Showing posts with label South. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South. Show all posts

Friday, July 15, 2011

SOUTH SUDAN: Don't Let Up After South Sudan's Independence!

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 Jul 14, 2011 1:10 PM EDT / thedailybeast.com.

Susan Rice in South Sudan


Now that South Sudan has a flag at the United Nations, Ambassador Susan Rice argues that successful statehood still takes attention, focus, and hard work—and not just in the world’s newest state.


South Sudan became the 193rd member of the United Nations this morning.
A nation that has known so many years of war and turmoil has claimed its rightful place in the world, complete with universal recognition and a flag on New York's First Avenue.
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It's impossible to overstate the significance of the last week's events to the people of South Sudan, who lost 2 million lives during a half century of bitter conflict. As the leader of a U.S. delegation that included Gen. Colin Powell, U.S. Rep. Donald Payne, and U.S. Special Envoy Princeton Lyman, I was deeply moved to witness South Sudan's joyful declaration of independence on July 9 in Juba, the new country's capital. It was blazingly hot, but the crowd was exuberant. Everyone was beaming; the country's new flag was everywhere, and many people were in tears. It was a proud moment--and the end of a long, arduous road.
But the hard work is only beginning. It will take leadership and vision to forge an enduring peace between two viable states, coexisting as peaceful neighbors. None of us--the United States, the UN, NGOs, aid groups, African leaders, South Sudan's neighbors, and everyone else who has wished for peace in the region--should let up now that South Sudan has won its independence.
Several core issues still need to be resolved. The two sides have yet to agree on a border or clarify the critical issue of citizenship. Failure to agree on these issues in the coming weeks would risk South Sudan's hard-won progress. So would the absence of agreement on oil and wealth sharing. Other enormous challenges will take years to address.
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Saturday, July 9, 2011

WORLD'S NEWEST NATION: South Sudan proclaims independence!

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DPA / The Hindu / JUBA, July 9, 2011.

A Bari community member holds the flag of southern Sudan during celebrations in Juba, southern Sudan, on Friday. Photo: AP
A Bari community member holds the flag of southern Sudan during celebrations in Juba, southern Sudan, on Friday. Photo: AP.

South Sudan officially separated from Sudan and proclaimed its independence in a ceremony in Juba on Saturday.
Parliamentary president James Wani Igga pronounced the declaration of independence in the capital. Thousands cheered as the Sudanese flag was lowered and replaced with the new South Sudanese flag.
The ceremony was witnessed by heads of state and dignitaries from around the world, including Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, who faces an international arrest warrant for war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity.
Merkel pledges support
German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Saturday pledged support for South Sudan, saying the founding of the new state was a “very special day for Africa”.


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Thursday, July 7, 2011

World's newest capital city: Juba, South Sudan, a ramshackle refuge!

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Southern Sudanese men walk on a dirt road in the South's capital Juba - AFP
Southern Sudanese men walk on a dirt road in the South's capital Juba - AFP.

The world’s newest capital is a war-damaged city of tin-shack housing and bumpy roads, strung out along the steamy banks of the White Nile river.
"Juba might not look like Washington or London - or even Khartoum, Kampala or Nairobi," said William Deng, a building material trader, referring to South Sudan’s regional neighbours.
"But it’s the capital of our new nation, and I’m proud of that," added Deng, whose shop is in the narrow dirt streets of the city’s Konyo-Konyo market, a key commercial centre.
South Sudan’s capital Juba was left in ruins by decades of conflict, violence that drove its people to vote overwhelming to separate from the north, with formal independence to be declared on Saturday.
"We’re a baby state starting from nothing, but we’ll build it up," Deng said, waving at the bustling street crammed with traders.
Entrepreneurs and jobseekers have poured into Juba in recent years, lured by profits from aid and oil dollars, be they southerners who fled during the war coming home, or neighbours from regional nations.
"Business is good and I can make a profit, I can’t make back home," said Ismail Hussein, a vegetable seller from neighbouring Uganda.
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From canvas tents to shipping containers
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