Tuesday, 31 December 2019

01 January 2020

SUDANESE CELEBRATE CHRISTMAS 2019 IN KHARTOUM

HAPPY NEW YEAR

     For the first time since 2011 the Sudanese have celebrated Christmas publicly.  The civilian cabinet named Christmas a public holiday.  The Minister for Religious Affairs apologized to Christians for discrimination under the previous government and promised more equality in the future.  Amna Azari, 18, visited a church for the first time in her life.  "We are becoming more tolerant and loving towards each other.  This is the legacy of our great revolution," she said.

     My first Christmas in Sudan was in 1991.  I stood at the back of the Catholic church in Torit. Shortly after the liturgy began a man named William Nyuon entered with his body guards, all dressed in civilian clothes.  He stood quietly behind me and I would later learn he was a high ranking officer in the Sudanese People's Liberation Army.  That same night I met Muslims and other Christians, all celebrating together.  Later on in the year, I attended Muslim celebrations of their holy days.

     As we begin another year and a new decade it is hopeful to see how the Sudanese have used a totally nonviolent process to remove a dictator and move towards a more democratic government.  They have a long way to go but I am impressed with how far they have come.  Other countries are using violence to bring about change and they seem to get more media coverage.  I am keeping my eye on the Sudanese and the path they are forging, hoping that the rest of us will follow in becoming more tolerant and loving.

PEACE OF THE SOLEMNITY OF MARY, MOTHER OF JESUS 
AND
WORLD DAY OF PRAYER FOR PEACE


Sunday, 1 December 2019

01 December 2019

Steven Mom Pepper Susan

   


Dear Friends,
     I am now back in Urbana Illinois for the whole of this past year and have settled in well.  I work as a Maryknoll lay missioner doing medical consultancy, advocacy with the Maryknoll Office of Global Concerns and mission education and fundraising in the mid-west.  I’ve travelled to Iowa, Wisconsin, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Chicago and it has been fun to learn more about my own country after being away for so many ears.      



May 2000
I received a great gift about a month ago.  In May 2000, I was working as a family physician in a remote village in Sudan.  A very sick little boy, Adimo, was brought to our clinic by his mother.  She had taken him to traditional healers but he kept getting thinner and thinner. The last town they visited was being bombed by the Antonov plane which was sent by the government to terrorize people.  They were afraid and had heard that there was a clinic deep inside their home area.  In desperation, they walked 120 miles to Nanyangacor where he met the first white woman he’d ever seen…me!  They didn’t know his age.  He looked about nine years old but he only weighed 20 pounds, the weight of a one-year old child!  Kala azar was killing him.  The little shepherds would sit in the shade of ant hills while tending the livestock.  Sand flies would come out of the ant hill and bite the children and pass on a little worm that would cause them to waste away until they died if they didn’t get treatment.  I was sure he would die but I was wrong.  We began to treat him with a painful daily injection in his tiny little muscles.  Over the next month he improved and lived.  Last month he found my email address and wrote to me.  He now weighs 140 pounds and wanted to say thank you. He gave me permission to share his story with you.
         
     Before I left East Africa, I went back to Adimo’s home area to say goodbye.  I failed to find him until now.  I am thrilled to hear that he is still alive and struggling to improve himself and his country.  He taught me never to give up on a sick patient and he continues to remind me how blessed and fortunate I am here in the USA. 

     In some ways, life is so much easier here.  The electricity and water work.  Drivers usually follow the rules of the road and it is a pleasure to get in the car and not be stopped by the police over and over again for no good reason.  It is wonderful to be with my family and enjoy meals together, a walk in the park, the changing seasons and reconnecting with friends in my parish and community who share this journey of life with me.  Unfortunately, we have a lot of consumerism and violence in our society too.  I feel like I need this time of Advent more than ever to focus my attention on love and the coming of Christ once again into my life.  I am very grateful for you and will pray for you during this season.  May it bring you joy, peace and love.

MERRY CHRISTMAS AND HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!

                                                                                      

Friday, 1 November 2019

01 November 2019


     I was recently asked to write an essay on the Sudans to clarify how they came to be and what is currently happening in both countries.  For those of you who are interested hope this helps!!!


GOVERNANCE IN THE REPUBLICS OF
SUDAN AND SOUTH SUDAN

     Sudan was a collection of small kingdoms until 1820 when Egypt conquered the territory.  They unified and controlled the north but the south was full of swamps and disease.  This area remained fragmented, difficult to access, and was frequently attacked by slave traders.  In 1881 the Mahdi, a Muslim religious leader, led a revolt to unify the western and central regions.  His followers continue to this day as the largest political grouping known as the Umma party. 
     In 1882, the British invaded Egypt and seven years later agreed with Egyptians to rule Sudan as a joint protectorate.  Both countries ceded independence to The Republic of Sudan (ROS) in 1956. They reneged on an agreement to set up a federal system between the north and south.  This ignited civil war because southerners demanded more representation, regional autonomy and, for some, complete separation.  With the exception of an eleven-year cease fire, fighting continued until 2005 when the Comprehensive Peace Agreement was ratified to guide development in the south.  This culminated in a national referendum in January 2011. 98.8% of the population voted to secede from the north and the Republic of South Sudan (ROSS) was inaugurated on July 9, 2011.
     The world’s newest nation began with little infrastructure, devastation from 45 years of war and ecstatic jubilation.  Almost all citizens were hopeful a new day was dawning. 
     In December 2013, ROSS President, Salva Kiir, alleged that a faction of the army loyal to Vice President Riek Machar attempted a coup d’etat and put it down within one day.  This sparked the South Sudan civil war that continued intermittently until September 2018 when the Revitalized Agreement on the Resolution of the Conflict in the Republic of South Sudan (R-ARCSS) was signed.  This war is far more complicated than a conflict between two men.  Several powerful groups are suppressing other groups and excluding them from mediation efforts.  For six years 200,000 displaced people have been living in church compounds and Protection of Civilian Sites secured by the UN.  Additionally, two million people are refugees in Uganda and the ROS.
     R-ARCSS requires Kiir and Machar to form a transitional government by November 12, 2019.  They must agree to the composition of the number and boundaries of subnational states and unification of the army.    While faith-based groups are praying and working for peace, few people are relocating from exile.  Some men cross back from Uganda into the ROSS to join a rebel group and increase its numbers.  But the reintegration of all combatants into one united army with a common purpose is far from reaching the goal.
     Meanwhile, the ROS also suffers from division and violence.  The former President, Bashir, was removed in April and on September 11th the Sudanese Sovereign Council was formed to provide a transitional government.  Eight months of peaceful civilian protests culminated in this development under the guidance of Abiy Ahmed, the Prime Minister of Ethiopia and the 2019 Nobel Laureate for Peace.  Hamdock, the new Prime Minister for Sudan, made his first official visit to Juba, ROSS, signaling the importance he places on good relations.  He seeks to integrate trade, allow visa free access from the ROSS and offer dual citizenship.  These meetings led to the ROS allowing the World Food Programme to visit Kauda in the Nuba Mountains for the first time in eight years; a hopeful development.
     Both countries must combat corruption.  The Sentry has recently described the hijacking of the ROSS by South Sudanese military elites, international corporations, banks and governments.  A case in point is oil which provides 95% of revenue for the ROSS.  Several countries, including Russia, South Africa and China, have invested in this sector.  Dar Petroleum is the largest exporter of oil from the ROSS.  This company has funded the lavish lifestyles of government officials and provided direct support to militias causing mass atrocities.  Hazardous waste has been dumped around the oil fields, thereby contaminating drinking water, while the number of people suffering from cancer, birth defects and lung damage in those areas increases.  The largest shareholder for this company is the China National Petroleum Corporation.  Government leaders and their commercial partners enjoy personal gain without fear of retribution because the state has been captured and will not hold them accountable.  The international community could combat this by sanctioning not only individuals, but networks and companies.
     The United States has accompanied developments in both of these countries for decades, most recently with $4 billion in aid to the ROSS since 2013.  It needs to support the nonviolent change of government in the ROS which took the lives of hundreds of civilians.  Civilians in the ROSS have even more reason to protest but are in survival mode and are unable to organize and resist corruption, negative ethnicity and inept governance.  

The advice of Bishop Kussala of Yambio/Tombura diocese can suggest a path forward…

     In South Sudan we have come to know that most of the people who are fighting are in the government and they have the weapons, so to initiate the process of justice, first we need to stop the war, organize the government, and then gradually the people can have the security to be able to speak out.

https://allafrica.com/stories/201910090094.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_South_Sudan
file:///C:/Users/susan/Documents/South%20Sudan/TakingOfSouthSudan-Sept2019-TheSentry.pdf
https://static1.squarespace.com/static/506c8ea1e4b01d9450dd53f5/t/5d95e3f68bb633646340bd85/1570104322464/South+Sudan+-+Dan+-+October+2019+-+FINAL+update.pdf
https://time.com/5700917/south-sudan-bishop-peace/
https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgxwDrldhbHHwPKdtfKFkqzTKlxNx?projector=1&messagePartId=0.1




Friday, 11 October 2019

10 October 2019

AN EXTRAORDINARY MISSION MONTH


    This is a very busy month for me and I am already behind with this blog!!!  October 20th will be World Mission Sunday and Pope Francis is trying to get us going with the theme...

THE CHURCH ON A MISSION 
IN THE WORLD


The Logo 

The logo of the Extraordinary Missionary Month October 2019 is a missionary cross where the primary colors refer to the five continents. The Cross is the instrument and direct sign of communion between God and man for the universality of our mission, and through its vibrant colors, a sign of victory and resurrection. The world is transparent because the action of evangelization has no barriers or boundaries, it is the fruit of the Holy Spirit. Christian charity and the world transfigured in the Spirit overcome distances and open the horizon of our minds and hearts. The words Baptized and Sent next to the image indicate the two characteristics of every Christian: baptism and proclamation. 

The Colors of the Logo 

The primary colors of the Cross are referred to the five continents: red for America, green for Africa, white for Europe, yellow for Asia and blue for Oceania. The red recalls the blood of the American martyrs, seeds for a new life in the Christian faith. Green is the color of life and symbolizes growth, fruitfulness, youth and vitality. It is also the color of hope, one of the three theological virtues. White is the symbol of joy, the beginning of a new life in Christ: this is the challenge that the old Europe is facing, so that it may be able to regain the evangelizing strength from which it was generated thanks to so many churches and saints. Yellow is the color of light, which nourishes itself with light by invoking the true Light. Blue is the color symbolizing the water of life that quenches our thirst and restores us along the path to God. It is the color of heaven, a sign of God's dwelling with us.
The Pope is trying to get us to put our faith into action and get out of our comfort zones.  That's the best way to grow.  One of my big challenges was working in Sudan with diseases I had never heard of before, let alone treated.  The need was so great that I knew I could offer something that was better than nothing when I was absent.  So I stuck with it and did my best.
In May 2000, a very sick little boy, Adimo, came to our clinic in Nanyangacor Sudan.  He had seen several witch doctors in another place without success.  In desperation, he and his mother walked 120 miles over one week because the Antonov bomber had made the town where he was unsafe.  He might have been 8, 9, or 10 years old but he only weighed 20 pounds.  This is the weight of a child at one year of age!!!  He had a disease called kala azar.  It is a parasite that is spread by a sand fly that bites shepherds when they sit in the shade of an ant hill tending their livestock.  It causes the person to waste away and die without treatment.  He was so sick I thought he would die.  The treatment was a very painful injection of a heavy metal every day for one month.  He had almost no muscle to put the medicine into!  His mother left him at the mission compound and walked three days to get home.  He didn't see her for several years.  We fed him nutrition biscuits along with the medicine and he lived.  Then he went to school.  And then he sent me an email last month.  He is now about 28 years old and weighs 140 pounds.  He has become an community health worker and wanted to say thank you.
I feel very grateful that I could be a conduit for healing that helped this little fellow to survive and now thrive.   Let us remember that each one of us, by virtue of our baptism, is a mission in the world.  We can do amazing things if we open ourselves to be a healing channel for the love of God who works through us.


BE EXTRAORDINARY THIS MONTH!!! 


Monday, 2 September 2019

01 September 2019


MALARIA – A MASTER OF DISGUISE

Maryknoll priests working in northern Uganda witness repeated outbreaks of malaria annually every June and July.  Why is this disease so difficult to control, let alone eradicate? 

Worldwide, 88% of malaria infections and 90% of deaths occur in Sub-Saharan Africa.   Uganda can illustrate the challenges to controlling this disease. With 42 million people, 100% of the population is at risk for malaria, the leading cause of death is malaria and 50% of these deaths are in children less than age five.

In Uganda, treatment of a single episode of malaria can cost US$9.   Additionally, a worker may miss 5-20 days of work and cognitive function in children can be impaired by as much as 60%.  Often, people are infected multiple times annually, further decreasing productivity.  A poor family may spend 25% of their household income on prevention and treatment.

Uganda began a targeted malaria control program in 2018 with the goal of reducing malarial deaths by 40% in 2020 and 75% in 2025.  Total deaths in 2017 numbered 5,100 and decreased to 3200 in 2018. However, from June 2018 to June 2019 the number of cases increased from 1 million to 1.4 million, an upsurge of 40%, mainly in West Nile, North and Central regions.  The prevalence in Kampala was about the same, but severe cases increased by 60%.  The National Malaria Control Plan (NMCP) identifies the reasons for these increases to be:
1.       Climate change
2.       Failure to use Long-Lasting Insecticide Treated Nets (LLIN)
3.       Failure to use prevention in highland areas where people have less immunity
4.       The rainy season is April to June when the mosquito vectors increase

The NMCP provides mass distribution campaigns of LLIN to the entire population every three years via programs for pregnant women, childhood immunization programs and schools.  Unfortunately, only 64% of pregnant women and 62% of children less than age five have nets, the nets are not used properly and they may be of poor quality and tear easily.

Movement of people who are uninfected, or partially infected, leads to outbreaks when they enter an endemic zone, since they have decreased immunity and poor access to treatment.  This could be a significant factor in northern Uganda where refugees have migrated from South Sudan.  This marginalized sector of Uganda has been greatly impacted by the re-occurring, multifactorial stresses of war and insecurity in South Sudan.

The NMCP attempts to provide malaria prevention to pregnant women by giving two doses of Intermittent Preventative Therapy (ITP) with sulfadoxine/pyrimethamine (SP).  However, only 45% of pregnant women attended two clinics before delivery and received both doses.  The NMCP also supports prevention, diagnosis and treatment through Integrated Community Case Management (ICCM). 

Not surprisingly, drug resistant strains have developed.  One study in Gulu, northern Uganda in 2018 reported that the resistance may have originated in Africa.  In south east Asia, resistance is well documented to first line drugs, occurring in 50-90% of treatment regimens in some regions.  There is great fear this will spread quickly to Africa where treatment options are limited. 

China has a project to eradicate malaria in Kenya since 2017.  It uses an artemisinin drug enhanced with piperaquine to give mass treatment of the population and attempts to eradicate the human reservoir of the parasite.  The drug costs $17 per dose and resistance to piperaquine has already developed in East Asia.  Evidence for the success of this approach is questionable.  There is concern that it could also lead to development of more resistance.

Development of a vaccine began in the early 1980s and progress is slow.  Malaria is a parasite and most vaccines have been made against bacteria and viruses.  Vaccines for parasites require a different process.  The malarial parasite has four different species with constantly changing antigens, the markers used to make a vaccine.  The parasite changes its appearance as it moves from the blood, to the liver, and then again to the blood.  It is a master of disguise.

A Malaria Vaccine Technology Roadmap has been developed by more than 230 experts in 100 organizations from 35 countries.  Their goal is to develop a malaria vaccine by 2025 that would protect against 80% of clinical disease for more than four years.  The RTS,S/A S01 vaccine is the most advanced candidate for use and was 47% effective in reducing mortality in Phase III trials in seven sub-Saharan countries.  The Pilot Project Phase IV trials began in 2018 in Kenya, Ghana and Malawi, with hopes that it will bring a new vaccine into production when completed.

If the malaria parasite develops resistance to treatment regimens and the mosquito develops resistance to vector control mechanisms, eradication is impossible.  Control of the disease can be successful, but it requires long-term strategies that target various points of infection and transmission.  The challenges are significant and will require uncompromising commitment for the long road ahead.

Today begins the SEASON OF CREATION which continues to October 4th, the Feast of St. Francis.  I accept that even mosquitoes have their place in creation but we must all learn to live in harmony!!!

PEACE OF THE CHANGING SEASONS TO YOU!!!

 http://www.health.go.ug/programs/national-malaria-control-program
https://www.pmi.gov/docs/default-source/default-document-library/malaria-operational-plans/fy19/fy-2019-uganda-malaria-operational-plan.pdf?sfvrsn=3
https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/24/4/17-0141_article
https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2019/07/22/742674941/study-malaria-drugs-are-failing-at-an-alarming-rate-in-southeast-asia
https://www.who.int/immunization/research/development/malaria/en/
https://www.ndm.ox.ac.uk/simon-draper-progress-in-malaria-vaccine-research
https://www.malariasite.com/malaria-vaccines/
https://www.kbc.co.ke/china-adopts-strategy-to-eradicate-malaria/
https://allafrica.com/stories/201908190111.html
https://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/scienceandhealth/Uganda-war-on-malaria/3073694-5238934-hkj8l1z/index.html

Saturday, 24 August 2019

24 August 2019


snagele@mklm.org
305 Evergreen Court West
Urbana Illinois 61801 
August, 2019

Dear Family and Friends,

August is a month of celebrations for Maryknoll Lay Missioners!

Susan Nagele with Class of 1984 Jubilee

I have recently returned from our center at Maryknoll, New York.  It has been 35 years since I walked through the door in 1984 to begin this journey in Tanzania, then Sudan, then Kenya and now at home in the USA!!!  When I first went overseas, I was given the address of a woman who had lived in Tanzania for 22 years…just in case I wanted to get in contact with her.  At the time, I marveled that anyone could stay for that long.  Now I can see that time flies when we’re on the right track!!!  We had a wonderful celebration together.


In April, I wrote a piece on immigration for the Catholic Volunteer Network competition and received an Honorable Mention.  It was also printed in the Catholic Post Diocese of Peoria and can be found at the following link…https://www.mklm.org/blog/what-the-heart-sees/

Our lay missioner lawyer, Heidi Cerneka, continues with immigration law in El Paso.  For those of you who are parishioners at St. Patrick Parish, Heidi will participate in a parish skype event for the Justice and Peace Commission on October 13, 2019 at 1:30pm CDT.   Don’t miss this if you want to know first-hand what is happening on the border.

Heidi recently helped Zam, a Ugandan asylum seeker, win her case.  Zam was advocating for work opportunities for youth in Uganda and supported an opposition party.  The current president, who has been in power for 33 years, is well known for persecution of any opposition and she fled. I know the situation well and she is only one of many.

Heidi Cerneka Maryknoll Lay Missioner with Ugandan refugee. Immigration case successful!

On August 15th Maryknoll Lay Missioners celebrated 25 years as an Association within the Maryknoll family of Fathers and Brothers (Maryknoll Society) and Sisters (Maryknoll Congregation). 
                                

                                        Founding of Maryknoll Lay Missioners August 15, 1994

Our financial report for 2018 is at the following link with lots of interesting pictures….

After working in Sudan for twelve years I have a great devotion to St. Bakhita, whose beautiful banner hangs in my parish.

There is a new book entitled…

BAKHITA
A Novel of the Saint of Sudan
By Véronique Olmi
Translated by Adriana Hunter

It is reviewed at the following link...

The author uses the facts of her research to construct a novel that portrays the details of how some of Bakhita’s life must have evolved.  I warn you, the first half of the book is difficult to read.  I often had to put it down because of the violence that is described.  But, I know that the truth about the what happened to this woman is the same truth that some of our brothers and sisters still live daily.  St. Bakhita is the Patroness of Sudan and the survivors of human trafficking.  I encourage you to read the book.
  
With gratitude for your support in Mission,
                                                                                      Susan Nagele
                       
We are grateful for your prayers and financial support.
If you would like to know more about Maryknoll Lay Missioners log onto our website:
www.mklm.org or call toll free 1-800-867-2980.

Thursday, 1 August 2019

01 August 2019

JUBILEE !!!

     I am on the train on my way to Maryknoll, New York to celebrate 35 years with Maryknoll Lay Missioners!!!

     I recently gave church talks in Illinois and Iowa and one of the participants took this picture.  I am wearing a necklace given to me by some friends from Toposaland in South Sudan where I worked from 1997-2003.  The colors are those of the flag of South Sudan.

     The problems in Sudan, the country to the north of South Sudan, continue.  The two parties have not yet signed the agreement they agreed to sign weeks back.  Last Monday,  30th July, children in El Obeid took to the streets to protest living conditions and food shortages.  Six people were killed, four children in uniforms and two others.  All schools have since been suspended.

It is hard to celebrate when so many are daily challenged with the details of simple survival.  We will keep working to give them a voice and support them in their peaceful quest for life.  More updates later!


Monday, 1 July 2019

01 July 2019



THE TORTUOUS PATH OF PEACEFUL PROTESTS IN SUDAN
AN EXAMPLE OF ACTIVE NONVIOLENCE

     June 3rd is the Feast of the Ugandan Martyrs, commemorating the execution of 45 young men in 1886.  A similar massacre has again occurred. 
     On June 3, 2019 the peaceful, civilian demonstrations at Columbia, the military headquarters in Khartoum, were violently disrupted and the Transitional Military Council (TMC) admitted 61 people were killed.  At least 40 bodies were found floating in the Nile river.  The TMC ordered this dispersal but claims the violence was not caused by Security Forces and was a ‘mistake’.  Scores of women and men were sexually violated, with Southern Sudanese and people from Darfur specifically targeted by the perpetrators.  The internet was disrupted and still fails to operate.
     In May, the Maryknoll Office of Global Concerns was concerned that the nonviolent protesters in Sudan were not receiving essential, international support.  A letter was written to Rep. Chris Smith (R-NJ) and Rep. Jim McGovern (D-MA) of the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission encouraging them to exert maximum pressure on the Sudanese military to allow a civilian-led democratic government. 
     On May 16th a bipartisan, bicameral letter was written by Rep. McGovern, signed by three additional Members of the House and nine senators, to Secretary of State Pompeo and Secretary of the Treasury Mnuchin.  They outlined six practical steps the US Government should take to assist the protesters to achieve their goal of a civilian democratic government.
     On June 1st the Lantos Commission released an additional statement in support of the protesters.
     On June 4th, after the massacre, international condemnation proceeded from the Secretary General of the UN, the UN Commissioner for Human Rights, the UK Foreign Minister, the British Ambassador to Sudan, the US Embassy in Khartoum and the EU.
     On June 6th the African Union suspended Sudan from membership.  Their requirement for a civilian interim government by June 30th still stands.
     On June 9th Pope Francis called for peace in Sudan during his weekly address.
#BlueForSudan - Mohamed Mattar killed in peaceful protests.  Blue was his favorite color
    From June 8-11th the protesters called for civil disobedience in response to the massacre.  This was called off when Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed arrived to assist with mediation.  Protesters continued to live in fear for their lives as the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), formerly known as the Janjaweed in the Darfur atrocities, terrorized the center of Khartoum.  Protesters circumvented the shut down of the internet by using social media at #BlueForSudan.  US celebrities such as Rihanna, Naomi Campbell and Ne Yo used this platform to increase awareness and solidarity with the protesters’ chant of SILMIYAH which means PEACEFUL.
     The US Trump administration has been accused of indifference to the call for a civilian government.  In 2005 the Bush administration was concerned with fighting terrorism.  This required partnering with the Sudanese intelligence chief, Salah Gosh.  Gosh visited Washington that year using a CIA jet and allegedly oversaw massacres in Darfur of over 300,000 people.  Salah has disappeared from military leadership but General Mohamed Dagalo, Hemedti, has taken his place and is posturing to become the next Sudanese president.  To date, there is no justice for the atrocities committed in Darfur.
    On June 12th Donald Booth was named the US Special Envoy to Sudan.
    On June 17th protesters began to urge nighttime and neighborhood resistance rallies to escalate pressure on the military and decrease the number of injuries and deaths.  This is known as the ‘second wave’ of the uprising.  Meetings with citizens are held in public places to counter MTC propaganda that denigrates the Forces for the Declaration for Freedom and Change (FDFC). They also discuss nonviolent tactics that are useful with the large scale RSF presence and mobilize future protest schedules.
     On June 19th the military agreed to restart mediation efforts with all parties included at the table.  The Ethiopian Special Envoy informed the FDFC that the next round of talks would take place in Addis Abba. The FDFC rejected talks outside of Sudan.  The AU and IGAD also disagreed on the best process to continue mediation.
     On June 23rd the FDFC accepted an Ethiopian led road map to a civilian led government.  The leadership council will include eight civilian and seven military members.  The military will chair the council for the first 18 months and civilians for the next 18 months.  The previous agreements for a protester appointed Cabinet and an FDFC majority legislative body will function during the three-year transition period leading up to elections.
     On June 24th the military rejected the Ethiopian proposal while awaiting a proposal from the AU.  The FDFC called for mass demonstrations on June 30th, the 30th anniversary of the coup that brought deposed dictator Omar al Bashir to power.
     On June 27th the AU and Ethiopian mediation team presented a unified proposal which would retain a civilian majority Sovereign Majority Council.  However, the details for the legislative council would not be decided until after this agreement was signed.  The UN Security Council agreed to an extension of UNAMID in Darfur until October 31, 2019.  The TMC had demanded that these UN premises be turned over to the RSF.
     On June 29th the security forces stormed the headquarters of the Sudanese Professionals Association and banned their news conference ahead of tomorrow’s rally.
     On June 30th hundreds of thousands of protesters took to the streets of Khartoum, Obdurman, Atbara and other cities across Sudan.  Security forces used tear gas to disperse them while they shouted “Burhan’s council, just fall”.  Five people were killed and 181 were injured.
     One protester was interviewed by the BBC and was quoted as saying guns have failed in Syria, Libya and Sudan.  Guns might win a battle but they won’t win the war.  What was successful was maintaining the peacefulness.
     The international community should
1.       Refuse to ever recognize legitimacy of the Transitional Military Council since the massacre of June 3rd.
2.       Demand accountability for the crimes committed.
3.       Direct all support to civil society and peaceful protesters.
4.       Withhold support for any elections until transition to civil rule is established.
5.       All Sudanese diplomatic presence abroad should be downgraded.
6.       Suspend economic initiatives with Sudan.
7.       EU country representatives in Sudan should advise policy decisions to support civilian rule, identify options to discourage regional and international support for the MTC and establish monitoring mechanism.
8.       The US should use the Global Magnitsky Act sanctions against MTC members responsible for violence and human rights abuses.  The EU should follow with a similar Act.
9.       The AU and IGAD should synchronize their approach to support a civilian transition to democracy
10.   Demand the MTC restore the Internet, lift media restrictions, release all political prisoners and allow deported leaders to return to Sudan
     The bravery of Sudanese protesters should be matched by honesty and boldness in the way the international community confronts the MTC.


PEACE OF THESE BRAVE SUDANESE AS AN EXAMPLE TO ALL OF US!!!

NB...On 4th July 2019 the FDFC and the MTC agreed to a peace agreement that will hopefully lead to a democratic government in three years time.  The MTC will hold the majority on the Sovereign Council for the first 21 months.  The international community still needs to remain vigilant and support the civilian FDFC.

July 18, 2019 the agreement was finally signed.

Resources

Friday, 31 May 2019

01 June 2019

A tale of two Sudans


The people of both Sudan and South Sudan are experiencing grave uncertainties about the possibilities of freedom, democracy and peace. This article was first published in the May-June 2019 issue of NewsNotes.
When the price of bread increased 300 percent in December 2018, the people of the city of Atbara took to the streets of this midsized town in Sudan. The energy of their protests spread throughout the country and grew into a nationwide movement that brought down the government of Omar al-Bashir on April 11. 
Bashir had taken power over Sudan in a military coup in 1989. He has been indicted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for his role in directing crimes against humanity including rape and torture, war crimes, and genocide that allegedly occurred in the Darfur region during his three decades of rule. He is currently being held in Kober prison in Sudan and the military says it will not extradite him to the ICC. Bashir will be tried in Sudan. 
The Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA) has led this peaceful uprising, calling for freedom, democracy, and peace. Numerous religious and ethnic groups have united in ongoing peaceful demonstrations. The protesters demand a transitional civilian council to lead the country, with limited military representation and an interim Cabinet to oversee the drafting of a new constitution. The Military Transitional Council insists it will maintain power over a civilian Prime Minister and Cabinet until elections are held.
Before the coup, the SPA encouraged members of all faiths to join the protests. Sudan’s constitution guarantees religious freedom, but Islamic law is the state religion. Non-Muslims were often harassed and restricted by the National Intelligence Service. The day after the coup, during Friday prayers for Muslims, Christians stood arm-in-arm to protect Muslims from the security forces while they were praying.

Women leading the movement in Sudan

Women have played a prominent role in the uprising. Referred to as kandakas, the queens of ancient Sudan, one woman has emerged as the face of the movement. Alaa Salah, a Sudanese student and protester, has become known as the "Woman in White" or "Lady Liberty" of Sudan after a local photographer captured her dancing on the top of a car in the capital of Khartoum while surrounded by a sea of protesters, with her arm raised in the air, finger pointed toward the sky and singing a Sudanese poem about how silence kills. The photo has since gone viral on Twitter
Image: Alaa Salah, a Sudanese student, standing on a car in the 2018–19 Sudanese protests. The image went viral as a symbol of the protests. Photo by Lana H. Haroun and licensed under Fair Use.
Salah has told reporters she rejects this notoriety and that the Sudanese people, especially those who have died, been injured or detained, are the true icon of the revolution. The Strategic Initiative for Women in the Horn of Africa (SIHA) has voiced their support, calling for equal citizenship, equal access to resources, the removal of laws that discriminate against women and platforms in the transitional government to develop family law based on the rights of women and children.

Deadline approaching for new unity government in South Sudan

Bashir was a guarantor for the peace agreement in Sudan’s southern neighbor, South Sudan, brokered in 2018, to end the civil war that began in 2015. The agreement stipulates that a unity government would be formed in South Sudan by President Salva Kiir and former first Vice President Riek Machar by May 12, 2019. In April, both Kiir and Machar were invited to the Vatican for a two-day spiritual retreat meant to foster peace. At the end of the retreat, Pope Francis begged the men to set aside their differences and bring peace to South Sudan. “I am asking you as a brother to stay in peace. I am asking you with my heart, let us go forward,” the pope said. Breaking papal protocol, he knelt and kissed their feet in a humble gesture of respect. 
However, Machar has stated that he is unable to form a unity government by this date and threatened to pull out of the accord entirely. He demands a six-month extension which has been agreed. 
Increasingly, it appears that this agreement addresses issues important to a limited number of warlords and even fails in that sphere. The border between Sudan and South Sudan has benefited from mutual trade for two years and a weakened government in Sudan will not be able to stop this. The mass demonstrations in Sudan are absent in South Sudan, where people have even more reason to demonstrate. The South Sudanese function at the level of survival and the secret service is greatly feared and ruthless. Losing Bashir as a guarantor of the revitalized peace agreement seems irrelevant.
Meanwhile, there is serious concern that South Sudan could return to civil war where over 50,000 have died, one millions are refugees and two million are displaced inside South Sudan.  
In Sudan, the military is refusing to allow civilians to hold a majority on the Transitional Sovereign Council.  The protesters have just completed two days of strikes hoping to pressure the military to relent.  Will they?
PEACE OF THESE NONVIOLENT CIVILIAN PROTESTERS TO YOU!!