Sub-Saharan Africa

South Sudan

  • Sudan
    How to Secure Peace in South Sudan
    The process that led to South Sudan’s independence offers lessons for avoiding a new, devastating conflict in the region and underscores the importance of sustained and vigorous U.S. diplomacy, writes CFR’s Payton Knopf from the new country’s capital.
  • Sub-Saharan Africa
    Understanding Sudan
    South Sudan's President Salva Kiir (L) and Sudan's President Omar Hassan al-Bashir walk at Juba airport July 9, 2011. (STR New/Courtesy Reuters) I recently received a request for some reading recommendations on Sudan and South Sudan. The literature is massive, so I thought I would share some resources I’ve found personally helpful in illuminating and demystifying a highly complex African conflict. Here, I focus on north-south relations, oil, Darfur, Khartoum politics, and the conflicts in Abyei and South Kordofan. Sudan: Assessing Risks to Stability (PDF), (Center for Strategic and International Studies) Authors Richard Downie and Brian Kennedy provide a comprehensive analysis of “key stress points” challenging stability in Sudan and South Sudan within a historical context. South Sudan Country Profile (The Fund for Peace) This is a brief country assessment outlining basic statistics and various improvements and challenges to watch in bullet form. Darfur in the Shadows (Human Rights Watch) Human Rights Watch documents rising insecurity in Darfur, a region that has largely been forgotten by the western media in light of the euphoria around the South Sudan independence referendum and the conflicts in Abyei and South Kordofan. Divisions in Sudan’s Ruling Party and the Threat to the Country’s Stability (International Crisis Group) As the title implies, this ICG report provides an analysis of the often underreported divisions within the Sudan president Omar al-Bashir’s National Congress Party and how those may contribute to instability. The Politics of Resources, Resistance and Peripheries in Sudan (South African Institute of International Affairs) Author Petrus de Kock goes deeper into Sudan and South Sudan’s many localized conflicts, rooted at least partially in competition not only for oil but subsistence resources, that often escape the attention of western media. Negotiating Peace in Sudan (the Cairo Review of Global Affairs) United States Special Envoy to Sudan Princeton Lyman writes about the difficult process that led to the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement and the unresolved challenges. A few organizations and websites with extensive resources: Enough: The Project to End Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity Satellite Sentinel Project Relief Web Sudan Human Security Baseline Assessment Finally, I did a few brief video interviews available online: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ow96-qXZ-iM& http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OU1Nmmgm0sA
  • Sudan
    South Sudan Independence July 9
    Women hold crosses as they march during a rehearsal of the Independence Day ceremony in Juba July 7, 2011. (Goran Tomasevic/Courtesy Reuters) On Saturday, south Sudan will celebrate its independence. Given the occasion, I have two pieces on the topic. In a CFR expert brief, I make the point that south Sudan’s succession is the first significant change in any African country’s national boundaries inherited from colonialism. (The only other case is Eritrea, which won its independence from Ethiopia in 1991. But Eritrea had been separate from Ethiopia when both were incorporated into Mussolini’s east African empire, while south Sudan was part of the colonial Anglo-Egyptian Sudan.) The Organization of African Unity and its successor, the African Union, have opposed changing colonial boundaries of African states. I do not think that south Sudan will lead to a wholesale call for a re-evaluation of Africa’s national boundaries, in part because governing elites do not want to open what could be a pandora’s box. But, south Sudan may encourage a conversation about Africa’s often illogical national boundaries, and may encourage the separatist Republic of Somaliland to seek international recognition. On the Royal African Society’s  blog, I make the point that despite the historic nature of south Sudan’s independence, it really opens a new chapter in a conflict that is likely to continue into the future, particularly given the violence in Abyei and South Kordofan.
  • Sudan
    South Sudan’s Challenge to Africa’s Colonial Borders
    South Sudan’s independence July 9 could encourage secession efforts elsewhere in sub-Saharan Africa, but elites in those countries will likely stymie those attempts at challenging colonial borders, at least for now.
  • Sudan
    Why Sudan’s Peace Is in Jeopardy
    Hostilities in Sudan might be relieved by a deal hammered out by former South African president Thabo Mbeki, but ethnic and religious divides, resource battles, and looming southern independence remain contentious issues, says CFR’s John Campbell.
  • Sudan
    A Trip Report: Sudan
    Play
    Upon their return from Sudan, please join George Clooney and John Prendergast to assess the in-country situation in advance of southern Sudan's independence referendum this January.
  • Sudan
    A Trip Report: Sudan
    Play
    Upon their return from Sudan, George Clooney and John Prendergast assess the in-country situation in advance of southern Sudan's independence referendum this January.
  • Sudan
    Sudan’s Fractured Internal Politics
    Experts say instability in south Sudan should be looked at in tandem with the crisis in Darfur, and some call for addressing Sudan’s problems in a more unified way to help forestall an escalation of violence.