Violence in key regions of South Sudan will not block the path to
independence, according to a Catholic leader who has called on the
government to address the ‘root causes’ of the conflict.
Auxiliary Bishop Daniel Adwok Kur of Khartoum highlighted the
‘large amounts of violent incidents’ in South Sudan which is preparing
to secede from the north of the country and become a separate nation.
With less than three months to go before independence is officially
declared, reports have come in of heavy clashes between rebel factions
and the army of South Sudan.
Hundreds are understood to have died in recent weeks in violent
outbreaks in states including Bar el Ghazal, Unity and Upper Nile.
In
Malakal, where Bishop Adwok was parish priest in the 1990s before
becoming bishop, at least 40 people died in a rebel raid.
Speaking with Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need, Bishop
Adwok said that, although many of the conflicts were intense, most were
localised and did not threaten the path to independence.
“These violent incidents will impede progress but it will not wash
away from them their wish to acquire independence,” the bishop said
during a visit to Germany.
“The wish to be independent from the north is not somehow grafted
onto them—it is in their heart that they want to be independent.”
Bishop Adwok called on the Government of South Sudan to resolve the
underlying problems causing the violence, some of which are reportedly
linked to interference from the Islamic north which is allegedly arming
rebel factions.
“It would be best to sit down and discuss the issues,” he said. “We have to ask the people: ‘What is the root of the tension.’
“If we do not address that, after some months or years it will cause the disturbance to widen.”
He made his comments on the eve of an extraordinary plenary meeting
of the Bishops’ Conference of Sudan led by Cardinal Gabriel Zubeir Wako
of Khartoum being held in Juba, the provincial capital of the South.
The bishop went on to underline the need for help as the South copes
with a massive influx of people pouring in from the north. According to
reports the International Organisation for Migration estimates that in
the year to August 2011 up to 750,000 people will have arrived in the
South.
With education remaining a top priority for the Church across Sudan,
he called on charities such as Aid to the Church in Need to help with
Catholic schools.
“The Church has always recognised that human formation and education
is at the heart of forming a healthy society and developing schools with
a clear Christian identity is very important in the south as well as
the north,” he said.
Aid to the Church in Need has given long-running support to the Save
the Saveable Schools programme for displaced communities, especially in
the Khartoum area and the bishop praised the charity for its commitment
to Save the Saveable and other Catholic programmes across Sudan.