South Sudan President Salva Kiir (L) and (R) SPLM Opposition leader Riek
Machar hold the hands of two clergymen during the opening prayer of the
press conference of the signing of Cessation of Hostilities on May 9 in
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. AFP Photo
By JOHN GACHIE, Special Correspondent
In Summary
- The process is beset by contradictions, obstacles, challenges and lack of commitment and trust by President Salva Kiir and Dr Riek Machar.
For regional military and security experts, the
current conflict in South Sudan did not come as a surprise. The signs
were there; what was uncertain was when, how, or what would trigger the
fighting and how the government of South Sudan would meet the challenge.
Following the signing of the Comprehensive Peace
Agreement formally ending the war in January 2005, Dr John Garang was
sworn in as the Vice President of the Republic of Sudan.
After his death in a helicopter crash on July 30,
2005, Salva Kiir was chosen to succeed Dr Garang to the post of First
Vice President of Sudan and President of Southern Sudan.
However, President Kiir’s leadership of the
Sudanese Peoples’ Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A) was not guaranteed
or secure within the top echelons of the party.
Many people in the movement felt that President
Kiir lacked the leadership skills and ability to hold the SPLM/A
together, and check the ambitions of the top military commanders.
President Kiir was perceived as “one among
equals,” a temporary figure who could be edged out once the independent
state of South Sudan was achieved.
Then the long-simmering power struggle within the
government exploded on December 15, 2013, in Juba, threatening to
consume the entire region as the military disintegrated.
The out-going head of the United Nations Mission
in South Sudan (UNMISS) and one of the key supporters and architects of
the South Sudan peace agreement, Hilde Johnson, aptly captures the
situation saying, “the signs, the tensions were all there; but above
all, there was paralysis.”
As the fighting raged, President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda dispatched his troops into the foray in support of President Kiir.
Foreign nationals were evacuated, a safe corridor
to the border with Uganda was created and the Juba airport was secured
by Ugandan troops.
In the meantime, the South Sudan rival faction
troops engaged in bitter and vicious fighting that quickly took an
ethnic turn, and the Sudan Peoples’ Liberation Army (SPLA) split into
two factions.
The military sector of South Sudan was allocated
over 40 per cent of the country’s annual budget estimates for more than
eight years on a standing parade figure of between 120,000 and 180,000
men that has disintegrated into rival factions.
In the interim, the international community and in
particular the African Union and the regional Inter-Governmental
Authority and Development (Igad) have tried to mediate and negotiate a
ceasefire in South Sudan without much success.
As the mediation process between the government of
South Sudan, led by President Kiir, and the rebels, led by his
erstwhile vice-president Riek Machar, limps on in starts and fits the
prospects for an enduring and lasting peaceful settlement to the
conflict seems to be ebbing away.
No comments :
Post a Comment