Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Photographs and Tables
- Acknowledgements
- Acronyms
- Map A – Southern Sudan during the colonial period
- Map B – Southern Sudan, 2011
- Map C – Juba, 2006
- Introduction: The Dilemma of ‘Post-conflict Reconstruction’ in South Sudan
- 1 The Momentum of History
- 2 ‘Rebels’ and ‘Collaborators’: Integration and Reconciliation
- 3 ‘Land Belongs to the Community’: Competing Interpretations of the CPA
- 4 The Unseeing State: Corruption, Evasion, and other Responses to Urban Planning
- 5 Local Land Disputes: Informality, Autochthony, and Competing Ideas of Citizenship
- Conclusion: All State-building is Local
- Interviews
- Bibliography
- Index
- Eastern African Studies
1 - The Momentum of History
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 February 2023
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Photographs and Tables
- Acknowledgements
- Acronyms
- Map A – Southern Sudan during the colonial period
- Map B – Southern Sudan, 2011
- Map C – Juba, 2006
- Introduction: The Dilemma of ‘Post-conflict Reconstruction’ in South Sudan
- 1 The Momentum of History
- 2 ‘Rebels’ and ‘Collaborators’: Integration and Reconciliation
- 3 ‘Land Belongs to the Community’: Competing Interpretations of the CPA
- 4 The Unseeing State: Corruption, Evasion, and other Responses to Urban Planning
- 5 Local Land Disputes: Informality, Autochthony, and Competing Ideas of Citizenship
- Conclusion: All State-building is Local
- Interviews
- Bibliography
- Index
- Eastern African Studies
Summary
On January 9, 2005, SPLM/A Chairman John Garang, and Ali Osman Taha, Sudan’s Vice President and head of the government delegation to the peace talks, signed the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) in Nairobi, Kenya. In his speech to the crowd gathered at Nyayo Stadium, Garang referred to the tumultuous history of the country:
Sudanese history is familiar to all of us, from the Islamic kingdoms of Sennar to the Turco-Egyptian occupation, to the first Islamic Mahdist state, to the Anglo-Egyptian Condominium to independence in 1956 and the Anyany a movement, to the SPLM/SPLA, to the second Islamic state in the Sudan, with which we negotiated from 1989, and to the Comprehensive Peace Agreement which we signed today. This is the history of the Sudan and this is how we got here. It has been a long journey of more than five thousand years to reach Naivasha and Nyayo Stadium today. It is important to know and appreciate where we came from in order to better be able to chart the way forward with the momentum of historical force.
As he spoke to the crowd, Garang alluded to the major changes the CPA promised for the people of Sudan, implying that the lessons of the tumultuous history of the past century would be an important resource for Southern Sudan’s erstwhile state-builders. Although he perhaps did not think of the southern leaders of his own party within the lineage of the violent and extractive states that had ruled over southern Sudan since the Turco-Egyptian period, his call to heed the lessons of history foreshadowed the challenges that the new southern government would face as it attempted to implement its vision for urban reconstruction in Juba.
Garang’s speech highlights the fact that the process of state construction in southern Sudan has been continuous since the nineteenth century. It began with the Turco-Egyptian invasion of Sudan in the 1820s, which heralded the initial expeditions into the area of Equatoria in the 1840s. It continued with the incorporation of the southern region into the framework of the Sudanese state following the 1899 Anglo-Egyptian Condominium Agreement. During that period, towns such as Juba were established as commercial and administrative centres.
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- Information
- The State of Post-Conflict ReconstructionLand, Urban Development and State-Building in Juba, Southern Sudan, pp. 28 - 73Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2014