Africa

Clashes in South Sudan no longer inter-ethnic conflict

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Residents of Duk Padiet stand near an airstrip two days after their village was attacked by the neighbouring Lou Nuer tribe in Southern Sudan, September 22, 2009.

Residents of Duk Padiet stand near an airstrip two days after their village was attacked by the neighbouring Lou Nuer tribe in Southern Sudan, September 22, 2009. More than 100 people were killed when tribesmen raided Duk Padiet, burning buildings and attacking churchgoers, officials said on September 21, 2009, in a further escalation of violence in the oil-producing region. A surge of tribal killings this year has sparked fears for the stability of Sudan's underdeveloped south, still emerging from two decades of civil war. Picture taken September 22, 2009. REUTERS 

By BADRU MULUMBA, NATION Correspondent, JUBA
Posted  Monday, September 28  2009 at  18:58

A devastating raid in the arid, sparse-populated Jonglei region of Sudan is turning the conventional wisdom long held as the path to pacifying Sudan onto its head.

At the height of raids two years ago, when nearly every state had an ongoing tribal raid, many saw dialogue and community talks after talks as the only means to ending the fights.

Calls to send in the military were largely scorned upon by the people, the analysts and the politicians.

When the Murle raided nearly every ethnic group, leaving mayhem in their wake and kidnapping scores of children and taking cattle, most aid agencies pushed the reconciliation route.

Child Protection International, one group that began a campaign to release abducted children at the time, issued a statement, saying a non violent response was what was needed.

Child abduction

Such a solution, the group said, should acknowledge the economic, health and security problems that underlie this pattern of child abduction.

When messy raids in Warrap, at the boundary with Abyei, left a trail of murders along the way, as Dinka Lou community went against the Apuuk, officials called for talks between the communities.

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The same policy stayed even as the Jur fought the Dinka, and the Agaar and Jur-bel communities of Lakes State fought, displacing hundreds, and ferreting thousands of herd of cattle.

And , at the height of the Murle attacks, the UN Secretary-general, Mr Ban Ki-Moon, said the government had to find a peaceful way to end the raids.

There was almost always no talk of bringing the perpetrators to justice.

But as the dynamics of the fighting have changed – less widespread, basing on the number of states currently reporting raids compared to last year, for instance, but better executed, according to officials -- so have the thoughts of how to end the fights evolved.

Military strategy

After the latest attack, perception that the fights were solely ethnic-driven is fading, slowly giving way to fears of an invisible insurgency.

At talks around tables in pubs, offices and the streets, the tide has slowly turned from discussing how to bring the communities to talk to discussing the best military strategy to put out the flames.

By and large, people are beginning to see the attacks as not merely tribal, but as a result of a sinister political motive aimed at, as the leaders often say, presenting Southern Sudan as ungovernable.

Ask many a Southerner what troubles them, and some will say: A rebellion, not ethnic fights.

Ask what solution is best for ending the fights, and many would say a firm, a strong counter-insurgency by the government.

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