South Sudan's leader, channeling Mandela, calls for forgiveness for north
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In at the close of a national referendum on seccession, Salva Kiir, the political leader of Southern Sudan, has called on his people 鈥 from inside a Catholic Church no less 鈥 to forgive the national government of Sudan for its decades of violence again Southerners. 鈥淢ay we, like Jesus Christ on the cross, forgive those who have forcefully caused their deaths,鈥 Kiir reportedly said.
Southern Sudanese are believed to have vote overwhelmingly to form a new nation, though full election results are not expected until next month. In choosing the path of forgiveness, Kiir, while following his own conscience, is echoing an approach successfully followed by Nelson Mandela of South Africa.
The declaration by Kiir follows , the head of Sudan鈥檚 Khartoum government, in which he signaled that he is prepared to let the South hive itself off peacefully. In a visit to Juba, the largest city in the city, al Bashir said he preferred a unified Sudan but would 鈥渞espect鈥 the South鈥檚 right to secede.
鈥淭ies between the north and the south are very huge,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e spoke to our brothers on how to keep those ties, even if we have two states.鈥
A two-state solution to Sudan is no chimera. The national referendum, now completed, has been deemed by a delegation of foreign observers led by Jimmy Carter, and the Bashir government is on the verge of accepting what many foreign observers until recently considered the unthinkable: peaceful separation.
The logic for al Bashir鈥檚 position is clear. He is no democrat, and he appears to reserve the option to intervene in Southern Sudan if for some reason the Kiir government cannot gain control over its undisputed territory.
To be sure, disputed areas in the border between the two halves of Sudan could well experience violent conflict, but such conflict could co-exist with the emergence of the new nation of Southern Sudan.
Pessimists about the Sudan outcome should be chastened by the relatively peaceful round of voting. In the weeks prior to the vote, Beltway pundits rolled out in order to create near-hysteria about the election. Their predictions could well demand humble apologies in the months ahead, since these predictions transparently tapped into routine fears and stereotypes of supposed African inclinations towards political violence.
Some gloomy critics still say , but with each passing day without such a war, the chances appear to grow that the new nation of Southern Sudan will indeed be born. And the attempt at emulation of Mandela, by the likely new president of an independent Southern Sudan, augurs well for the birth of this new nation.
鈥 G. Pascal Zachary blogs at .