JR-Publications-Sudan-Handbook-1

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160 thE sudan handbook

These criticisms found a new strength in 1983 when, following a
mutiny amongst southern troops at Bor deep in the south, John Garang,
a Sudan army colonel and ex-Anyanya officer, announced the formation
of the Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA). In the following year
SPLA attacks forced Chevron to shut down its operations in the south
and halted the work on the Jonglei Canal. It was a blow to Nimeiri, which
also brought growing criticism within the army itself. These multiple
dissatisfactions came together in another popular uprising, centred once
more on Khartoum, in 1985 when Nimeiri was out of the country. The
army could not be relied on to suppress the uprising and instead the
military leaders backed down; Nimeiri, unable to return, went into exile
in Cairo.
Nimeiri’s downfall reflected not only discontent over the re-opening
of civil war in the south and the imposition of harsh Islamic law in the
north, but also judgement on the economic and social record of his
years in power. Sudan’s economy had largely failed to grow. The most
lasting monument to Arab investment was the giant sugar scheme at
Kenana, but even that was of arguable significance for the economy as
a whole. Sudan was left mired in debt on a scale far greater than it had
ever experienced before. Hopes of wealth from oil had been dashed by
the renewal of civil war. Yet Nimeiri and those around him were widely
believed to have made considerable personal gains, often by corrupt
means. Thus the gap between rich and poor grew, a situation emphasized
when famine struck the western regions of Kordofan and Darfur in the
early 1980s. The government did little or nothing to alleviate the suffer-
ings of Darfuris. Many died before international assistance arrived. At
the same time Sudan’s middle class was shrinking; many left the country
especially for the Gulf states where their comparatively high educational
level opened many doors.
Nimeiri’s regime maintained the narrow base of Sudanese political
life. He and many of his entourage were from families originally from
the riverain areas north of Khartoum. Those from other parts continued
to feel excluded. The re-division of the country into over twenty states

The Sudan Handbook, edited by John Ryle, Justin Willis, Suliman Baldo and Jok Madut Jok. © 2011 Rift Valley Institute and contributors was seen as an attempt, not to improve administration, but rather to


(www.riftvalley.net).

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