00:00:00
[Music]
00:00:17
it is a sad story Sudan used to be
00:00:20
looked at at the land of
00:00:23
opportunities the land of Mighty people
00:00:26
the Arab don't respect us the Arab don't
00:00:29
give us our right the Arab don't give us
00:00:31
our dignity they don't see us as people
00:00:33
I feel very sad I think uh we had we
00:00:37
have arrive to to to a very dangerous
00:00:40
point where we should or we have to
00:00:43
divide our country most of the people
00:00:45
are working for separation that they
00:00:47
have to separate for them from the
00:00:49
north enough is
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enough
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[Music]
00:01:08
God we praise and
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glorify
00:01:13
you for
00:01:18
your
00:01:19
the of
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War An
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Origin
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ofation
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a new national anthem for a country yet
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to be
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[Music]
00:01:38
born the lyrics and music were created
00:01:41
here at Juba University in southern
00:01:42
Sudan and tell the story of the ancient
00:01:45
Kingdom of kush of struggle martyrdom
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and of Hope for the
00:01:55
future
00:01:57
so our sud
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[Music]
00:02:02
as dean of music and arts at the
00:02:04
University Professor Muhammad Ali
00:02:06
oversaw the creation of the new
00:02:08
Anthem he's a northern born Arab who has
00:02:11
embraced the multiculturalism of the
00:02:12
tribal
00:02:23
South Fe integration with the
00:02:26
community but then uh n
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it is the nature by the
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way any sort of discrimination I cannot
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feel
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[Music]
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it
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[Music]
00:03:28
for
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but he is a rare Viewpoint in what has
00:03:40
become an increasingly polarized country
00:03:43
where over two and a half million people
00:03:44
have died in civil
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[Music]
00:03:58
conflict
00:04:04
[Music]
00:04:12
the future will be determined by a
00:04:14
referendum in which Sudan will almost
00:04:16
certainly break into two with the South
00:04:19
gaining independence from the previously
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dominant North the fate of the most
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volatile region abier as yet
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[Music]
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unknown
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carum a modern vibrant capital city for
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a country which despite us imposed
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sanctions has in recent years enjoyed
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one of the fastest growing economies in
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[Music]
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Africa but surrounding the city a ring
00:04:51
of shanty towns referred to locally as
00:04:53
the black
00:04:57
belt this is Mandela
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recognized as the most deprived slum in
00:05:03
carum it's populated almost exclusively
00:05:06
by Southern Sudanese many of them
00:05:09
refugees of
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War they're just a few of the millions
00:05:12
left displaced in a country that has
00:05:15
rarely known
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peace
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in southern Sudan there is a freedom
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even though you don't even though you
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don't have a good job you have your own
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land which is which is inhabitant and is
00:05:43
your it is not temporary but we now live
00:05:46
in Kum
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temporary across town in the rundown
00:05:58
suburb of mayo the removal truck has
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arrived at the house Moses taban and his
00:06:02
wife Deborah share with their extended
00:06:14
family having arrived in the north at an
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early age Moses claims he was
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discriminated against almost from the
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[Applause]
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beginning
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now that the south is at peace they both
00:06:57
want to go home for Deborah there's an
00:07:00
additional reason she wants to escape
00:07:02
the insults she says are commonly thrown
00:07:04
at the black community especially the
00:07:06
use of the word AB
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slave all around the capital Southerners
00:07:28
prepare to return
00:07:30
home and across the country every means
00:07:34
of Transport is being used in what has
00:07:36
become a mass
00:07:39
migration an exodus of perhaps as many
00:07:41
as a million people leaving for what
00:07:44
most believe will be a better life in an
00:07:46
independent
00:07:53
Homeland the first great Exodus was
00:07:56
involuntary black slaves taken North by
00:07:59
manly Egyptian and Turkish
00:08:03
Traders the open of the suit gave the St
00:08:06
Traders access to southern Sudan where
00:08:09
they were able to cause havoc and and
00:08:11
devastate Villages through trading in in
00:08:15
human
00:08:17
beings this is the sud one of the
00:08:20
world's largest swamps covering up to
00:08:23
40,000 square km around the Border area
00:08:26
between northern and southern Sudan
00:08:31
for thousands of years grasses and rafts
00:08:34
of water hents and Papyrus had merged to
00:08:37
form a shifting Labyrinth of channels a
00:08:40
natural barrier to any boat attempting
00:08:42
to navigate the
00:08:46
Nile it wasn't until
00:08:48
1839 that an Egyptian sponsored
00:08:51
Expedition finally broke through and the
00:08:53
slave trade mushroomed it opened the sou
00:08:57
Sudan to slave Traders trades were after
00:09:01
Ivory gold and human
00:09:04
stock sadik al- Mahi was the last
00:09:07
democratically elected prime minister of
00:09:09
the
00:09:10
Sudan the slave trade is a matter of uh
00:09:15
tragic
00:09:17
history and it is something that
00:09:21
represents a dark aspect of uh of past
00:09:25
Humanity but what we need to apologize
00:09:28
for
00:09:30
is the association in the North in our
00:09:33
culture in the north between Blackness
00:09:38
and slavery as Northerners we should
00:09:41
apologize for this uh
00:09:45
association between color and
00:09:48
slavery in the late 19th century sadik
00:09:51
Al mahad's great-grandfather had
00:09:53
conquered Sudan in the modern world's
00:09:55
first Islamic
00:09:57
revolution in the final battle the
00:09:59
British Governor General Charles Gordon
00:10:02
was
00:10:04
killed but soon the British returned in
00:10:06
force and in partnership with Egypt
00:10:09
effectively ruled the country until
00:10:11
Independence in
00:10:15
[Music]
00:10:19
1956 people were relieved that at last
00:10:23
they going to have their country for
00:10:25
themselves they would run their own
00:10:26
Affairs and they were more or less
00:10:28
United
00:10:30
in their feelings of togetherness and
00:10:35
Readiness to build the future of the
00:10:39
Sudan when the British left they they
00:10:42
left a Democratic elected government the
00:10:45
first government was elected in
00:10:47
1954 that government who opted for
00:10:51
Independence the British left an
00:10:53
independent and strong Civil Service
00:10:56
they did leave
00:11:00
good civil service in the
00:11:03
Sudan even the Sudan Defense Force was
00:11:07
uh very efficient but mainly for the
00:11:11
north they did very little in the
00:11:14
South out of 800 Civil Service posts
00:11:18
vacated by the British just four were
00:11:21
given to
00:11:23
Southerners but even before independence
00:11:27
the signs were clear that the South was
00:11:28
uneasy with a northern dominated
00:11:32
Administration the
00:11:34
trouble between North and South started
00:11:38
in August
00:11:43
1955 Joseph lagu who became one of
00:11:46
Southern Sudan's most famous Rebel
00:11:47
leaders remembers the first shot fired
00:11:50
in what eventually led to 50 years of
00:11:53
conflict a company of Southern soldiers
00:11:56
refused orders from their Northern
00:11:57
officer who then shot one of them in the
00:11:59
arm was a warning to
00:12:01
obey that
00:12:03
initial uh shot made the soldiers to
00:12:06
dispose from there disorderly they went
00:12:10
into the Armed store broke the armed
00:12:12
store took weapons and then started
00:12:16
shooting their Northern
00:12:17
commanders uh that they could get hold
00:12:20
of and after finishing off with them uh
00:12:25
they they went into the into the town
00:12:28
and then started kill any Northern
00:12:30
Sudanese they can
00:12:32
find even today many Arab shopkeepers
00:12:35
living in the South are fearful of what
00:12:38
might happen should Southerners vote to
00:12:39
break
00:12:43
away Abu Kasam babikir has watched with
00:12:46
growing concern in recent months as
00:12:49
friends have abandoned their stores to
00:12:50
return
00:12:58
North the
00:13:06
guy he now plans to leave himself
00:13:09
uncertain whether he will ever
00:13:19
return others are determined to
00:13:26
[Music]
00:13:28
stay
00:13:40
the seeds of the north south divide had
00:13:42
been swn long before Sudan itself had
00:13:44
gained
00:13:49
independence it is the British to blame
00:13:52
because they wanted the themselves to be
00:13:54
a separate country in 1922 the British
00:13:58
col Masters had created a time bomb for
00:14:01
regional and religious conflict by
00:14:03
restricting the movement of Northerners
00:14:05
south of the 10th parallel and of
00:14:07
Southerners above the eth the result was
00:14:10
a Country Split in Two and that was a
00:14:13
great mistake they should have allowed
00:14:17
the Intercourse the social and uh uh and
00:14:21
uh cultural in Intercourse between the
00:14:24
North and South to develop naturally
00:14:26
they didn't they disrupted it they
00:14:28
thought
00:14:29
that the South was a cultural vacuum it
00:14:33
should be filled uh with
00:14:36
[Music]
00:14:42
Christianity under British rule the
00:14:45
Christian faith flourished in southern
00:14:53
Sudan the British were trying to get rid
00:14:58
of the Islamic influences in the South
00:15:00
they wanted sou Sudanese to be
00:15:04
converted to
00:15:07
Christianity by allowing the
00:15:10
missionaries to operate in the sou
00:15:14
Sudan they just didn't want Northerners
00:15:17
to spread Islam Islam was developing
00:15:19
fast
00:15:20
there so it is obvious that their motive
00:15:24
was to stop Muslims from being there to
00:15:29
spread Islam especially that Muslims at
00:15:32
the time were very very devout
00:15:36
Muslims resist the spirit of God that
00:15:39
resist all the good things that the Lord
00:15:42
does in the lives of the nation come
00:15:44
Heavenly Father Christian missionaries
00:15:47
flocked to the South determined to take
00:15:50
advantage the traditional tribal
00:15:52
religions were
00:15:54
[Music]
00:15:57
marginalized San was on the front line
00:16:00
in the struggle between the world's two
00:16:02
biggest
00:16:04
[Music]
00:16:12
religions within just two years of
00:16:14
Independence the new government faced a
00:16:16
vote of no confidence in Parliament the
00:16:19
then prime minister abdah KH negotiated
00:16:23
a Handover of power to the military he
00:16:27
invited ibraim
00:16:29
AB General ibraim Abu to take over power
00:16:34
AB 1958 that's just two years after
00:16:37
Independence is very rare that a country
00:16:41
that has been fighting for Independence
00:16:43
for years and years and years and then
00:16:46
immediately after
00:16:47
Independence it's gone away taken away
00:16:50
from them by the military is very very
00:16:53
rare it was you know a hand over to the
00:16:57
military so began a cycle of short
00:16:59
bursts of democracy followed by military
00:17:02
dictatorships that has lasted to the
00:17:04
present
00:17:05
day General abud himself was overthrown
00:17:08
six years after taking power making way
00:17:11
for civilian
00:17:14
rule we lived through a very special
00:17:18
period what we call today the the Golden
00:17:21
Era uh in
00:17:24
Sudan Omar El fadley rarely Ventures
00:17:27
over the threshold of a world he has
00:17:29
created from a Time Gone
00:17:32
by a time when cartoon was a very
00:17:35
different
00:17:38
city General Aboud was gone and by the
00:17:41
late 60s and early' 70s the capital city
00:17:44
had become a magnet for those seeking a
00:17:46
sense of
00:17:51
[Music]
00:17:57
freedom Kum was the Beirut of Africa or
00:18:01
was the Paris of Africa even as Beirut
00:18:04
used to claim that they used to be the
00:18:06
the Paris of the Middle East we believe
00:18:08
that Kum was also at that time uh in the
00:18:12
way of having uh an open market as I
00:18:15
said latest products from London from
00:18:19
New York from Paris you can find it
00:18:22
right in this
00:18:24
street but also culture entertainment
00:18:29
the freedom of having parties wedding
00:18:32
parties all through the night if you
00:18:35
wish I mean
00:18:36
uh everything was just a
00:18:39
normal uh happy life to be honest with
00:18:44
you despite restrictions the leading
00:18:47
members of the band have continued to
00:18:49
play small venues in cartoon since the
00:18:53
1960s those people have been through so
00:18:56
much because of the political changes so
00:19:00
this country has been through so much
00:19:03
they you know anti culture anti music
00:19:07
anti arts antio and then you have the
00:19:10
curfews for so many years and then you
00:19:12
have the closure of all the
00:19:15
entertainment places and they're still
00:19:20
playing there is a big gap between our
00:19:22
generation and the new generation today
00:19:25
we don't speak the same language we
00:19:28
don't when we talk about democracy and
00:19:31
freedom what is democracy and what's
00:19:33
what's
00:19:35
freedom in fact they say hasn't
00:19:38
democracy failed in this
00:19:41
country do we need
00:19:43
[Music]
00:19:46
freedom but the freedoms enjoyed by the
00:19:48
rich youth of carum in those days were a
00:19:52
world away from the realities of poverty
00:19:54
and conflict elsewhere in the
00:19:57
country
00:20:05
a war had begun years earlier in the
00:20:11
South we started action exactly on 19th
00:20:16
of
00:20:17
September
00:20:21
1963 we started with our bare hands I
00:20:26
myself entered the the bull with matchet
00:20:29
in my hand I had no no gun I had three
00:20:34
old guns which I gave to my company
00:20:38
commanders I organized the gorilla Army
00:20:42
and called it
00:20:45
an an is name of a
00:20:50
poison uh which is used by some tribes
00:20:53
including my own M tribe and uh it is a
00:20:59
deadly uh poison if it touches
00:21:03
you or it is given to you in water or in
00:21:06
food there is no medicine for
00:21:09
it the Anana Rebellion became a civil
00:21:12
war lasting almost 9 years and brought
00:21:15
Joseph lagu into direct confrontation
00:21:17
with an old army colleague Jafar numer
00:21:20
who led a military coup in
00:21:24
1969 I knew him since 19 60 here in
00:21:31
Juba as he took power in
00:21:34
carum I found myself also in charge of
00:21:40
the movement in the
00:21:43
bush and when our the effect of our
00:21:49
fighting was biting and so
00:21:52
forth they he made a pronouncement one
00:21:57
of his main yeah pronouncement that
00:22:00
South
00:22:01
Sudan is a distinct region of the Sudan
00:22:07
and the people living there have their
00:22:10
right to self rule I said if someone has
00:22:16
recognized what I am fighting
00:22:19
for then what is now left is to seek a
00:22:24
way uh to have meaningful dialogue with
00:22:28
with him a peace Accord was signed in
00:22:31
1972 in Addis Ababa it gave the South
00:22:34
autonomy in everything except National
00:22:36
matters such as defense and Foreign
00:22:39
Affairs Joseph lagu became vice
00:22:41
president and 10 years of relative peace
00:22:44
followed the longest in modern Sudanese
00:22:49
history but unknown to the general
00:22:52
public a quiet Revolution which had
00:22:54
started in the corridors and debating
00:22:56
societies of carum University in the
00:22:58
early 60s was beginning to wield
00:23:00
influence in political
00:23:04
circles the key figure to emerge was a
00:23:07
man who would eventually pull the
00:23:09
country onto a path of strict Islamic
00:23:11
principles who would orchestrate
00:23:13
military coups and who is blamed by many
00:23:16
in the South for creating laws which led
00:23:18
to the second Civil War in which over a
00:23:21
million people
00:23:23
died his name Hassan
00:23:27
alabi
00:23:33
[Music]
00:23:43
dman
00:23:57
Sou
00:24:02
[Music]
00:24:10
the tabibi family has been crafting
00:24:12
precious metals in Northern Sudan for
00:24:14
over 500
00:24:27
years
00:24:37
[Music]
00:24:57
for
00:25:04
like the tabbies the sudin have a
00:25:07
reputation for friendliness and
00:25:09
tolerance but the country's constitution
00:25:11
based on a localized interpretation of
00:25:13
sharia law is less
00:25:20
tolerant it redefines the role of
00:25:22
religion and politics and the chief
00:25:25
author of the Sudanese version of what
00:25:26
they call political Islam
00:25:28
is Hassan
00:25:31
alabi he first came to prominence as a
00:25:33
student leader coordinating Street
00:25:35
protests which led to the overthrow of
00:25:37
the Abu military government in
00:25:40
1964 and from the University stage of
00:25:42
Revolution a popular Uprising and the
00:25:44
Army later on joined the people oh every
00:25:47
general strike everyone's in the street
00:25:50
civilian government lasted just 5 years
00:25:53
before being replaced in another
00:25:55
military coup which brought the leftwing
00:25:57
colonel jaffan num to power tabi was
00:26:01
imprisoned and then sent into
00:26:04
exile over the years that followed
00:26:07
numeri swung from initially being
00:26:09
aligned to the Communists through Arab
00:26:11
nationalism to pan-africanism and
00:26:14
finally in the late 1970s sensing a mood
00:26:17
change in the country he began to
00:26:19
embrace political Islam when he saw that
00:26:22
the Islamic fundamentalist were a
00:26:25
political Factor uh he he changed into
00:26:29
Islamic fundamentalism he was that sort
00:26:32
of man n played the populist card by
00:26:36
turning strongly towards political Islam
00:26:40
oh yes he did and he was he was of
00:26:42
course very jealous of us he did not
00:26:45
want Islam to to I mean to be related to
00:26:48
us because we were the only ones who
00:26:50
were championing the cause of Islam num
00:26:53
invited tabi back to Kum and appointed
00:26:56
him to the powerful post of Attorney
00:26:58
General
00:26:59
General they then set about dismantling
00:27:01
the Adis Ababa agreement which had
00:27:03
granted the South
00:27:04
autonomy
00:27:09
[Music]
00:27:11
W it was at this point that John gang a
00:27:15
ProtegΓ© of Joseph lagu from the Anana
00:27:17
days and now a senior officer in the
00:27:19
Sudanese Armed Forces began plotting a
00:27:22
southern
00:27:25
rebellion in May 1983
00:27:28
in gang's hometown of bore soldiers
00:27:31
mutinied refusing to obey orders from
00:27:33
their Northern commanders num sent
00:27:36
troops to crush the
00:27:39
Revolt it was the opportunity gang had
00:27:42
been waiting
00:27:44
for n foolishly ordered the attack of
00:27:50
Bor Garrison despite my personal warning
00:27:56
that don't if you you light fire it will
00:28:00
spread like Bush fire and you will not
00:28:03
be able to quench it leave those people
00:28:07
alone in the face of attack from a large
00:28:10
force of Northern sudanes gang joined
00:28:12
the mutineers and led them into the bush
00:28:15
to start a Guerilla
00:28:17
movement these are some of the survivors
00:28:19
that left bore to form the Sudan
00:28:22
people's Liberation Army the
00:28:27
spa
00:28:49
although the first few months of the
00:28:50
spla were marked by infighting amongst
00:28:53
its leaders a decision taken in carum
00:28:56
would soon unite the Waring
00:28:58
factions tabi played with the minds of
00:29:03
the foolish military rulers he made them
00:29:08
to do for him what he could not do
00:29:12
alone in September 1983 with tabi at its
00:29:16
core the Nami regime introduced a strict
00:29:19
interpretation of sharia law which
00:29:22
included punishments of limb amputation
00:29:24
for crimes such as theft stoning to
00:29:26
death of women for adultery and a ban on
00:29:29
alcohol consumption do you accept that
00:29:32
the introduction of the September laws
00:29:34
struck fear through the
00:29:36
South I think it was only used as
00:29:39
propaganda and struck fear thereafter
00:29:41
but it wasn't actually application
00:29:43
because bars were open all the time in
00:29:46
Juba those days I'm quite sure about
00:29:48
that when I went I went to do myself
00:29:50
with with with J Flo and uh but security
00:29:55
people sometimes if they you think they
00:29:57
think you are um subverting public order
00:30:01
for any reason they might uh I mean they
00:30:03
might be as zealous
00:30:06
or islamically oriented I mean like the
00:30:09
salafis like the jihadist I mean all
00:30:11
over the world uh when
00:30:13
n declared the Islamic Sharia to rabi
00:30:18
said what would have taken us 100 years
00:30:21
to achieve he did it by stroke of the
00:30:26
pen even among nor than Muslims there
00:30:28
was
00:30:29
anger particularly at what they saw as
00:30:31
tab's manipulation of the fundamentals
00:30:34
of
00:30:56
Islam
00:31:08
the September laws would turn what was a
00:31:10
small Rebellion occurring in the
00:31:13
South into a full scale Civil War
00:31:16
lasting over two
00:31:17
decades it
00:31:19
immediately pitted the country against
00:31:23
each other and it is what made made the
00:31:28
people of southern Sudan swell the
00:31:33
ranks of the
00:31:36
SPM the Border Town of malakal witnessed
00:31:40
some of the worst
00:31:43
fighting it was
00:31:45
terrible people lie under the beds when
00:31:48
you hear the the sounds of the heavy
00:31:50
artilleries nobody moves on the road
00:31:54
even in the house nobody moves around
00:31:57
you just like Down Under the
00:31:59
beds people are just frightened even
00:32:02
when people leave there under the bed
00:32:04
you are shaking when you
00:32:07
shering death can come at any
00:32:12
time yes some people died even near in
00:32:16
front of my house also there were some
00:32:17
people who were
00:32:19
shot then they laid there for two or 3
00:32:23
days nobody to touch them at that time
00:32:27
then you cannot walk
00:32:29
you just stay in your
00:32:31
place until all the time when the dead
00:32:34
bodies are collected and then you see
00:32:37
some police walking on the road then
00:32:40
that will be the time that you can come
00:32:44
[Applause]
00:32:46
out 300 km Northwest of malikal lie the
00:32:50
nuba
00:32:55
[Applause]
00:32:55
[Music]
00:32:56
mountains
00:32:58
the people here are a mixture of
00:33:00
Christians Muslims and traditional
00:33:02
African
00:33:03
religions the war affected them
00:33:26
all
00:33:28
[Music]
00:33:35
hope of an end to conflict came in
00:33:38
1985 a general strike and mounting
00:33:41
public anger led to president deiri
00:33:43
being overthrown while on a visit to the
00:33:45
United
00:33:47
States Washington itself military rule
00:33:50
was eventually replaced by a coalition
00:33:52
civilian government headed by sadik al-
00:33:56
mahadi but it wouldn't be long before
00:33:58
rumors of yet another coup emerged I
00:34:01
thought that a country with Civil War a
00:34:06
country with conflict all over a country
00:34:09
with tension with its neighbors no one
00:34:11
would want to step into this uh
00:34:16
uh um
00:34:18
hell he had reckoned without the
00:34:20
ambition of Brigadier Omar
00:34:23
al-Bashir in September 1989 just as
00:34:26
almadi was about to clinch an historic
00:34:28
peace agreement with the
00:34:30
spa the military made their
00:34:33
move the idea was that we'll meet on the
00:34:36
18th of September to clinch this and one
00:34:41
of the reasons for the coup was that
00:34:44
they thought this was a conspiracy
00:34:47
against Islam unknown to al- mahadi it
00:34:50
was his own brother-in-law Hassan Al
00:34:52
rabi who was behind the coup was our
00:34:55
soldiers actually and most of people
00:34:57
dressed not even soldiers at first but
00:35:00
later on we allowed a few officers to
00:35:01
take over so you controlled it we
00:35:04
controlled
00:35:05
it in the days leading up to the coup
00:35:08
Joseph lagu received a warning to get
00:35:10
out of the country this former Rebel
00:35:12
leader was tipped off that the
00:35:14
democratically elected government of al-
00:35:16
mahadi was about to be
00:35:18
overthrown I was tipped by
00:35:21
tabi that there was going to
00:35:25
be problem and that should get away from
00:35:29
the Sudan to rabi give you advanced
00:35:31
notice yes effectively of a c and you
00:35:35
did nothing about it h you did nothing
00:35:38
about it what what can I do about it
00:35:40
make it public why should I make it
00:35:44
public why should I make it publicly he
00:35:46
gave me a hand he says something is
00:35:48
going to happen better get away as for
00:35:50
tab's brother-in-law prime minister
00:35:52
sadik al- Mahi there was no warning what
00:35:56
did your brother-in-law say to you
00:35:59
unfortunately he was on very bad terms
00:36:01
with
00:36:02
me he thought I was just taking part
00:36:05
from him and uh uh those days I was
00:36:08
still
00:36:10
on I was not in office necessarily but I
00:36:13
he he knew that it's it's our movement
00:36:16
and I am the leader of that
00:36:18
movement in the South John gang soon
00:36:21
faced a rebellion of his own when the
00:36:23
spa leadership split along tribal lines
00:36:27
the movement was split into
00:36:29
two and then they launched an all out
00:36:35
war in in bour
00:36:38
area A Home of Dr John of course
00:36:41
possibly trying
00:36:42
to uh strip him of his
00:36:46
support Kang was from the Dinka tribe
00:36:49
and most of the attackers came from a
00:36:51
rival tribe the new
00:36:56
a
00:37:00
they abducted also a number of uh
00:37:03
children and and and when girls and
00:37:06
women there was a Massac massing of
00:37:09
people thousands of people died and it
00:37:12
was a total Destruction and the whole
00:37:14
area was
00:37:15
left uh deserted no man's area uh so it
00:37:20
was a very terrible uh
00:37:26
situation
00:37:32
Bishop Samuel gang and local Chief Enoch
00:37:34
Deng raced to the town when they heard
00:37:37
the news it took 13 days for the bishop
00:37:40
to find his own family I found the
00:37:42
people down those dead people on the
00:37:46
road
00:37:48
everywhere and then I R up for my
00:37:53
children thank God I went and I found
00:37:56
them uh in the
00:37:58
bush with their mama their
00:38:02
mother and little food which was with
00:38:05
them there was water and I
00:38:09
P they spent 13
00:38:13
days the current vice president of
00:38:16
southern Sudan has been accused of
00:38:18
orchestrating the bar attacks to
00:38:19
destabilize John
00:38:21
gang an accusation he
00:38:24
denies in the midst of confusion
00:38:29
uh people
00:38:30
died actually it's fair to say that most
00:38:32
of the attackers were from the new tribe
00:38:35
your tribe
00:38:37
yes were you involved in instigating
00:38:40
this in any way at
00:38:42
all I would have no reason to
00:38:47
instigate gang now had to fight a civil
00:38:51
war within the spla and continue to
00:38:54
battle the northern
00:38:56
Army president Bashir on the other hand
00:39:00
experienced a golden period as the 20th
00:39:02
century came to a
00:39:06
close oil had been discovered in the
00:39:09
Border regions boosting the Sudanese
00:39:11
economy carum began to transform itself
00:39:14
into a modern metropolis and his
00:39:16
popularity
00:39:18
[Music]
00:39:23
soord but as bashier star rose Hassan
00:39:26
out 's influence declined and soon he
00:39:29
became a marginalized figure on the
00:39:31
political
00:39:36
[Music]
00:39:42
Wings the discovery of oil has brought
00:39:44
its own problems because 80% of the
00:39:47
reserves are in the South and the
00:39:49
pipeline goes
00:39:51
north and in the oil Rich region of
00:39:54
abier there's a dangerous territorial
00:39:57
dispute that could explode at any
00:40:24
moment these are the miseria a nomadic
00:40:28
tribe of Arab origin for at least 300
00:40:31
years during the dry season they have
00:40:34
left their grazing lands in the north to
00:40:35
travel southwards to the place they call
00:40:38
the Sea of
00:40:41
Arabs on their way they must pass
00:40:44
through the abier region inhabited by
00:40:46
the mainly Christian Dinka no
00:40:56
tribe time and again the region has been
00:41:00
devastated by fighting which the local
00:41:02
population claims as the work of miseria
00:41:05
militias armed by the government I have
00:41:08
seen the whole area was burn down even
00:41:11
those building you are seeing they have
00:41:13
just been revealed they were not there
00:41:16
the whole thing has got destroyed at all
00:41:18
and people move towards South
00:41:21
AB but the miseria chief denies that his
00:41:24
people are responsible to turn over the
00:41:27
picture that the meria are bad people
00:41:29
the missia are hostile the missia are
00:41:31
very violent yes yes we are not like
00:41:36
this I I I confirm to you that till this
00:41:40
moment we want to live in coexistence
00:41:44
and peace with our brothers till this
00:41:47
moment
00:41:52
yes after intense
00:41:55
negotiations in 200 five president Omar
00:41:58
Al Bashir and SPM leader John gang
00:42:01
brought 22 years of Civil War to an end
00:42:04
by signing the historic comprehensive
00:42:06
peace agreement at a ceremony in nvasha
00:42:09
in neighboring
00:42:12
[Applause]
00:42:14
Kenya two key articles of the agreement
00:42:17
were for a referendum to be held
00:42:19
throughout southern Sudan on
00:42:21
Independence and a simultaneous
00:42:23
referendum in abier where the population
00:42:25
would be allowed to vote on whether to
00:42:27
be in the North or the South there's
00:42:30
little doubt that Dink and KN favor the
00:42:32
South this is something that will be
00:42:34
decided by the people because right to
00:42:36
self-determination
00:42:38
is people's right so it is the people of
00:42:43
ab who are going to determine what
00:42:45
course of action to take thereafter but
00:42:48
the ab ballot was abandoned amid
00:42:50
protests of the rights of the miseria
00:42:52
who had no vote were being ignored I
00:42:56
think a was the mistake committed by the
00:43:00
the government negotiators in uh in the
00:43:03
Nasha
00:43:04
process a region belongs to both the
00:43:07
miseria and Dinka according to the
00:43:11
SPM it's only the Dinka which
00:43:15
uh uh in my view is a uh is is is a
00:43:20
racist these people have depended on
00:43:23
their cattle for hundreds of years you
00:43:27
need water not
00:43:29
oil uh for your cattle to drink the
00:43:32
meria drinks water but the government
00:43:35
drinks
00:43:37
oil you
00:43:38
know even if they hide it we know what
00:43:42
they are
00:43:44
after failure to find agreement between
00:43:47
the Dinka and the miseria could provide
00:43:49
the spark for an allout
00:43:52
War if Den say that they they they will
00:43:57
not permit the missia to reach the the
00:44:02
waters I am I tell you we will fight
00:44:06
them we will fight them we will fight
00:44:08
them and we will go through even Beyond
00:44:11
AB to drink water and to and to take
00:44:15
[Music]
00:44:18
p in Omar fy's restaurant in carum Daran
00:44:22
performer Omar isas sings of peace and
00:44:26
unity in his trou
00:44:28
[Music]
00:44:41
Homeland the United Nations says up to
00:44:44
300,000 people have died in darur and
00:44:47
2.7 million have fled their homes
00:44:50
president bashier who puts the death
00:44:53
tollet far fewer just 10,000 has had an
00:44:57
an arrest warrant issued against him by
00:44:58
the international criminal court on
00:45:00
charges of war
00:45:03
crimes it's all a far cry from those hey
00:45:06
days in 2005 when he and John gang had
00:45:09
joined together in
00:45:12
[Music]
00:45:14
peace in the nuba mountains near the
00:45:16
border between North and South they
00:45:19
still sing of that historic
00:45:22
[Music]
00:45:25
moment
00:45:31
[Music]
00:45:33
but in a mosole in Juba southern Sudan
00:45:36
lie the remains of John gang killed in a
00:45:39
helicopter crash just 6 months after
00:45:41
signing the peace agreement and three
00:45:43
weeks after over a million people had
00:45:45
welcomed him to
00:45:50
cartoon Gan came with the idea that the
00:45:53
Sudan should remain
00:45:55
United and and he believed in that till
00:45:58
he died he believed in that and he
00:46:00
looked at the Sudan as a country you
00:46:02
know that has a role to play it is a
00:46:05
Lynch pain of the whole
00:46:07
continent even his enemies knew that
00:46:09
here was a man who had attempted to
00:46:11
cross the divide that was Sudan he was a
00:46:15
true leader he inspired people around
00:46:18
him he was a towering
00:46:19
figure and I could see that even uh from
00:46:23
my position in on the other Camp because
00:46:25
he was always an enemy enemy but no one
00:46:28
could miss his uh leadership character
00:46:33
and his abilities it was a great
00:46:36
loss not for the SPM not for the South
00:46:42
but for the Sudan and for
00:46:44
Africa Sudan was the giant of Africa a
00:46:48
great experiment to discover whether
00:46:50
different religions and cultures could
00:46:51
coexist
00:46:53
together instead it has become the land
00:46:56
of Broken
00:47:04
[Music]
00:47:11
[Music]
00:47:25
Dreams