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Chairperson, Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Development, honourable members, ladies and gentlemen, I would like to take this opportunity to thank the committee for inviting me to this hearing. It is an honour to be here with you to talk about the impact of the referendum on the future of the Sudan.
When the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, CPA, was signed on January 9, 2005, it basically established an autonomous Government of Southern Sudan, GOSS, within a united Sudan. One of the most important provisions was article 46 of the interim constitution of the Government of Southern Sudan that establishes liaison offices abroad. The liaison offices abroad derive their constitutional mandate from article 46 of the interim constitution, which states that the Government of Southern Sudan, GOSS, has the right to establish liaison offices, to engage, develop, and maintain good bilateral and multilateral relations and cooperation with foreign governments, foreign non-governmental organizations and associations for mutual advantage in trade, investment, culture, sports, education, credit, loans, grants, technical assistance, and other fields of developmental cooperation between the Government of Southern Sudan and those countries.
My role and responsibilities, as GOSS's principal liaison officer in Ottawa, is to advocate to the Canadian government on bilateral and developmental issues on behalf of the people and the Government of Southern Sudan and to inform the Canadian government on progress and challenges that are still facing the implementation of the CPA.
The referendum on self-determination for the people of southern Sudan and Abyei is a national exercise that will have a profound effect on the future of the Sudan as a country. The word “self-determination” is a universal principle that the Government of Southern Sudan has accepted to settle the issue of the war between the north and the south in Nairobi, Kenya, in 2005, during the long, difficult negotiation that was supported generously by the Intergovernmental Agency for Development countries, and the international community, including the Canadian government. And we thank you for that.
The National Congress Party chose the path to self-determination over secularism during the negotiations in Kenya for reasons known to them only. The agreement provided the parties to the CPA with two options during the interim period of six years. First, the unity of the Sudan must be made attractive to the people of southern Sudan by the NCP-dominated government in the north. Secondly, after six years the people of southern Sudan will exercise their democratic rights to either confirm the current unity of the Sudan, if it is made attractive, or they can choose to form their own country through a referendum.
The question is this: how did we reach this stage of a referendum on self-determination for the people of southern Sudan and Abyei?
Ladies and gentlemen, Sudan has been at war with itself for 40 of its 55 years of independence. For the last 22 years, the war in southern Sudan has been about the unity of the Sudan, a Sudan that is secular and democratic, where religion has no place in government; citizenship is not determined by the colour of your skin, religious beliefs, or region; justice, equality, and peaceful coexistence is voluntary; national wealth is shared equally; and development projects are carried out equally in all parts of the country. All of this in the current Sudan remains a dream.
The President of the Government of Southern Sudan, His Excellency General Salva Kiir Mayardit, is prepared to have the referendum conducted on time, as is stipulated in the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, CPA. He has established the southern Sudan referendum task force, chaired by the vice-president of the Government of Southern Sudan, Dr. Riak Machar, to prepare the people of southern Sudan for the referendum.
The task force has established post-referendum negotiating teams to iron out the questions of nationality, borders between the north and the south, national debt, national assets, international agreements, oil revenues, etc. Just this month, because of the importance the Government of Southern Sudan attaches to the peaceful conduct of the referendum, the president convened a south-south dialogue with all the political parties in southern Sudan to find a common ground.
He also issued a presidential pardon to those who had rebelled against the government in southern Sudan because of the results of the April 2010 Sudan general elections. His executive pardon was well received. This is in anticipation that the referendum is an historic event and the people of southern Sudan must go to the referendum as one united block.
The NCP has not responded well to the quest for peaceful conduct of the referendum. The borders between the north and southern Sudan should have been demarcated two years ago, but until today this has not yet been agreed upon. The 1956 borders are known to both parties; that is why the 2008 census and the April 2010 Sudan general elections were conducted without borders. The Government of Southern Sudan believes that the referendum can also be conducted without the physical demarcation of the borders.
The registration of voters for the referendum should have been completed three month ago, but as we speak, the registration is only slated for November 14. The Government of Southern Sudan believes in negotiations on any outstanding issues during the post-referendum period, and we appeal to the international community, and Canada in particular, to help both parties during the negotiations.
In regard to the case of Abyei, the international tribunal ruled clearly in 2009 on where Abyei belonged. The NCP accepted the ruling but refused to implement the decision of the International Court. As we speak, the Abyei boundary has not been demarcated and its referendum commission has not been formed. The international community, and Canada in particular, must put political pressure on both the NCP and the SPLM so that the Abyei referendum takes place at the same time as the referendum in southern Sudan. The Government of Southern Sudan, and indeed the international community, does not want Abyei to become a hot spot in years to come.
How will the referendum in southern Sudan affect the popular consultations in the Nuba Mountains, Southern Blue Nile, and Darfur?
Ladies and gentlemen, the Government of Southern Sudan and the SPLM party have said in several public meetings that the popular consultations for the two areas are very important for the people in those areas to decide if the current arrangement is working for them. This is going to be carried out by the elected members of the state legislative assemblies within the respective state parliaments. These popular consultations are to empower them and give them more voice in the decision-making process in their states.
The issue of Darfur is completely different from that of southern Sudan and Abyei, although there are similarities in how the war is being conducted. The people of southern Sudan are sympathetic to the people of Darfur.
His Excellency Salva Kiir Mayardit, President of the Government of Southern Sudan and chairman of the SPLM party, has stated clearly his desire to help in the mediation process, but the offer was rejected by the NCP party.
We hope that the Government of Sudan will use the CPA model in southern Sudan to solve the issue of Darfur.
The conflict in Darfur is all about an equal development and equal political representation in the decision-making process in the centre and an equal share of national resources and wealth. The Government of Southern Sudan will continue to search for peace in Darfur, even if the people of southern Sudan decide to have their own country during the referendum. It is in the best interests of the Government of Southern Sudan to have a viable neighbour in the north.
Lately Sudan has received political attention from many countries, as demonstrated at the high-level meeting on Sudan that took place in New York at UN headquarters, organized by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. During the meeting the international community, and Canada in particular, stated clearly that the referendum is a very important part of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, and any delay in the conduct of the referendum will not be acceptable.
What else can Canada and the international community do to ensure that the referendum is credible? Ladies and gentlemen, we believe Canada and the international community must send election monitors to both northern and southern Sudan to help in the smooth running of the referendum process. We know that Canada is chairing the referendum basket fund for other countries to contribute money to support the conduct of the referendum. We also know that Canada has prepared a library of documents to support the post-referendum negotiation. Also, CIDA is taking a leading role in the humanitarian development initiative in southern Sudan and the Abyei area.
However, we'd love to see Canada move beyond humanitarian assistance to take a leading role as a middle power and an honest broker in pressuring both parties to negotiate in good faith for the sake of peace in the region. If the referendum is delayed or the result is disputed, the consequence will be great, not only for the people of southern Sudan but for the whole region, given the fact that the former Ugandan rebels--the Lord's Resistance Army, or LRA--is still a menace in some parts of southern Sudan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, central Africa, and now Darfur.
The President of Sudan, General Omar Hassan al-Bashir, is on the record as saying he will be the first to recognize the wishes of the people of southern Sudan should they vote for independence from the north. The people of southern Sudan and the international community will hold him accountable should violence erupt because of non-recognition of the result of the referendum. The President of the Government of Southern Sudan and the people of southern Sudan have stated clearly in many public rallies that they will accept the result of the referendum should the people of southern Sudan choose unity over separation. We expect the same from the north as well, although there are voices in the north that say otherwise.
There are many cynics who say that Sudan is a married couple in an angry divorce. We are frightened of the violent fights, but we see Sudan as a mother giving birth to twins. When the labour pains are over, the two children can grow up as friends.
Thank you for inviting me to this important hearing.