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Archive for April 3rd, 2011

South Sudan: Too soon to celebrate?

Posted by African Press International on April 3, 2011

Analysis: Republic of South Sudan faces precarious start

Too soon to celebrate?

JUBA , 1 April 2011 (IRIN) – A resurgence of internal armed opposition in Southern Sudan illustrates that the birth of this new independent nation, scheduled for 9 July, will be marked not only by celebrations of long-fought liberation from the North, but also by anxiety about the government’s ability to maintain peace and stability across a vast and ethnically diverse region.

Claims of rebel unity feed this anxiety. The most prominent man now fighting the southern army (SPLA), George Athor, a former SPLA general, who broke away after claiming fraud in April 2010 gubernatorial elections, recently announced that five opposition forces active in several states had forged a united front against the ruling Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM).

“Our objective is realization of democracy in the new country of South Sudan,” Athor said by satellite phone from his undisclosed hideout in Jonglei.

“We must ensure that all Southern Sudanese are equal irrespective of tribe,” Athor said, arguing that there is “no equality among southerners” under the rule of the SPLM, which is dominated by the Dinka, the region’s largest ethnic group.

SPLA spokesman Col Philip Aguer dismissed Athor’s unity claim, insisting that all the various opposition forces scattered across the South had in common was support from Khartoum. Aside from a few documents of dubious authenticity, no hard evidence has emerged to support this allegation, made repeatedly since rebellions escalated after the elections last year, and then again after a lull surrounding January’s secession referendum.

Over recent weeks hundreds have been killed in the violence, which echoes the internal conflicts that raged during the South’s decades-long armed rebellion against the North. That larger civil war ended with the 2005 signing of a Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA).

“Current reports indicate that more than 10 conflict incidents relating to militia groups occurred in March,” said Giovanni Bosco, head of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Juba, the Southern capital.

He added that almost 16,000 people had been newly displaced in Jonglei, Upper Nile and Unity states as a result.

“The recent increase in the intensity and scope of violence in parts of the South is worrying. Even more worrying is the impact of fighting on civilians, including on the high number of returnees [from the north] present in some of the affected areas,” said Bosco, noting that the fighting – and related relocation of five NGOs in Jonglei – limited the humanitarian response and risked disrupting the current start of the school year.

“Of additional concern are reports of newly laid land-mines, which pose a threat to the security of civilians and jeopardize the agricultural season,” he said.

The UN has also warned that more than 10,000 civilians displaced by clashes between the SPLA and Athor’s group in Jonglei were “in a dire state with serious shortages of food, water and medicine… a number of elderly people have died” while fleeing to places of sanctuary set up by local authorities.

“This is not what we expected,” said Philip Aguer (not related to the SPLA spokesman), a former SPLA child soldier whose father died in the civil war. “We are disappointed with what we are now experiencing,” he said, referring to the army’s alleged “mistreatment of innocent people” in its counter-insurgency operations.


Photo: Jose Miguel Calatayud/IRIN
Embattled: GoSS President Salva Kiir

Inclusive leadership needed

Several analysts have underlined how important it is for all citizens to trust the government of the soon-to-be independent state to represent their interests.

“South Sudan [as the new country will officially be named] will need to demonstrate that it belongs to all South Sudanese; that it does not belong to any ethnic, religious or political group,” Jok Madut Jok, an academic specializing in conflict analysis, who now serves as Minister of Culture, said in a 25 March speech at the University of Juba.

Civil society groups have criticized Salva Kiir, President of the Government of Southern Sudan (GoSS), for failing – beyond offering amnesty to various rebel leaders if they disarmed – to significantly make good on public promises in the referendum’s run-up to accommodate his political and military opponents.

On 17 March, the Carter Center issued a statement urging the SPLM to be more inclusive in the transition to independence and criticizing the party for its “dominance over all decisions” and its prevention of “meaningful participation from opposition members”.

For Zach Vertin, an analyst with the International Crisis Group, “Managing diversity and building a common national identity in the new South will not be easy, particularly in a still-militarized environment. How the GoSS and the SPLA handle these latest rebellions may set the tone for the post-independence period, as relationships are redefined between state and non-state actors,” he told IRIN.

“A forceful response [to armed opposition] on its own is unlikely to yield solutions, particularly where local communities, ethnic tensions, and legitimate grievances are mixed in. Southern leadership should open political space and articulate a strategy to address genuine grievances so as to consolidate its legitimacy among the public more broadly. Otherwise, these may not be the last of the rebellions,” he warned.

Ali Verjee, a senior researcher with the Rift Valley Institute, told IRIN: “The violence has demonstrated that the currents of discontent within both the SPLM and SPLA are far from resolved, and have a growing constituency of support, which may grow further still.

“While the causes of the violence are complex, it’s worth noting at least two holdovers from the CPA: a continuing failure to successfully integrate other armed forces into the SPLA and dissatisfaction with the flawed 2010 elections, which collectively opened more wounds than they healed.

“The patterns of behaviour that have so far defined the approach to military integration and political competition, if sustained, will not end Southern Sudan’s instability,” he warned.

mf/am/mw

source http://www.irinnews.org

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Surviving the quaker

Posted by African Press International on April 3, 2011

MYANMAR: Earthquake homeless need urgent shelter

A quake survivor sits with pictures of her lost ones who perished

MA AN HKAN, 1 April 2011 (IRIN) – The main concern for thousands of survivors of last week’s devastating earthquake in Myanmar is lack of shelter.

“We’ve lost everything. How are we supposed to rebuild?” asked Nan Yone, 75, squatting on the floor of her makeshift tent near the remains of her home in the village of Ma An Hkan in Tarlay Sub-Township, the worst affected area, about an hour’s drive from the Burmese border town of Tachileik.

According to the Myanmar Red Cross Society (MRCS), 3,152 people were left homeless by the 6.8 magnitude quake that struck Myanmar’s eastern Shan state on 24 March, affecting at least 18,000 people and killing 74.

More than 700 homes were damaged or destroyed, local authorities in Tarlay reported.

A rapid assessment by the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and MRCS, with Noble Compassionate Volunteer (NCV) and World Vision Myanmar, found 90 villages moderately or severely affected.

On 30 March, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported that in 50 of those affected, more than half of all buildings were damaged or destroyed, while in the remaining 40, the figure was more than 30 percent.

“Many houses were destroyed because they were poorly constructed,” Denis de Poerck, acting country director of Save the Children/Myanmar told IRIN from Yangon.

And with aftershocks continuing, many quake-traumatized residents – despite early rains beginning – are not taking any chances, erecting makeshift tents outside.


Photo: Lynn Maung/IRIN
Many survivors are living in tents

“They construct a temporary tent on the ground just in front of their old house and stay there,” said De Poerck.

Traditionally the rainy season begins in mid-May and ends in mid-September, reaching its peak in July and August.

“Many people will catch cold, especially children under-five,” an NCV health worker said. “These people urgently need proper shelter before the rainy season officially starts,” she stressed.

Despite significant relief efforts to date, more is needed, with many residents picking away at the remnants of their devastated homes in the hopes of salvaging material that might be usable.

According to OCHA, they still need additional material support, particularly non-food items, such as tarpaulins, blankets and household utensils.

Swe Swe Lin, a pregnant mother-of-two, rebuilt her bamboo house with the help of villagers, but does not dare sleep inside it.

“No, not with the aftershocks. It’s just safer to stay in the tent now,” the 29-year-old said. “I’m not sure whether I would survive the next time and I’m worried about my unborn baby.”

lm/ds/mw

source http://www.irinnews.org

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The Asia-Pacific is prone to natural disasters

Posted by African Press International on April 3, 2011

ASIA: Earthquakes highlight need for regional preparedness, say experts

The Asia-Pacific is prone to natural disasters

BANGKOK, 31 March 2011 (IRIN) – Two back-to-back earthquakes in Japan and Myanmar, which left more than 27,000 people dead and thousands more injured, underscore the need for greater disaster preparedness in the region, experts say.

“Natural hazards to do not recognize man-made borders, and this in itself is a compelling reason for countries to come together for regional cooperation in disaster-risk reduction,” Krasae Chanawongse, chairman of the Asian Disaster Preparedness Center (ADPC) told IRIN in Bangkok.

According to a recent report by the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), the Asia-Pacific region accounts for 85 percent of global deaths from natural disasters, and 38 percent of global economic losses.

“Building codes, stronger schools and hospitals, and the location of power plants are all important. We need risk-sensitive land-use planning,” said Sanny Jegillos, regional programme coordinator at the UN Development Programme, at an ADPC regional panel discussion earlier this month in Bangkok. Climate change, coupled with rapid economic growth, urbanization, and unregulated construction, make the region particularly vulnerable, he added.

While the region has shown more effective and rapid responses compared with 10-15 years ago, “progress has been regrettably uneven because some countries lack funds, expertise, and technology”, Oliver Lacey Hall, regional head of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Bangkok, said.

According to the latest figures provided by OCHA on 30 March, the 9.0 magnitude earthquake and subsequent tsunami that struck Japan on 11 March left over 27,000 people dead, 173,000 homeless, and more than 16,000 missing.

Two weeks later, a 6.8 magnitude quake in Myanmar’s eastern Shan state left 74 dead, 125 injured, and 703 homes damaged or destroyed. More than 3,000 people were left homeless, the Myanmar Red Cross reported.

dm/ds/mw

source http://www.irinnews.org

Posted in AA > News and News analysis | Leave a Comment »

 
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