tWEntiEth-CEntuRy CiVil WaRs 211
The overthrow of the military government in 1964 paradoxically gave
the Anyanya their first real access to arms. The civilian government in
Khartoum chose to support the Simba rebels in the Congo, but arms
intended for the Simba fell into the hands of the Anyanya, making them
a far more potent military force than they had previously been.
An attempt was made to reach a political solution for the ‘Southern
Problem’ at the 1965 round table conference in Khartoum where all the
major northern parties were represented, along with the newly formed
Southern Front. SANU, too, was persuaded to attend. But the conference
got no further than each party stating its position and no real compro-
mise was reached. One result was that SANU split. William Deng chose
to stay inside the country and work through the parliamentary system,
while Joseph Oduho and Aggrey Jaden went back into exile. Fr. Saturnino
Lohure continued his work seeking arms and supplies for the Anyanya.
Factionalism thus beset the southern guerrilla movements from the
outset. Over the next few years there were several attempts at forming
‘provisional governments’ in the bush: the Azania Liberation Front,
the Anyidi Liberation Front, the Nile Provisional Government, the
Nile Republic, even a Sueh River Republic under Samuel Abujohn in
Zandeland. Very often fighting in the field was between these different
groups.
The early civil war took place mainly along the south’s international
borders (where the guerrillas had their bases) and especially in Equatoria.
This limited territorial range was one of the movement’s weaknesses,
and only gradually did the civil war expand outside these areas and begin
to overcome these factional differences.
Those killed in factional fighting were not the main casualties. In 1965
the army carried out a series of massacres, the largest of which took place
in Juba and Wau in which a large number of educated southerners were
killed. Fr. Saturnino, one of the key figures, was killed through collusion
between the Sudanese and Ugandan armies as he crossed into Uganda in
1967, and William Deng was assassinated by the army in 1968.
With the 1967 Arab-Israeli War and the 1969 left-wing coup that
The Sudan Handbook, edited by John Ryle, Justin Willis, Suliman Baldo and Jok Madut Jok. © 2011 Rift Valley Institute and contributors brought in a second military government under Jaafar Nimeiri the Sudan
(www.riftvalley.net).