Press Release
OBSERVATIONS ON THE COMPREHENSIVE PEACE
(The SHRO-Cairo Position on the Peace Deal and Constitutional Panel)
The complex sets of constitutional drafts that would be emerging from the peace
agreements lie beyond the national scope of the two peace partners. It is to
the advantage of the whole Nation to ensure full representation of all political
parties and civil society groups in the Committee on the Interim Constitution
to finalize a workable national constitution for the upcoming transition and
the aftermath.
The North/South civil war that first broke in August 1955, a few months before
the inauguration of the country’s independence, witnessed many attempts
to make peace. The first of these attempts was made in the Round Table Conference
in March 1965. The Addis Ababa Agreement was finalized in March 1972, and the
Sudanese Peace Agreement (or al-Merghani/Garang Agreement) was signed on November
16, 1988. These attempts were short of achieving their goals due to different
visions by the northern forces that dishonored the agreements or thought, as
many governments did, that they might decisively win the conflict by military
action.
Thirty months of hard negotiations were successfully concluded in the signing
of the last two Peace Protocols between the Government of Sudan and the Sudan
People’s Liberation Movement and Army (SPLM/A). The two protocols comprised
an agreement on permanent cease-fire in the South and modalities of implementing
the signed agreements; and another agreement on the pending issues concerning
the sharing of power and wealth in the areas neighboring the South in dispute.
By signing these two last protocols, the number of agreements amounted to eight
agreements that became known as “the Comprehensive Peace Agreement.”
The agreement would rule over a transition period of 6 months immediately after
the signing of the agreements up until the end of another 6-years’ transitional
period. Major features of the agreement include:
The Machekos Protocol:
The most important provisions of this Protocol, which was signed on July 20,
2002, guaranteed the right of South Sudan to self-determination and a referendum
on independence by end of the stipulated 6 years. During these same years, the
Islamic Shari’a Law would be implemented only in the North.
The Protocol on Security Measures:
One of the most important protocols signed on September 25, 2003 was a provision
on the co-existence of two armies in the transitional period, the Sudanese Armed
Forces and the Sudan people’s Liberation Army (SPLA). The Protocol provided
for a cease-fire subject to international monitoring that would be enforceable
from the date of signing the Comprehensive Peace Agreement. Integrated forces
composed of 24,000 regulars (6,000 to be stationed in South Sudan, 6,000 in
Nuba Mountains, 3,000 in Blue Nile, and 3,000 in Khartoum) would be located
in South Sudan, the Nuba Mountains, the Southern Blue Nile Province, and Khartoum.
More than 10,000 regulars of the government troops would be centered in the
South to the northern parts of the country. The SPLA fighters currently positioned
in the Nuba Mountains and the Southern Blue Nile Province would return to the
South.
The Protocol on Wealth Sharing:
Signed on January 7, 2004, this Protocol provided for the equal sharing of
the revenue of the South oil between the (next) National Government and the
Government of South Sudan in the 6 months’ period (before the next 6 years’
transition), including 2 percent of the total oil revenue that would be reserved
to the Oil-Producing State. The Protocol guaranteed the inhabitants of the oil-producing
state the right to renew, or to reject, the invested oil contracts in their
region. A national committee representing both governments would lay out the
policy and negotiation for oil investments. The non-oil revenue, especially
taxation and tariff, would be controlled by the South Government. The Protocol
provided for an Islamic banking system in the North and a conventional banking
order in the South.
The Protocol on Power Sharing:
Signed on May 26, 2004, this Protocol re-allocated the national executive powers
such that the ruling National Congress Party (NCP) would have 52 percent of
parliamentary seats. The remaining seats would reserve 28 percent for the SPLM,
14 per cent for the northern parties, and 6 percent for the southern parties.
By Protocol, the SPLM Chairperson would take up the office of the First Vice
President of the State. He would be sworn on oath within 2 months of the day
of approving an Interim Constitution for the transition period.
Concerning the regional administration of North Sudan, the ruling NCP was granted
70 percent of the executive and legislative seats, the SPLM 10 percent, and
the other political parties 20 percent of the total. In the South government,
the SPLM was granted 70 percent of the executive and legislative seats, the
other southern political forces 15 percent, and the ruling NCP 15 percent. It
was also decided by agreement that both Arabic and English languages would be
used as official languages of the State, and that the Southerners would get
30 percent of the government jobs in the national level.
The Protocol on Resolving the Conflict in Nuba and Blue Nile:
A significant provision of the Protocol signed on May 26, 2004, dealt with
the three northern regions bordering the South (whose inhabitants were supportive
of the SPLAM/A in the civil war). The protocol designated the sharing of executive
and legislative powers in the Nuba Mountains and South Blue Nile Province such
that the PCP would have 55 percent and the SPLM 45 percent. The governance of
the disputed regions would be rotational. Each side would assume the office
of governor for half of the pre-election time.
The Protocol on Resolving the Conflict in Abyei:
By the Protocol signed on May 26, 2004, the inhabitants of Abyei were considered
citizens of both North and South parts of the country. The Abyei inhabitants
were privileged with the right to choose between the administrative statuses
of their region in the north or that of the Bahr al-Ghazal’s region in
the South.
The Protocol on the Permanent Cease-Fire:
The protocol signed on December 31, 2004, provided for the establishment of
armed units composed of 4,000 regulars to be located all over the South and
the three disputed regions - Abyei, Southern Blue Nile, and South Kordofan -
in addition to an integrated armed unit in the National Capital Khartoum. The
Protocol entrusted the administration of South Sudan with the financing of the
SPLA troops during the 6 months of transitional rule. The National Government
would finance the Sudanese Armed Forces and the integrated forces. The Protocol
left the issue of financing the Southern forces in the long run to the National
Council of the Transitional Period. The protocol cancelled the state of emergency
in all regions subject to the Cease-Fire Agreement between the government and
the SPLM/A. The emergency law would be abrogated all over the country, except
where it would not be possible to do so.
The Protocol on the Implementation Modalities:
As signed on the 31st of December, 2004, the Protocol set-up the time tables
and defined the roles and responsibilities of implementing the agreements in
the transitional period. A chief feature of the negotiated tasks was the adoption
of a national interim constitution within 6 weeks of signing the Comprehensive
Peace Agreement. “This Interim National Constitution shall be the supreme
law of the land. The Interim Constitution of Southern Sudan, state constitutions
and all laws shall comply with it.” The First Vice President’s Office
will be assumed by the SPLAM/A Chairperson, Mr. John Garang, in a national unity
government that would rule the country for 6 years of transitional rule.
The SHRO-Cairo Peace Welcoming Release
SHRO-Cairo welcomed the peace agreement signed on January 9, 2005, as a possible
basis to develop a consistent and peaceful transition to a stable democratic
rule in Sudan.
Equally importantly, the Organization welcomed the agreement because it ended
in legal terms long years of civil war and human suffering. This, however, doesn’t
mean that the Peace Protocols, in their existing form, are qualified to resolve
the whole problems of the Nation, or that the agreements are perfect.
In a press release (January 9, 2005), SHRO-Cairo:
“congratulated the People of Sudan in the South and in the North, the
Mother Continent of Africa, and the whole International Community with the signing
of the Naivasha Peace Agreements, which completed a historic formal ending of
the North-South disasters of war by internationally-recognized treaty guarantees
aimed to satisfy the yearning of our people for the achievement of the just
peace, the sustainable development, and the regular democracy. SHRO-Cairo hopes
that the two Peace Partners, the National Congress Party and the Sudan People’s
Liberation Movement, would successfully accomplish the peace obligations conferred
upon them by agreement, and the promise they both pledged to promote the Naivasha
Accords to a nationally recognized consensus that should extend, on equal terms,
the just and permanent peace, power sharing, and participation in national decision
making to the other marginal regions, especially Darfur, the Nuba Mountains,
Eastern Sudan, and the Northern Provinces as well.”
“The Organization reiterates the grave national, regional, and international
concerns for the worsening conditions of the displaced people of Darfur and
the escalated violence in the region; henceforth, the possibility of “taking
a swift action” in the words of the United Nations Secretary General (January
8, 2005) to redress the situation. At this point, SHRO-Cairo emphasizes the
Sudanese Appeal to the World on the Human Crisis of Darfur, which held the Khartoum
Government “squarely responsible for the crisis,” and calls upon
the International Community to work closely with the People of Sudan to end
the crisis via a national constitutional conference.”
“The Organization emphasizes, in particular, the urgent need to ensure
non-discriminatory representation of all political parties and civil society
groups in the next Committee on the Interim Constitution. Most importantly,
the committee in question should exercise firm consideration of all international
human rights charters and conventions, as well as the Sudanese legal heritage
and social realities, to democratize, with the peace spirit of the Naivasha
agreements, the repressive law arsenal of the government in order to ensure
the full enjoyment of human rights and public freedoms to all citizens, irrespective
of faith, political stand, social status, or any other discriminatory criteria.”
“Specifically, the Committee should carefully consider clear provisions
by constitutional law for accountability of authority abuses, as well as principled
abrogation of all forms of physical punishment in the criminal law; the provisions
against women’s rights in the family law and other legal acts; the heavy
taxation policies; the state-imposed unevenly distributed zakah [alms giving];
and the other authoritative orientations that have been inflicted upon the public
by the State media and press in 15 consecutive years of anti-democratic rule.”
“SHRO-Cairo is deeply concerned about the powers bestowed on the President
to establish judicial bodies and a national human rights commission in consultation
with the First Vice President, according to the Implementation Modalities of
the Protocol on Power sharing, as adopted by agreement. The Organization is
seriously concerned for the possibilities of executive and legislative intrusions
in the Interim Period against independence of the Judiciary in light of the
government’s purge of judges and the other unresolved injustices of the
Sudanese criminal justice system.”
“The Organization hopes the next South and North Interim Governments
would strongly maintain the Independence of the Judiciary, as a cornerstone
of democratic rule. Besides the need to implement laws based on international
human rights laws and the best of Sudan laws, Sudan courts must be strictly
independent from the Executive. The Judiciary should be fully allowable to select
its own governing councils, as well as the management of its legal and administrative
affairs by judicial jurisdiction, free of presidential dictates or legislative
interference.”
“Because the full enjoyment of civil freedoms and human rights is the
strongest guarantee of a lasting peace and effective rule of law all over the
country, the Organization urges the governing partners of the National Congress
Party and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement to act in the best interest
of the Naivasha Peace Protocols to protect the untouchable right of civil society
groups to establish their own Federation of Human Rights, as well as other human
rights assemblies, free of any government intrusion or security orientation
- let alone a presidential state-imposed commission - in accordance with the
International Agreement on Civil and Political Rights to which Sudan is party.”
“SHRO-Cairo emphasizes further, the need to spend the oil wealth and
other state revenues to increase the social and economic development of the
Nation in order to fulfill the social and economic rights of people, as guaranteed
by international norms. For this purpose, the already proposed enlarged military
and security spending in the State Budget under the renewed emergency law should
be effectively reduced.”
“Towards the achievement of this important end, the governing bodies
of the country, as would be established according to the Accords, must reserve
the largest share of the State financial resources in the post-conflict period
for the necessary spending on social development (health, education, housing,
and culture) programs side-by-side with the encouragement of local and foreign
investments to generate the vital productive components of labor and employment,
absorb the returnee citizens in decent conditions into their homelands, and
reinstate the unfairly dismissed public service workers and/or employees throughout
the last 15 years of anti-democratic rule to man, with the available working
force, the Nation’s development in the Peace Era.”
SHRO-Cairo Critique of the Initial Implementation
One of the biggest shortcomings of the peace agreements is that the agreements
do not mention a word about the gross human rights violations committed by the
two peace partners in the conflict, or those committed under a state of emergency
solely imposed upon the country by the Sudan Government for decades to pursue
war activities in the South or the other regions of Sudan.
Many of these violations are prosecutable by international law. The non-mention
in the agreements of the rights of the victims is not acceptable since it has
encouraged a continuity of human rights violations, one way or another, as has
been frequently reported in the other regions of the country, especially Darfur.
The Protocol on the sharing of power (signed in May 2004) says that, in all
levels of governance, Sudan will fulfill the duties prescribed by international
human rights treaties and other instruments to which (Sudan) is a party.
The Protocol emphasizes the fundamental human rights, including the right to
life and personal freedoms, the freedoms of expression, assembly, and religious
beliefs, and the right to be safe from tortures, or any cruel treatment, dehumanizing,
or humiliating punishment.
In past performances, however, many of these rights were not practically respected
by the governing groups. It should be emphasized that human rights are not achievable
by mere mentioning in protocols. Human rights are achieved by effective guarantees
and actual protection measures.
The agreements did not give equal weight to human rights’ implementation.
Hence, the agreements did not include any time-tables to guarantee these rights
or to protect them, as was carefully handled with respect to the issues related
to security matters and the troops’ deployment, or the preparation of
an interim constitution and the referendum on self-determination in the South
and the Abyei area. The human rights issues should have been considered a priority
over all other issues because human rights provide a real guarantee to execute
all democratic measures and procedures.
The agreements provided for the establishment of an interim government that
would basically include the present-time government and the SPLM. In varying
degrees, however, both partners are responsible for the commission of gross
human rights violations, for example extra-judicial killings, abductions, rapes,
tortures, and forced displacement for which they are legally accountable.
These crimes must be investigated. The persons responsible for the wrong-doing
must be prosecuted before an independent judiciary, in accordance with the due
process of justice. Under any circumstances, none of the human rights violations
should be exempted from lawful accountability.
In principle, the unraveling of human rights violations or corruption, and
the restoration of all due rights to the victims are inevitable conditions to
ensure the permanent and the just peace.
The Organization is gravely concerned the Sudan Government decided to extend
the state of emergency all over the country shortly before the signing of the
peace agreements.
This action indicated clearly the government’s intent to restrict the
fundamental rights and public freedoms, ban assemblies, and disperse demonstrations
with un-restricted arbitrary arrests, as well as protecting the security forces
by legal immunity, regardless of all their heinous crimes.
Another serious aspect of the agreements is that they failed to bring together
all Sudanese parties to the Sudan’s Crisis, besides the fact that the
agreements have been met with opposition, in varying degrees, in the North and
in the South.
Thus, whereas some parties welcomed cautiously the agreements, other parties
put forward certain conditions, while a few groups rejected the agreements,
all in all, since they had not taken part in the negotiations or been invited,
in essence, to participate in the peace talks.
The agreements, as they stand today, are not perfectly comprehensive because
they were not fully representative of the North and the South as a whole. Unless
this shortcoming is resolved, the danger of a new conflict would not be removed
between North-South, North-North, or South-South.
The Organization has consistently appreciated the conditions that led to the
bilateral negotiations between the Khartoum Government and the SPLM to stop
the bleeding war in the South. SHRO-Cairo, however, has often pointed out the
significance of incorporating all of the other political forces in the post-signing
stage of the protocols.
The drive to democratic rule by rushing a national interim constitution in
a short period of time is another problematic issue. The agreements signed by
the two partners on January 9, 2005, and the non-democratic constitution of
1998 were considered constitutional references for the next interim constitution
in spite of their contradictory contents.
The structure of the committee to draft the interim constitution granted the
two partners a majority to approve it on their own right because they posses
80 percent of the committee’s membership (52 for government; 28 for the
SPLM), whereas approval of the draft requires only two thirds of the membership.
The other political constituencies of the country and civil society groups that
include women, human rights’ groups, and legal experts have been largely
marginalized in this fundamental activity.
It is true each party to the agreement “is required to ensure participation
of the civil society.” And yet, this provision is not a sufficient guarantee
for a real or effective participation of the civil society. Moreover, it is
extremely important that the membership of the committees entitled to review
the constitution, human rights, or civil service be selected on the basis of
honesty, autonomous stands, and non-partisan commitments.
Additionally, the peace agreement, as signed by the government and the SPLM,
has been placed above the Interim Constitution should any contradiction occur
between the adopted references. The two peace partners alone, nonetheless, have
been empowered with politically-controlled legislative institutions to overcome
such difficulties.
The shortcomings of the agreement include the existence of other contradictions
such as the use of discriminatory criteria with respect to citizens. According
to the agreement, “Nationally enacted legislation applicable to Southern
Sudan and/or states of Southern Sudan shall have as its sources of legislation
popular consensus, the values and the customs of the people of the Sudan, including
their traditions and religious beliefs, having regard to the Sudan’s diversity.”
At the same time, “Nationally enacted legislation having effect only in
respect of the states outside Southern Sudan shall have as its sources of legislation
Sharia and the consensus of the people.”
Accordingly, there would be a variety of constitutions in the same Homeland:
“Islamic constitutions” for the North and a “people’s
constitution” in the South. Also, special “constitutional arrangements”
would be established for the Blue Nile, Southern Kordofan, and Abyei. The National
Capital Khartoum would be governed by “a national constitution”
that might turn into a form of Islamic governance.
The complex sets of constitutional drafts that would be emerging from the peace
agreements lie beyond the national scope of the two peace partners. It is to
the advantage of the whole Nation to ensure full representation of all political
parties and civil society groups in the Committee on the Interim Constitution
to finalize a workable national constitution for the upcoming transition and
the aftermath.
By agreement, “A dual banking system shall be established, and shall
consist of an Islamic banking system that shall operate in Northern Sudan and
a conventional banking system to operate in Southern Sudan” This situation
would require convertible banking transactions in different geographical locations.
It also entails a deprivation of Northern states from privileges allowable in
the Southern states.
Not only that the agreement grants the two partners a hegemonic status over
all legislative and executive bodies of the transitional government. The agreement
further extends the same powers over technical committees, civil and military
institutions, and other modalities.
Despite the agreement’s recognition of the need to bring about social
change in all aspects of life, the agreement doesn’t consider the need
to develop these institutions by constitution unto “a national identity.”
The agreement refers only to an incorporation of both sides of the Protocols
“in shared institutions.”
The fact of the matter is that all State bodies and institutions have been
previously converted by the NIF military rule to partisan bodies under full
control of the ruling party. The latter has already purged the National trained
personnel of the civil and military service of Sudan. Therefore, it is not enough
to rely on the good wishes or intentions of the two partners to establish a
national army and a national civil service: the two signers of the peace agreement
must not act as a sole decision maker on the key issues of the Nation.
Gravely enough, the People’s Defense Forces (PDF) have not been discussed
in the January agreement. The PDF, which the Khartoum rulers are determined
to sustain, is a militia group established and controlled by the NIF ruling
party since the advent of the Inqaz military coup in June 1989 to intimate the
opposition.
Furthermore, the peace agreement has not mentioned a word on the destruction
of the civil service by the Inqaz rule (1989 to the present time) and the need
to reform it by democracy.
SHRO-Cairo believes that within the frame of the signed peace agreements, any
change that might be possibly enforced in the civil service, security, and military
bodies would be inevitably modeled on the same partisan mode of the legislative
and executive arrangements of the protocols.
The Organization feels there is a dire need to establish new State apparatuses
to restore formally and contextually the National Identity of the Sudan’s
civil service, armed forces, police, and security departments.
The independence of the Judiciary has not been clearly stated in the agreements,
although it constitutes the cornerstone of the transition to democratic rule
and the permanent and just peace.
The cultural rights of citizens in the National Capital Khartoum are ambiguously
mentioned in provisions of the agreement. For example, the Protocols speak about
“behavior based on cultural practices and traditions which does not disturb
public order, is not disdainful of other traditions, and not in flagrant disregard
of the law shall be deemed in the eyes of the law as an exercise of personal
freedoms.”
The kind of culture or the habits that the text addresses in Sudan as a multi-cultural
society, should have been carefully specified simply because the identifiable
culture by agreement might well be the culture adopted by the prevailing laws
of the ruling regime.
While the agreement exempts the non-Muslim population of the National Capital
from Shari’a rules, the agreement doesn’t indicate, in clear constitutional
terms, the status of the non-Muslims in the other regions of the North or the
status of Muslims in the South.
The Sudan Human Rights Organization Cairo Office ascertains the importance
of the Bill of Rights, i.e., the human rights and the public freedoms included
in the 9th of January documents and the need to commit Sudanese governance to
all human rights norms, not only those thus far ratified by the Sudan Government.
The Organization calls on all of the concerned parties to implement effective
measures to realize the full enjoyment of human rights and public freedoms,
as top national priorities, in a specified time-table by agreement.
The human rights’ priorities must embrace the international obligation
conferred upon the Government, as a party to the UN treaty-bodies, to surrender
the suspects referred to the International Criminal Court for investigation
about the crimes, which might include genocide, committed against humanity in
Darfur.
Chief among the fundamental rights and freedoms, the Organization emphasizes:
- The enjoyment of the right to life, as a right that must be ascertained
by full legal accountability of all suspects who involved themselves in the
commission of extra-judicial killings or other murders, whether they were
members of the government forces or any other warring group.
- The full enjoyment of public freedoms and personal security, as a right
that is ascertained only by the principled application of effective measures
and immediate procedures to improve the conditions of refugees, displaced
people, and the other victimized groups.
- The right to personal safety to live freely from tortures or any cruel
of degrading treatment. This right cannot be recognized without abrogation
of the Emergency Law and its special courts, and the ongoing repressive laws,
including the Criminal Law that continues to inflict the cruel, dehumanizing
and humiliating penalties of flogging, limb amputation, execution, and crucifixion
on people.
- The right to personal safety from tortures will not be ensured in the next
transition without legal accountability of all those who involved themselves
in the reported murders, tortures, abductions, rapes, or the kindred all over
the country.
- The right to live freely from arbitrary arrest or detention and the right
to a just trial. These rights wouldn’t be ensured while the security
authorities enjoy an upper hand over the rule of law, arresting without charge,
depriving arrestees or detainees from legal consultation and family visitation,
or detaining people for unspecified periods of time to penalize them, in advance,
for their views or political stands. The right to personal safety is not applicable
without effective presence and functioning of an Independent Judiciary.
- The right to the freedom of expression, association, and peaceful assembly.
These rights cannot be realized with the unabated harassment of people by
the Authority, the censorial activities against the Press, or the suppression
of peaceful demonstrations, as occurred in Port Sudan this last January.
- The right to citizenship without any discrimination on the basis of ethnic
origin, religious beliefs, or sex. This right would not be guaranteed when
the government takes sides with or against a specific ethnic group, imposes
certain religious rules, or persecutes women with curtailments and suppressive
laws.
SHRO-Cairo believes that the persistent violence in other regions of the country,
especially in Darfur, posits a permanent threat to the Peace Agreements. The
instability of Western Sudan would overshadow the possible stability of the
neighboring regions, North or South.
The continuity of the humanitarian disaster of Darfur will negatively affect
the ongoing efforts by the International Community to support the construction
programs stipulated by the agreements in South Sudan.
The People of Sudan has already experienced the fact that it would be difficult
for many concerned parties to provide assistance to a country in which chaos,
savagery, and violence continues to ravage the life of civilians by non-democratic
regimes.
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