192 thE sudan handbook
Smaller ethnic groups and individual immigrants found themselves
in an inferior position to the large dar-owning tribes, both in terms of
rights to land (and water), and in terms of representation in the higher
levels of local administration and justice, and later political arenas. The
ensuing tensions have only been exacerbated by the alienation of land for
mechanized agriculture and oil production, leading to growing pressure
for grazing and for fertile farming land. The quest for rights to land
and water are therefore commonly pursued through demands to have
a nazir. The British also rewarded the loyalty of prominent religious or
tribal leaders by awarding them land, a policy continued by subsequent
governments. The association of land with the Native Administration
was reversed under Nimeiri’s government in 1970–71, when the acceler-
ating demand for land for agricultural production was combined with a
gradual drive since the 1950s to abolish Native Administration altogether.
The resulting Unregistered Lands Act of 1970 established government
ownership of all land not privately owned and registered, that is, all
the communal land governed primarily under customary systems. The
following year, Native Administration was abolished formally through
the People’s Local Government Act. These two measures undermined the
previously clear demarcation of tribal rights and responsibilities for land
and natural resources, opening up confusion, uncertainty and conflict,
which remain largely unresolved even today.
Traditional vs. Modern Government
The 1971 Local Government Act has been seen as the culmination of
efforts by members of the nationalist effendiya to attack the Native
Administration as colonial collaborators and relics of backward rural
life, whose stranglehold over rural communities was hindering develop-
ment and political participation. Yet the idea of a deep enmity between
Sudanese graduates and the Native Administration is in many ways
misleading. Many traditional leaders have themselves also been highly
educated and had prior experience of government-related employment, a
The Sudan Handbook, edited by John Ryle, Justin Willis, Suliman Baldo and Jok Madut Jok. © 2011 Rift Valley Institute and contributors tendency encouraged by colonial administrators. The political parties of
(www.riftvalley.net).