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Re: نيويورك تايمز وكارتر واخرون: ينعون جنوب السودان اذ انفصل. (Re: محمود الدقم)
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April 12, 2010, 1:00 pm Pre-Failed State Bleak description of southern Sudan, which is expected to vote for independence in a referendum scheduled for January 2011.
Writing for Time, Alex Perry offered a gloomy assessment of southern Sudan’s readiness for independence:
How can southern Sudan become an independent nation when it possesses so little of what defines one? Many aid workers and development experts in Juba doubt it can. They have coined a new term to describe its unique status: pre-failed state. In public, the international community tries to be more upbeat. But optimism is hard with so little time to prepare for separation. Southerners are expected overwhelmingly to choose to split Africa’s largest country at a referendum on independence next Jan. 9, and David Gressly, the U.N.’s regional coordinator for southern Sudan, admits, “There is a lot of discussion about whether southern Sudan will be ready for secession.” Asked whether South Sudan is sufficiently prepared to go it alone, former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, whose Carter Center promotes health and democracy in Sudan, replies simply: “No.”
Any premature birth presents complications. For southern Sudan, they could be particularly severe. Sudan is already one of the least stable countries on earth. This is where Osama bin Laden lived for five years in the 1990s; where the government has waged, in Darfur, what the Bush Administration called genocide; where the President, Omar al-Bashir, is the first head of state to be indicted by the International Criminal Court; and where 2 million people died in two civil wars between the south and the northern government in 1955-72 and between 1983 and 2005, conflicts that left the entire country awash with guns.
A new country born into that environment, which, say, did not have clearly defined borders, or had weak institutions, or was split internally, could spell disaster. “It could recreate the conditions for civil war,” says Gressly. Major General Scott Gration, U.S. special envoy to Sudan, describes his task as ensuring “civil divorce, not civil war,” and warns, “This place could go down in flames tomorrow. The probability of failure is great.”
http://schott.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/12/pre-failed-state/
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