to international peace and security.
Joint military exercise 'Bulgarian Panther 2008' with Bulgarian and US army soldiers.
Men dressed in arab atire watch as Bulgarian forces secure an area during joint military exercise 'Bulgarian Panther 2008' with Bulgarian and US army soldiers at Novo Selo military base east of the capital Sofia Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2008.
15 October 2008
Bulgarian Army Bulgaria BMP-23 armoured infantry fighting combat vehicle picture Bulgarian Panther 2008 Bulgarian and US army soldiers picture
Data Sheet BMP-23
Russia may sign a contract with Venezuela on delivering BMP-3 armored infantry fighting vehicles.
Russia may sign a contract with Venezuela in the next month on delivering BMP-3 armored personnel carriers, Russian news agency RIA Novosti said yesterday, citing the deputy head of arms exporter Rosoboronexport. This would be another major deal for Russia after the last week announcement of the contract for the delivery of 420 BMP-3M Russian vehicles to Greece. "We are preparing to deliver a large number of BMP-3 armored personnel carriers", Igor Sevastyanov, deputy director of Rosoboronexport, was quoted as saying by RIA Novosti. "The contract could be signed in the course of a month," he said.
17 October 2008
22 Oct 2008
US Army Bradley M2 armoured infantry fighting combat vehicle picture
BAE Systems has been awarded two new contracts to fit additional protection kits to more than 800 Bradley fighting vehicles at military bases in the United States and deployed in combat. The contracts, initially worth $27.6 million, have the potential to increase to over $55 million. The order will apply urban survivability kits – which include advanced survivability seats, hot box restraint kits and fire suppression kits – to 328 Bradleys and heat abatement kits to an additional 476 Bradleys. Delivery of the kits is anticipated to begin in November 2008 and be completed by May 2009.
21 October 2008
REUTERS
Elephant herds found on isolated south Sudan island
Mon May 28, 2007 10:18am EDT
By Skye Wheeler
JUBA, Sudan (Reuters) - International wildlife experts have located hundreds of wild elephants on a treeless island in the swamps of south Sudan, where they apparently avoided unchecked hunting during more than 20 years of war.
"We flew out of a cloud, and there they were. It was like something out of Jurassic Park," said Tom Catterson, working on a U.S.-funded environment program in south Sudan.
Environmentalists are keeping the location of the island in the Sudd area secret to prevent poachers from killing the animals.
Sudan's north-south civil war caused massive displacement of animals as well as people into neighboring countries, according to southern environment ministry official Victor Wurda la Tombe.
The conflict ended with a 2005 peace agreement that gave the south semi-autonomous status, but experts say game hunting is still unchecked in a region filled with guns despite a five-year ban on hunting to allow wildlife to replenish.
Environmentalists are only now beginning to discover the extent of the damage on animal populations, and are looking for additional pockets where animals could not be reached by rebels or armed groups looking for meat and export products like tusks.
It is possible there are other herds of elephants -- mostly unheard of in the contemporary south -- hiding out in the Sudd, an area so flat the Nile River breaks up into hundreds of channels and lakes.
"It's not that good a habitat for elephants, but they're free of people shooting at them," said Catterson on Sunday. "You and I wouldn't stand a chance in there between the mosquitoes and crocodiles. And you'd get lost."
Although Sudan is banned from exporting elephant tusks, it is still easy to purchase ivory carvings in Khartoum's famous Omdurman market. The Sudd is also host to a wide variety of fish, birds, amphibians and reptiles.
Two oil companies have been given concession rights by the southern government in areas deep in the Sudd previously undisturbed by seismic testing and exploratory drilling.
Both the ministry and international experts are worried about the potential for damage in the fragile swamp.
"Because the land is so flat, if you interrupt drainage patterns here you can have a huge impact," Catterson said.
19 Oct 2008
Nine Chinese oil workers kidnapped in Sudan
KHARTOUM
(AFP) — Nine Chinese oil workers have been kidnapped near Sudan's disputed central oil district of Abyei, the Chinese embassy said on Sunday, with a Sudanese driver also feared missing.
"Nine Chinese oil workers, they are kidnapped," an embassy spokesman told AFP, asking not to be named. "We're still looking into the issue. We're taking the necessary steps."
He said the kidnapping happened on Saturday and that the embassy was in crisis talks following the incident.
"We're now in a meeting with our ambassador," he said. "We have contacts with the Sudanese authorities to identify and localise the kidnappers."
He said the missing were three Chinese engineers and six other workers employed by the China National Petroleum Corporation in South Kordofan, a state which includes the disputed oil district of Abyei.
They were snatched around midday (0900 GMT) on Saturday while "on the road," he said, "probably by armed men." He said the group's Sudanese driver had not been taken.
However, a diplomatic source in Khartoum said that one Sudanese driver had been kidnapped and one released during the incident in Heglig in South Kordofan.
Heglig lies near the line separating the former warring parties of north and south Sudan, in the Muglad Basin where most of Sudan's proven oil reserves are found.
Ali Yousuf, director of protocol at the Sudanese foreign ministry, told AFP that Sudanese forces were scouring the area of the kidnap, inside the "Block 4" oil field, but "no contact has been made with the kidnappers."
The diplomatic source said that members of the Arab Messeria tribe had carried out the kidnapping because they want a greater share of the region's oil revenue.
The Messeria were also blamed for the kidnapping of four Indian oil workers and their Sudanese driver in the same area in May. All five managed to escape or were released unharmed, the last one in July.
In the past, Darfur rebels have kidnapped foreign oil workers from Sudanese oilfields, often targeting Chinese companies because of their strong ties with Khartoum, although all of those abducted eventually emerged unscathed.
In October 2007, Darfur rebels from the Justice and Equality Movement attacked an oilfield run by the Greater Nile Petroleum Operating Company (GNPOC), a consortium involving China's CNPC.
In 2004, Darfur rebels from another group, the Sudan Liberation Army, kidnapped two Chinese engineers working on water projects in the western region, which neighbours Kordofan.
One of the engineers escaped and the other was released unharmed after less than two weeks.
Abyei and surrounding areas are prey to sporadic violence between tribes aligned either with the Arab-dominated government in Khartoum or with the administration in the south despite a 2005 peace deal that ended the civil war.
Under a roadmap for peace agreed in June, joint patrols are supposed to be restoring security in Abyei after May fighting flattened the area's main town and killed at least 89 people.
The violence was seen as the biggest threat to the fledgling peace process that ended 21 years of civil war between north and south in 2005 after more than 1.5 million people were killed.
9 Oct 2008
Sudan Comprehensive Peace Agreement
The 2005 CPA established a new Government of National Unity (GNU) and the interim Government of Southern Sudan (GOSS) and called for wealth-sharing, power-sharing, and security arrangements between the two parties. The historic agreement provides for a ceasefire, withdrawal of troops from southern Sudan, and the repatriation and resettlement of refugees. It also stipulates that by the end of the six-year interim period, during which the various provisions of the CPA are implemented, there will be elections at all levels, including for president, state governors, and national and state legislatures.
On July 9, 2005, the Presidency was inaugurated with General Omar al-Bashir sworn in as President and Dr. John Garang, Chairman of the SPLM/A, installed as First Vice President. Ratification of the Interim National Constitution followed. The Constitution declares Sudan to be a "democratic, decentralized, multi-cultural, multi-ethnic, multi-religious, and multi-lingual State."
On July 30, 2005, the charismatic and revered SPLM leader John Garang died in a helicopter crash. The SPLM immediately named General Salva Kiir Mayardit, Garang's deputy, as First Vice President. As stipulated in the CPA, Kiir now holds the posts of President of the Government of Southern Sudan and Commander-in-Chief of the SPLA.
Implemented provisions of the CPA include the formation of the National Legislature, appointment of Cabinet members, establishment of the Government of Southern Sudan and the signing of the Southern Sudan Constitution, and the appointment of state governors and adoption of state constitutions.
A number of CPA-mandated commissions have also been created. Thus far, those formed include the Assessment and Evaluation Commission, National Petroleum Commission, Fiscal and Financial Allocation and Monitoring Commission, and the North-South Border Commission. The Ceasefire Political Commission, Joint Defense Board, and Ceasefire Joint Military Committee were also established as part of the security arrangements of the CPA. Some commissions remain outstanding.
With the establishment of the National Population Census Council, a population census began in April 2008 in preparation for national elections in 2009. The CPA mandates that the Government of Southern Sudan hold a referendum at the end of a six-year interim period in 2011, allowing southerners to secede if they so wish. On January 9, 2007, commemoration of the second anniversary of the CPA was held in Juba. During the ceremony, President Bashir and First Vice President Kiir exchanged forceful accusations concerning the delays in the implementation of the agreement. In his remarks, Salva Kiir described the achievement of the CPA as the most important achievement in modern Sudanese history and confirmed that there would be no retreat from the path of peace. While some progress has been achieved during the last two years, meaningful implementation of key CPA requirements has faltered, and relations between the National Congress Party (NCP) and SPLM were at an all-time low at the end of 2007. In October 2007, a lack of progress on issues such as north-south border demarcation, certain security provisions, and north-south sharing of oil revenues threatened to erode the CPA as the SPLM threatened a permanent withdrawal from the Government of National Unity. International attention maintains focus on the CPA as the mainstay of peace in Sudan in response to calls for reinvigorated CPA implementation. Implementation of the CPA is moving forward slowly, but the return to peace in Southern Sudan has brought political, civil, and economic dividends.
Background Note: Sudan
PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of the Sudan
Geography
Area: 2.5 million sq. km. (967,500 sq. mi.); the largest country in Africa and almost the size of continental U.S. east of the Mississippi River.
Cities: Capital--Khartoum (pop. 1.4 million). Other cities--Omdurman (2.1 million), Port Sudan (pop. 450,000), Kassala, Kosti, Juba (capital of southern region).
Land boundaries: Central African Republic, Chad, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Libya, and Uganda.
Terrain: Generally flat with mountains in east and west. Khartoum is situated at the confluence of the Blue and White Nile Rivers. The southern regions are inundated during the annual floods of the Nile River system (the Suud or swamps).
Climate: Desert and savanna in the north and central regions and tropical in the south.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective (sing. and pl.)--Sudanese.
Population (2007 est.): 39.4 million; 30%-33% urban.
Annual growth rate (2007 est.): 2.1%.
Ethnic groups: Arab/Muslim North and black African/Christian and animist South.
Religions: Islam (official), indigenous beliefs (Southern Sudan), Christianity.
Languages: Arabic (official), English, tribal languages.
Education: Years compulsory--8. Attendance--35%-40%. Literacy--61%.
Health: Infant mortality rate--92/1,000. Life expectancy--49.1 years.
Work force: Agriculture--80%; industry and commerce--7%; government--13%.
Government
Independence: January 1, 1956.
Type: Provisional Government, the Government of National Unity (GNU), established by the Comprehensive Peace Agreement signed in January 2005 that provides for power sharing pending national elections. National elections are to occur no later than July 2009.
Constitution: The Interim National Constitution was adopted on July 6, 2005. It was drafted by the National Constitutional Review Commission, as mandated by the January 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA). The Government of Southern Sudan (GOSS) also has an interim constitution adopted in December 2005; it was certified by the GNU Ministry of Justice to be in conformance with the Interim National Constitution and the Comprehensive Peace Agreement.
Branches: Executive--executive authority is held by the president, who also is the prime minister, head of state, head of government, and commander in chief of the armed forces. Effective July 9, 2005, the executive branch includes a first vice president and a vice president. As stipulated by the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, the first vice president position is held by a person selected by the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) who concurrently serves as President of the GOSS. Legislative--National Legislature. The National Assembly, the lower house, has 450 members with a power-sharing formula which allows the ruling National Congress Party 52% of seats, the SPLM 28%, and other Northern and Southern parties, 14% and 6% respectively. There is also an upper house, the Council of States, which is composed of two appointed representatives from each of the nation's 26 states, including two observers from Abyei. Judicial--High Court, Minister of Justice, Attorney General, civil and special tribunals.
Administrative subdivisions: Twenty-six states, each with a governor appointed by the president, along with a state cabinet and a state legislative assembly. The regional GOSS oversees 10 states.
Political parties: Currently there are several political parties in both the nation's north and south. All political parties were banned following the June 30, 1989, military coup. Political associations, which take the place of parties, were authorized in 2000. Some parties are in self-imposed exile.
Central government budget (2007 est.): $9.7 billion.
Defense (2004 est.): 40% of GNP.
Economy
GDP (2007, purchasing power parity): $107.86 billion.
GDP annual growth rate (2007): 12.8%.
Per capita income GDP (2007): $2,500.
Avg. annual inflation rate (2007): 5.3%.
Natural resources: Modest reserves of oil, natural gas, gold, iron ore, copper, and other industrial metals.
Agriculture: Products--cotton, peanuts, sorghum, sesame seeds, gum arabic, sugarcane, millet, livestock.
Industry: Types--motor vehicle assembly, cement, cotton, edible oils and sugar refining.
Trade (2007 est.): Exports--$9.156 billion: crude oil and petroleum products, cotton, gold, sorghum, peanuts, gum arabic, sugar, meat, hides, live animals, and sesame seeds. Major markets--Egypt, Persian Gulf states, Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, China, South Korea. Imports (2007 est.)--$8.262 billion: oil and petroleum products, oil pipeline, pumping and refining equipment, chemical products and equipment, wheat and wheat flour, transport equipment, foodstuffs, tea, agricultural inputs and machinery, industrial inputs and manufactured goods. Major suppliers--European Union, China, Malaysia, Canada, U.K., Italy, Germany, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the Persian Gulf states, and surrounding East African nations.
Fiscal year: January 1-December 31.
PEOPLE
Sudan's population is one of the most diverse on the African continent. There are two distinct major cultures--"Arab" and black African--with hundreds of ethnic and tribal subdivisions and language groups, which make effective collaboration among them a major political challenge.
The northern states cover most of the Sudan and include most of the urban centers. Most of the 22 million Sudanese who live in this region are Arabic-speaking Muslims, though the majority also uses a non-Arabic mother tongue--e.g., Nubian, Beja, Fur, Nuban, Ingessana, etc. Among these are several distinct tribal groups: the Kababish of northern Kordofan, a camel-raising people; the Ja'alin and Shaigiyya groups of settled tribes along the rivers; the semi-nomadic Baggara of Kordofan and Darfur; the Hamitic Beja in the Red Sea area and Nubians of the northern Nile areas, some of whom have been resettled on the Atbara River; and the Nuba of southern Kordofan and Fur in the western reaches of the country.
The southern region has a population of around 6 million and a predominantly rural, subsistence economy. Except for a ten-year hiatus, Southern Sudan has been embroiled in conflict since Sudan's independence in 1956, resulting in major destruction and displacement since independence. More than 2 million people died over the course of the war, and more than 4 million are internally displaced or became refugees as a result of the civil war and war-related impacts. The Southern Sudanese practice mainly indigenous traditional beliefs, although Christian missionaries have converted some. The South also contains many tribal groups and many more languages than are used in the North. The Dinka--whose population is estimated at more than 1 million--is the largest of the many black African tribes of the Sudan. Along with the Shilluk and the Nuer, they are among the Nilotic tribes. The Azande, Bor, and Jo Luo are "Sudanic" tribes in the west, and the Acholi and Lotuhu live in the extreme south, extending into Uganda.
In 2007, Sudan's population reached an estimated 39 million. With the establishment of the National Population Census Council, a population census began in April 2008 in preparation for national elections in 2009. The population of metropolitan Khartoum (including Khartoum, Omdurman, and North Khartoum) is growing rapidly and ranges from 6-7 million, including around 2 million internally displaced persons from the former southern war zone as well as western and eastern regions affected by drought, conflict, and marginalization. In Darfur, there are an estimated 2.4 million internally displaced persons, another 250,000 refugees in 12 camps in neighboring Chad, and an additional 5,000-7,000 in the border area.
HISTORY
Sudan was a collection of small, independent kingdoms and principalities from the beginning of the Christian era until 1820-21, when Egypt conquered and unified the northern portion of the country. However, neither the Egyptian nor the Mahdist state (1883-1898) had any effective control of the southern region outside of a few garrisons. Southern Sudan remained an area of fragmented tribes, subject to frequent attacks by slave raiders.
In 1881, a religious leader named Muhammad ibn Abdalla proclaimed himself the Mahdi, or the "expected one," and began a religious crusade to unify the tribes in western and central Sudan. His followers took on the name "Ansars" (the followers) which they continue to use today and are associated with the single largest political grouping, the Umma Party, led by a descendant of the Mahdi, Sadiq al Mahdi.
Taking advantage of dissatisfaction resulting from Ottoman-Egyptian exploitation and maladministration, the Mahdi led a nationalist revolt culminating in the fall of Khartoum in 1885. The Mahdi died shortly thereafter, but his state survived until overwhelmed by an invading Anglo-Egyptian force under Lord Kitchener in 1898. While nominally administered jointly by Egypt and Britain, Britain exercised control, formulated policies, and supplied most of the top administrators.
Independence
In February 1953, the United Kingdom and Egypt concluded an agreement providing for Sudanese self-government and self-determination. The transitional period toward independence began with the inauguration of the first parliament in 1954. With the consent of the British and Egyptian Governments, Sudan achieved independence on January 1, 1956, under a provisional constitution. This constitution was silent on two crucial issues for southern leaders--the secular or Islamic character of the state and its federal or unitary structure. However, the Arab-led Khartoum government reneged on promises to southerners to create a federal system, which led to a mutiny by southern army officers that launched 17 years of civil war (1955-72).
Sudan has been at war with itself for more than three quarters of its existence. Since independence, protracted conflict rooted in deep cultural and religious differences retarded Sudan's economic and political development and forced massive internal displacement of its people. Northerners, who have traditionally controlled the country, have sought to unify it along the lines of Arabism and Islam despite the opposition of non-Muslims, southerners, and marginalized peoples in the west and east. The resultant civil strife affected Sudan's neighbors, as they alternately sheltered fleeing refugees or served as operating bases for rebel movements.
In 1958, General Ibrahim Abboud seized power and pursued a policy of Arabization and Islamicization in the South that strengthened southern opposition. General Abboud was overthrown in 1964 and a civilian caretaker government assumed control. Southern leaders eventually divided into two factions, those who advocated a federal solution and those who argued for self-determination, a euphemism for secession since it was assumed the South would vote for independence if given the choice.
Until 1969, there was a succession of governments that proved unable either to agree on a permanent constitution or to cope with problems of factionalism, economic stagnation, and ethnic dissidence. These regimes were dominated by "Arab" Muslims who asserted their Arab-Islamic agenda and refused any kind of self-determination for Southern Sudan.
In May 1969, a group of communist and socialist officers led by Colonel Gaafar Muhammad Nimeiri, seized power. A month after coming to power, Nimeiri proclaimed socialism (instead of Islamism) for the country and outlined a policy of granting autonomy to the South. Nimeiri in turn was the target of a coup attempt by communist members of the government. It failed and Nimeiri ordered a massive purge of communists. This alienated the Soviet Union, which withdrew its support.
Already lacking support from the Muslim parties he had chased from power, Nimeiri could no longer count on the communist faction. Having alienated the right and the left, Nimeiri turned to the South as a way of expanding his limited powerbase. He pursued peace initiatives with Sudan's hostile neighbors, Ethiopia and Uganda, signing agreements that committed each signatory to withdraw support for the other's rebel movements. He then initiated negotiations with the southern rebels and signed an agreement in Addis Ababa in 1972 that granted a measure of autonomy to the South. Southern support helped him put down two coup attempts, one initiated by officers from the western regions of Darfur and Kordofan who wanted for their region the same privileges granted to the South.
However, the Addis Ababa Agreement had no support from either the secularist or Islamic northern parties. Nimeiri concluded that their lack of support was more threatening to his regime than lack of support from the South so he announced a policy of national reconciliation with all the religious opposition forces. These parties did not feel bound to observe an agreement they perceived as an obstacle to furthering an Islamist state. The scales against the peace agreement were tipped in 1979 when Chevron discovered oil in the South. Northern pressure built to abrogate those provisions of the peace treaty granting financial autonomy to the South. Ultimately in 1983, Nimeiri abolished the southern region, declared Arabic the official language of the South (instead of English) and transferred control of southern armed forces to the central government. This was effectively a unilateral abrogation of the 1972 peace treaty. The second Sudan civil war effectively began in January 1983 when southern soldiers mutinied rather than follow orders transferring them to the North.
In September 1983, as part of an Islamicization campaign, President Nimeiri announced that traditional Islamic punishments drawn from Shari'a (Islamic Law) would be incorporated into the penal code. This was controversial even among Muslim groups. Amputations for theft and public lashings for alcohol possession became common. Southerners and other non-Muslims living in the North were also subjected to these punishments.
In April 1985, while out of the country, Nimeiri was overthrown by a popular uprising in Khartoum provoked by a collapsing economy, the war in the South, and political repression. Gen. Suwar al-Dahab headed the transitional government. One of its first acts was to suspend the 1983 constitution and disband Nimeiri's Sudan Socialist Union.
Elections were held in April 1986, and a civilian government took over after the April 1986 elections. There were tentative moves towards negotiating peace with the South. However, any proposal to exempt the South from Islamic law was unacceptable to those who supported Arabic supremacy. In 1989, an Islamic army faction, led by General Omar al-Bashir, mounted a coup and installed the National Islamic Front. The new government's commitment to the Islamic cause intensified the north-south conflict.
Meanwhile, the period of the 1990s saw a growing sense of alienation in the western and eastern regions of Sudan from the Arab center. The rulers in Khartoum were seen as less and less responsive to the concerns and grievances of both Muslim and non-Muslim populations across the country. Alienation from the "Arab" center caused various groups to grow sympathetic to the southern rebels led by the Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A), and in some cases, prompted them to flight alongside it.
The Bashir government combined internal political repression with international Islamist activism. It supported radical Islamist groups in Algeria and supported Iraq's invasion of Kuwait. Khartoum was established as a base for militant Islamist groups: radical movements and terrorist organizations like Osama Bin Laden's al Qaida were provided a safe haven and logistical aid in return for financial support. In 1996, the U.N. imposed sanctions on Sudan for alleged connections to the assassination attempt on Egyptian President Mubarak.
Its policy toward the South was to pursue the war against the rebels while trying to manipulate them by highlighting tribal divisions. Ultimately, this policy resulted in the rebels' uniting under the leadership of Colonel John Garang. During this period, the rebels also enjoyed support from Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Uganda. The Bashir government's "Pan-Islamic" foreign policy, which provided support for neighboring radical Islamist groups, was partly responsible for this support for the rebels.
The 1990s saw a succession of regional efforts to broker an end to the Sudanese civil war. Beginning in 1993, the leaders of Eritrea, Ethiopia, Uganda, and Kenya pursued a peace initiative for the Sudan under the auspices of the Intergovernmental Authority for Development (IGAD), but results were mixed. Despite that record, the IGAD initiative promulgated the 1994 Declaration of Principles (DOP) that aimed to identify the essential elements necessary to a just and comprehensive peace settlement; i.e., the relationship between religion and the state, power sharing, wealth sharing, and the right of self-determination for the South. The Sudanese Government did not sign the DOP until 1997 after major battlefield losses to the SPLA. That year, the Khartoum government signed a series of agreements with rebel factions under the banner of "Peace from Within." These included the Khartoum, Nuba Mountains, and Fashoda Agreements that ended military conflict between the government and significant rebel factions. Many of those leaders then moved to Khartoum where they assumed marginal roles in the central government or collaborated with the government in military engagements against the SPLA. These three agreements paralleled the terms and conditions of the IGAD agreement, calling for a degree of autonomy for the South and the right of self-determination.
However, by mid-2001, prospects for peace in Sudan appeared fairly remote. A few days before the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in New York and Washington, the Bush Administration named former Senator John Danforth as its Presidential Envoy for Peace in the Sudan. His role was to explore the prospects that the U.S. could play a useful role in the search for a just end to the civil war, and enhance the delivery of humanitarian aid to reduce the suffering of the Sudanese people stemming from the effects of civil war. The terrorist attacks of September 11 dramatically impacted the bilateral relationship between the United States and the Khartoum government. (For "U.S.-Sudanese Relations," see below.)
End to the Civil War
In July 2002, the Government of Sudan and the SPLM/A reached a historic agreement on the role of state and religion and the right of southern Sudan to self-determination. This agreement, known as the Machakos Protocol and named after the town in Kenya where the peace talks were held, concluded the first round of talks sponsored by the IGAD. The effort was mediated by retired Kenyan General Lazaro Sumbeiywo. Peace talks resumed and continued during 2003, with discussions regarding wealth sharing and three contested areas.
On November 19, 2004, the Government of Sudan and the SPLM/A signed a declaration committing themselves to conclude a final comprehensive peace agreement by December 31, 2004, in the context of an extraordinary session of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) in Nairobi, Kenya--only the fifth time the Council has met outside of New York since its founding. At this session, the UNSC unanimously adopted Resolution 1574, which welcomed the commitment of the government and the SPLM/A to achieve agreement by the end of 2004, and underscored the international community's intention to assist the Sudanese people and support implementation of the comprehensive peace agreement. It also demanded that the Government of Sudan and the Sudan Liberation Movement/Army (SLM/A) and the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) halt all violence in Darfur.
In keeping with their commitment to the UNSC, the Government of Sudan and the SPLM/A initialed the final elements of the comprehensive agreement on December 31, 2004. The two parties formally signed the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) on January 9, 2005, in Nairobi, Kenya. The U.S. and the international community have welcomed this decisive step forward for peace in Sudan.
8 Oct 2008
Somali Pirates Stare Down Global Powers
U.s. Navy / Reuters
Crew members of the MV Faina standing on the deck of the hijacked Ukrainian ship following a U.S. Navy request to check on their health and welfare Friday.
Somali Pirates Stare Down Global Powers
07 October 2008
By Elizabeth A. Kennedy / The Associated Press
NAIROBI, Kenya -- With a Russian frigate closing in and a half-dozen U.S. warships within shouting distance, the pirates holding a tanker off Somalia's coast might appear to have no other choice than to wave the white flag.
But that's not how it works in Somalia, a failed state where a quarter of the children die before they turn 5, where anybody with a gun controls the streets and where every public institution has crumbled.
The 12-day standoff aboard the Ukrainian MV Faina raises the question: How can a bunch of criminals from one of the poorest, most wretched countries on Earth face off with some of the world's richest, best-armed superpowers?
"They have enough guns to fight for another 20 years," said Ted Dagne, a Somalia analyst in Washington. "And there is no way to win a battle when the other side is in a suicidal mind-set."
In Somalia, pirates are better-funded, better-organized and better-armed than one might imagine in a country that has been in tatters for nearly two decades. They have the support of their communities and rogue members of the government -- some pirates even promise to put ransom money toward building roads and schools.
With most attacks ending with million-dollar payouts, piracy is considered the biggest economy in Somalia. Pirates rarely hurt their hostages, instead holding out for a huge payday.
The strategy works well: A report Thursday by a London-based think tank said pirates have raked in up to $30 million in ransoms this year alone.
"If we are attacked we will defend ourselves until every last one of us dies," Sugule Ali, a spokesman for the pirates aboard the Faina, said in an interview over satellite telephone from the ship, which is carrying 33 battle tanks, military weapons and 21 Ukrainian, Latvian and Russian hostages. One Russian has reportedly died, apparently of illness.
The pirates are demanding $20 million ransom, and say they will not lower the price.
"We only need money and if we are paid, then everything will be OK," Ali said. "No one can tell us what to do."
Ali's bold words come as his dozens of fighters are surrounded by U.S. warships and American helicopters buzz overhead. Moscow has sent a frigate, which should arrive within days.
Jennifer Cooke of the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington said hostage taking is the key to the pirates' success against any military muscle looming from Russia and the United States.
"Once you have a crew at gunpoint, you can hold six U.S. naval warships at bay and they don't have a whole lot of options except to wait it out," Cooke said.
The pirates have specifically warned against the type of raids carried out twice this year by French commandos to recover hijacked vessels. The French used night vision goggles and helicopters in operations that killed or captured several pirates, who are now standing trial in Paris.
But the hostages are not the bandits' only card to play.
Often dressed in military fatigues, pirates travel in open skiffs with outboard engines, working with larger mother ships that tow them far out to sea.
They use satellite navigation and communications equipment and an intimate knowledge of local waters, clambering aboard commercial vessels with ladders and grappling hooks.
They are typically armed with automatic weapons, anti-tank rocket launchers and grenades -- weaponry that is readily available throughout Somalia, where a bustling arms market operates in the center of the capital.
They also have the support of their communities and some members of local administrations, particularly in Puntland, a semiautonomous region in northeast Somalia that is a hotbed for piracy, officials and pirates say.
Abdulqadir Muse Yusuf, a deputy minister of ports in Puntland, acknowledged there were widespread signs that Puntland officials, lawmakers and government officials are "involved in or benefiting from piracy" and said investigations were ongoing. He would not elaborate.
Piracy has transformed the region around the town of Eyl, near where many hijacked ships are anchored while pirates negotiate ransoms.
"Pirates buy new luxury cars and marry two, three or even four women," said Mohamed, an Eyl resident who refused to give his full name for fear of reprisals from the pirates. "They build new homes -- the demand for construction material is way up."
He said most of the well-known pirates promise to build roads and schools in addition to homes for themselves. But for now, Mohamed said he has only seen inflation skyrocket as the money pours in.
"One cup of tea is about $1," he said. Before the piracy skyrocketed, tea cost a few cents.
7 Oct 2008
Background Note: Sudan
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of the Sudan
Geography
Area: 2.5 million sq. km. (967,500 sq. mi.); the largest country in Africa and almost the size of continental U.S. east of the Mississippi River.
Cities: Capital--Khartoum (pop. 1.4 million). Other cities--Omdurman (2.1 million), Port Sudan (pop. 450,000), Kassala, Kosti, Juba (capital of southern region).
Land boundaries: Central African Republic, Chad, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Libya, and Uganda.
Terrain: Generally flat with mountains in east and west. Khartoum is situated at the confluence of the Blue and White Nile Rivers. The southern regions are inundated during the annual floods of the Nile River system (the Suud or swamps).
Climate: Desert and savanna in the north and central regions and tropical in the south.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective (sing. and pl.)--Sudanese.
Population (2007 est.): 39.4 million; 30%-33% urban.
Annual growth rate (2007 est.): 2.1%.
Ethnic groups: Arab/Muslim North and black African/Christian and animist South.
Religions: Islam (official), indigenous beliefs (Southern Sudan), Christianity.
Languages: Arabic (official), English, tribal languages.
Education: Years compulsory--8. Attendance--35%-40%. Literacy--61%.
Health: Infant mortality rate--92/1,000. Life expectancy--49.1 years.
Work force: Agriculture--80%; industry and commerce--7%; government--13%.
Government
Independence: January 1, 1956.
Type: Provisional Government, the Government of National Unity (GNU), established by the Comprehensive Peace Agreement signed in January 2005 that provides for power sharing pending national elections. National elections are to occur no later than July 2009.
Constitution: The Interim National Constitution was adopted on July 6, 2005. It was drafted by the National Constitutional Review Commission, as mandated by the January 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA). The Government of Southern Sudan (GOSS) also has an interim constitution adopted in December 2005; it was certified by the GNU Ministry of Justice to be in conformance with the Interim National Constitution and the Comprehensive Peace Agreement.
Branches: Executive--executive authority is held by the president, who also is the prime minister, head of state, head of government, and commander in chief of the armed forces. Effective July 9, 2005, the executive branch includes a first vice president and a vice president. As stipulated by the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, the first vice president position is held by a person selected by the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) who concurrently serves as President of the GOSS. Legislative--National Legislature. The National Assembly, the lower house, has 450 members with a power-sharing formula which allows the ruling National Congress Party 52% of seats, the SPLM 28%, and other Northern and Southern parties, 14% and 6% respectively. There is also an upper house, the Council of States, which is composed of two appointed representatives from each of the nation's 26 states, including two observers from Abyei. Judicial--High Court, Minister of Justice, Attorney General, civil and special tribunals.
Administrative subdivisions: Twenty-six states, each with a governor appointed by the president, along with a state cabinet and a state legislative assembly. The regional GOSS oversees 10 states.
Political parties: Currently there are several political parties in both the nation's north and south. All political parties were banned following the June 30, 1989, military coup. Political associations, which take the place of parties, were authorized in 2000. Some parties are in self-imposed exile.
Central government budget (2007 est.): $9.7 billion.
Defense (2004 est.): 40% of GNP.
Economy
GDP (2007, purchasing power parity): $107.86 billion.
GDP annual growth rate (2007): 12.8%.
Per capita income GDP (2007): $2,500.
Avg. annual inflation rate (2007): 5.3%.
Natural resources: Modest reserves of oil, natural gas, gold, iron ore, copper, and other industrial metals.
Agriculture: Products--cotton, peanuts, sorghum, sesame seeds, gum arabic, sugarcane, millet, livestock.
Industry: Types--motor vehicle assembly, cement, cotton, edible oils and sugar refining.
Trade (2007 est.): Exports--$9.156 billion: crude oil and petroleum products, cotton, gold, sorghum, peanuts, gum arabic, sugar, meat, hides, live animals, and sesame seeds. Major markets--Egypt, Persian Gulf states, Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, China, South Korea. Imports (2007 est.)--$8.262 billion: oil and petroleum products, oil pipeline, pumping and refining equipment, chemical products and equipment, wheat and wheat flour, transport equipment, foodstuffs, tea, agricultural inputs and machinery, industrial inputs and manufactured goods. Major suppliers--European Union, China, Malaysia, Canada, U.K., Italy, Germany, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the Persian Gulf states, and surrounding East African nations.
Fiscal year: January 1-December 31.
PEOPLE
Sudan's population is one of the most diverse on the African continent. There are two distinct major cultures--"Arab" and black African--with hundreds of ethnic and tribal subdivisions and language groups, which make effective collaboration among them a major political challenge.
The northern states cover most of the Sudan and include most of the urban centers. Most of the 22 million Sudanese who live in this region are Arabic-speaking Muslims, though the majority also uses a non-Arabic mother tongue--e.g., Nubian, Beja, Fur, Nuban, Ingessana, etc. Among these are several distinct tribal groups: the Kababish of northern Kordofan, a camel-raising people; the Ja'alin and Shaigiyya groups of settled tribes along the rivers; the semi-nomadic Baggara of Kordofan and Darfur; the Hamitic Beja in the Red Sea area and Nubians of the northern Nile areas, some of whom have been resettled on the Atbara River; and the Nuba of southern Kordofan and Fur in the western reaches of the country.
The southern region has a population of around 6 million and a predominantly rural, subsistence economy. Except for a ten-year hiatus, Southern Sudan has been embroiled in conflict since Sudan's independence in 1956, resulting in major destruction and displacement since independence. More than 2 million people died over the course of the war, and more than 4 million are internally displaced or became refugees as a result of the civil war and war-related impacts. The Southern Sudanese practice mainly indigenous traditional beliefs, although Christian missionaries have converted some. The South also contains many tribal groups and many more languages than are used in the North. The Dinka--whose population is estimated at more than 1 million--is the largest of the many black African tribes of the Sudan. Along with the Shilluk and the Nuer, they are among the Nilotic tribes. The Azande, Bor, and Jo Luo are "Sudanic" tribes in the west, and the Acholi and Lotuhu live in the extreme south, extending into Uganda.
In 2007, Sudan's population reached an estimated 39 million. With the establishment of the National Population Census Council, a population census began in April 2008 in preparation for national elections in 2009. The population of metropolitan Khartoum (including Khartoum, Omdurman, and North Khartoum) is growing rapidly and ranges from 6-7 million, including around 2 million internally displaced persons from the former southern war zone as well as western and eastern regions affected by drought, conflict, and marginalization. In Darfur, there are an estimated 2.4 million internally displaced persons, another 250,000 refugees in 12 camps in neighboring Chad, and an additional 5,000-7,000 in the border area.
HISTORY
Sudan was a collection of small, independent kingdoms and principalities from the beginning of the Christian era until 1820-21, when Egypt conquered and unified the northern portion of the country. However, neither the Egyptian nor the Mahdist state (1883-1898) had any effective control of the southern region outside of a few garrisons. Southern Sudan remained an area of fragmented tribes, subject to frequent attacks by slave raiders.
In 1881, a religious leader named Muhammad ibn Abdalla proclaimed himself the Mahdi, or the "expected one," and began a religious crusade to unify the tribes in western and central Sudan. His followers took on the name "Ansars" (the followers) which they continue to use today and are associated with the single largest political grouping, the Umma Party, led by a descendant of the Mahdi, Sadiq al Mahdi.
Taking advantage of dissatisfaction resulting from Ottoman-Egyptian exploitation and maladministration, the Mahdi led a nationalist revolt culminating in the fall of Khartoum in 1885. The Mahdi died shortly thereafter, but his state survived until overwhelmed by an invading Anglo-Egyptian force under Lord Kitchener in 1898. While nominally administered jointly by Egypt and Britain, Britain exercised control, formulated policies, and supplied most of the top administrators.
Independence
In February 1953, the United Kingdom and Egypt concluded an agreement providing for Sudanese self-government and self-determination. The transitional period toward independence began with the inauguration of the first parliament in 1954. With the consent of the British and Egyptian Governments, Sudan achieved independence on January 1, 1956, under a provisional constitution. This constitution was silent on two crucial issues for southern leaders--the secular or Islamic character of the state and its federal or unitary structure. However, the Arab-led Khartoum government reneged on promises to southerners to create a federal system, which led to a mutiny by southern army officers that launched 17 years of civil war (1955-72).
Sudan has been at war with itself for more than three quarters of its existence. Since independence, protracted conflict rooted in deep cultural and religious differences retarded Sudan's economic and political development and forced massive internal displacement of its people. Northerners, who have traditionally controlled the country, have sought to unify it along the lines of Arabism and Islam despite the opposition of non-Muslims, southerners, and marginalized peoples in the west and east. The resultant civil strife affected Sudan's neighbors, as they alternately sheltered fleeing refugees or served as operating bases for rebel movements.
In 1958, General Ibrahim Abboud seized power and pursued a policy of Arabization and Islamicization in the South that strengthened southern opposition. General Abboud was overthrown in 1964 and a civilian caretaker government assumed control. Southern leaders eventually divided into two factions, those who advocated a federal solution and those who argued for self-determination, a euphemism for secession since it was assumed the South would vote for independence if given the choice.
Until 1969, there was a succession of governments that proved unable either to agree on a permanent constitution or to cope with problems of factionalism, economic stagnation, and ethnic dissidence. These regimes were dominated by "Arab" Muslims who asserted their Arab-Islamic agenda and refused any kind of self-determination for Southern Sudan.
In May 1969, a group of communist and socialist officers led by Colonel Gaafar Muhammad Nimeiri, seized power. A month after coming to power, Nimeiri proclaimed socialism (instead of Islamism) for the country and outlined a policy of granting autonomy to the South. Nimeiri in turn was the target of a coup attempt by communist members of the government. It failed and Nimeiri ordered a massive purge of communists. This alienated the Soviet Union, which withdrew its support.
Already lacking support from the Muslim parties he had chased from power, Nimeiri could no longer count on the communist faction. Having alienated the right and the left, Nimeiri turned to the South as a way of expanding his limited powerbase. He pursued peace initiatives with Sudan's hostile neighbors, Ethiopia and Uganda, signing agreements that committed each signatory to withdraw support for the other's rebel movements. He then initiated negotiations with the southern rebels and signed an agreement in Addis Ababa in 1972 that granted a measure of autonomy to the South. Southern support helped him put down two coup attempts, one initiated by officers from the western regions of Darfur and Kordofan who wanted for their region the same privileges granted to the South.
However, the Addis Ababa Agreement had no support from either the secularist or Islamic northern parties. Nimeiri concluded that their lack of support was more threatening to his regime than lack of support from the South so he announced a policy of national reconciliation with all the religious opposition forces. These parties did not feel bound to observe an agreement they perceived as an obstacle to furthering an Islamist state. The scales against the peace agreement were tipped in 1979 when Chevron discovered oil in the South. Northern pressure built to abrogate those provisions of the peace treaty granting financial autonomy to the South. Ultimately in 1983, Nimeiri abolished the southern region, declared Arabic the official language of the South (instead of English) and transferred control of southern armed forces to the central government. This was effectively a unilateral abrogation of the 1972 peace treaty. The second Sudan civil war effectively began in January 1983 when southern soldiers mutinied rather than follow orders transferring them to the North.
In September 1983, as part of an Islamicization campaign, President Nimeiri announced that traditional Islamic punishments drawn from Shari'a (Islamic Law) would be incorporated into the penal code. This was controversial even among Muslim groups. Amputations for theft and public lashings for alcohol possession became common. Southerners and other non-Muslims living in the North were also subjected to these punishments.
In April 1985, while out of the country, Nimeiri was overthrown by a popular uprising in Khartoum provoked by a collapsing economy, the war in the South, and political repression. Gen. Suwar al-Dahab headed the transitional government. One of its first acts was to suspend the 1983 constitution and disband Nimeiri's Sudan Socialist Union.
Elections were held in April 1986, and a civilian government took over after the April 1986 elections. There were tentative moves towards negotiating peace with the South. However, any proposal to exempt the South from Islamic law was unacceptable to those who supported Arabic supremacy. In 1989, an Islamic army faction, led by General Omar al-Bashir, mounted a coup and installed the National Islamic Front. The new government's commitment to the Islamic cause intensified the north-south conflict.
Meanwhile, the period of the 1990s saw a growing sense of alienation in the western and eastern regions of Sudan from the Arab center. The rulers in Khartoum were seen as less and less responsive to the concerns and grievances of both Muslim and non-Muslim populations across the country. Alienation from the "Arab" center caused various groups to grow sympathetic to the southern rebels led by the Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A), and in some cases, prompted them to flight alongside it.
The Bashir government combined internal political repression with international Islamist activism. It supported radical Islamist groups in Algeria and supported Iraq's invasion of Kuwait. Khartoum was established as a base for militant Islamist groups: radical movements and terrorist organizations like Osama Bin Laden's al Qaida were provided a safe haven and logistical aid in return for financial support. In 1996, the U.N. imposed sanctions on Sudan for alleged connections to the assassination attempt on Egyptian President Mubarak.
Its policy toward the South was to pursue the war against the rebels while trying to manipulate them by highlighting tribal divisions. Ultimately, this policy resulted in the rebels' uniting under the leadership of Colonel John Garang. During this period, the rebels also enjoyed support from Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Uganda. The Bashir government's "Pan-Islamic" foreign policy, which provided support for neighboring radical Islamist groups, was partly responsible for this support for the rebels.
The 1990s saw a succession of regional efforts to broker an end to the Sudanese civil war. Beginning in 1993, the leaders of Eritrea, Ethiopia, Uganda, and Kenya pursued a peace initiative for the Sudan under the auspices of the Intergovernmental Authority for Development (IGAD), but results were mixed. Despite that record, the IGAD initiative promulgated the 1994 Declaration of Principles (DOP) that aimed to identify the essential elements necessary to a just and comprehensive peace settlement; i.e., the relationship between religion and the state, power sharing, wealth sharing, and the right of self-determination for the South. The Sudanese Government did not sign the DOP until 1997 after major battlefield losses to the SPLA. That year, the Khartoum government signed a series of agreements with rebel factions under the banner of "Peace from Within." These included the Khartoum, Nuba Mountains, and Fashoda Agreements that ended military conflict between the government and significant rebel factions. Many of those leaders then moved to Khartoum where they assumed marginal roles in the central government or collaborated with the government in military engagements against the SPLA. These three agreements paralleled the terms and conditions of the IGAD agreement, calling for a degree of autonomy for the South and the right of self-determination.
However, by mid-2001, prospects for peace in Sudan appeared fairly remote. A few days before the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in New York and Washington, the Bush Administration named former Senator John Danforth as its Presidential Envoy for Peace in the Sudan. His role was to explore the prospects that the U.S. could play a useful role in the search for a just end to the civil war, and enhance the delivery of humanitarian aid to reduce the suffering of the Sudanese people stemming from the effects of civil war. The terrorist attacks of September 11 dramatically impacted the bilateral relationship between the United States and the Khartoum government. (For "U.S.-Sudanese Relations," see below.)
End to the Civil War
In July 2002, the Government of Sudan and the SPLM/A reached a historic agreement on the role of state and religion and the right of southern Sudan to self-determination. This agreement, known as the Machakos Protocol and named after the town in Kenya where the peace talks were held, concluded the first round of talks sponsored by the IGAD. The effort was mediated by retired Kenyan General Lazaro Sumbeiywo. Peace talks resumed and continued during 2003, with discussions regarding wealth sharing and three contested areas.
On November 19, 2004, the Government of Sudan and the SPLM/A signed a declaration committing themselves to conclude a final comprehensive peace agreement by December 31, 2004, in the context of an extraordinary session of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) in Nairobi, Kenya--only the fifth time the Council has met outside of New York since its founding. At this session, the UNSC unanimously adopted Resolution 1574, which welcomed the commitment of the government and the SPLM/A to achieve agreement by the end of 2004, and underscored the international community's intention to assist the Sudanese people and support implementation of the comprehensive peace agreement. It also demanded that the Government of Sudan and the Sudan Liberation Movement/Army (SLM/A) and the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) halt all violence in Darfur.
In keeping with their commitment to the UNSC, the Government of Sudan and the SPLM/A initialed the final elements of the comprehensive agreement on December 31, 2004. The two parties formally signed the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) on January 9, 2005, in Nairobi, Kenya. The U.S. and the international community have welcomed this decisive step forward for peace in Sudan.
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