World needs to act now to prevent new Sudan war, ten aid agencies warn
Major conflict could return to southern Sudan unless there is urgent international action to save the peace agreement that ended one of Africa’s longest and deadliest wars, ten aid agencies warned today.
In a new report “Rescuing the Peace in Southern Sudan” – released ahead of the fifth anniversary of the signing of the peace agreement between the Sudanese government and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement – the agencies said a lethal cocktail of rising violence, chronic poverty and political tensions has left the peace deal on the brink of collapse.
“It is not yet too late to avert disaster, but the next 12 months are a crossroads for Africa’s largest country. Last year saw a surge in violence in southern Sudan. This could escalate even further and become one of the biggest emergencies in Africa in 2010,” said co-author of the report Maya Mailer, Policy Advisor for Oxfam.
In 2009 some 2,500 people were killed and 350,000 fled their homes, a human toll greater than occurred last year in Darfur. The rest of the world has largely overlooked this suffering according to the agencies. Communities say that women and children have increasingly been targeted in attacks on villages and the Government of Southern Sudan and international peacekeepers have not been able to protect them.
The report says the next 12 months will see a number of potential flashpoints that could inflame violence if not properly prepared for. These include Sudan’s first multi-party elections in 24 years and a referendum in which southerners will vote on whether to remain united with the north or to secede and become independent.
To safeguard civilians at this fragile juncture, the agencies urged the UN Security Council to ensure that protecting civilians becomes a core priority for the UN peacekeeping force, UNMIS. The agencies also called on the international community to help mediate between the northern and southern parties before the elections and referendum, to reduce the likelihood of conflict, and to support the government in the south to provide security.
The agencies also warned that growing frustration over the lack of development in southern Sudan is harming the chances of peace. Less than half the population has access to clean water and maternal mortality rates are among the worst in the world. There are fewer than 50 kilometers of tarmac road in the entire region, an area the size of France, and during heavy rains many areas are cut off for months at a time, making the delivery of humanitarian aid almost impossible. Some 80 percent of adults cannot read or write and one in seven children die before their fifth birthday.
“After five years of peace, southern Sudan remains one of the poorest regions on earth. People hoped the peace would bring economic benefits and development, but this has happened far too slowly and in some areas not at all. We are very worried about children who seem to be increasingly targeted in attacks on villages. International donors and the government must urgently improve aid to these areas,” said Francisco Roque, Country Director of Save the Children in South Sudan.
A return to conflict would have devastating consequences that extend far beyond southern Sudan, the agencies said. The civil war was responsible for the deaths of 2 million people and forced around 4 million people to flee their homes, many into neighboring countries. The war destabilized the entire region, fuelling conflicts and suffering across central and eastern Africa.
The crisis in southern Sudan is escalating at a time when the situation in Darfur, in western Sudan, remains one of the world’s biggest humanitarian emergencies. The agencies warned that there can not be sustainable peace in Darfur if the peace between north and south is allowed to fail.
“Sustained diplomatic engagement from the international community, including Sudan’s neighbors, is what is needed. This helped achieve what many thought was impossible and secure the peace agreement in the first place. Now engagement is needed again to ensure all that effort does not go to waste. A return to war is by no means inevitable, but it depends whether the world heeds the warning signs of the past year and has the political will to save the peace,” said Paul Valentin, International Director of Christian Aid.
Notes to Editors
The 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement was signed on 9 January 2005. It ended a war between northern and southern Sudan that cost two million lives
The ten agencies backing the report are: Christian Aid, Cordaid, Handicap International, ICCO, International Rescue Committee, Oxfam International, Save the Children Sudan, Caritas France/ Secours Catholique, TearFund and World Vision.
Read more
Blog: Can we rescue the peace in southern Sudan?
Read the report: Rescuing the Peace in Southern Sudan
-
thanks for the RTs! @HelenClarkUNDP @devex @PearsonElaine @voiceteam @RejectApathy @rahafals @Refugees @WomensCampaign @judeinlondon10 hours 4 min ago
-
1 woman dies every 90 sec in pregnancy/childbirth RT @liviafirth: Love the F Word @AnnieLennox @Oxfam @eco_age http://t.co/b9PtgNPl10 hours 29 min ago
-
.@rodruff a too hasty tweet! thx for the catch. correction: 1 woman dies every 90 sec in childbirth or pregnancy http://t.co/b9PtgNPl10 hours 40 min ago
-
#Africa asks itself: Where is the #aid money? http://t.co/gVBspsd4 UN appeal scorecards here: http://t.co/5h2vcj1R #EastAfrica11 hours 28 min ago
-
RT @GdnDevelopment UK Govt backs away from pledge to enshrine 0.7% #aid level in law http://t.co/FnL3JViT @DFID_UK12 hours 52 min ago
-
Oxfam delivering water, sanitation, health promotion to battle cholera risks in wake of #Mozambique #floods http://t.co/7WtRyhUG13 hours 11 min ago
-
The perils of doing #business w/o community consent. @Oxfam's James Ensor http://t.co/8NjgqcjO #csr #humanrights v @rightsagenda14 hours 15 min ago
-
#Foodcrisis in #WestAfrica in 10 pics http://t.co/m8LHvABm #Niger #Mali #Burkina #Chad #Mauritania @louis_press v @HuffingtonPost16 hours 2 min ago
-
What is #famine? A triple failure” of production, access & response http://t.co/wzNS66iD Oxfam aims to reach 3.5M ppl #EastAfrica16 hours 54 min ago
-
UN: #Famine conditions in Somalia have ended http://t.co/hId0k3Kn but we must not get complacent! http://t.co/mjaCLx2y17 hours 21 min ago
-
Studies suggest weak land rights worldwide promote land rush @RightsResources http://t.co/8C8JgVgk #landgrabs #GROW19 hours 22 min ago
-
From pastoralist to fisherman: meet Peter Abwell http://t.co/eWAevY7h “Ppl in this village see me as role model" #Kenya #drought19 hours 57 min ago
-
Thanks for the RTs! @ILoveMyTrips @1billionhungry @xJudex1984 @TheSavageHammer @stevesharra @Nasser_Saidi @HungerProject1 day 9 hours ago
-
Catering the #London2012 #Olympics will be the largest non-#humanitarian feeding operation in history http://t.co/m072eiKS #GROW1 day 11 hours ago
-
The toughest sport in the toughest country? Afghan women boxers train for #London2012 http://t.co/1YbzCYm2 #olympics RT @oxfamnz1 day 11 hours ago
