
The UN Security Council will vote on sending up to 7,000 armed blue berets to
the Republic
of South Sudan, which wins independence from its former enemy Sudan
at midday on Saturday.
Ban Ki-moon has recommended that the new mission should focus on protecting
civilians - with force if necessary - and on reforms to the police, army and
justice systems.
There are fears that from its outset, the world's 193rd country will be unable
adequately to police its territory, guard its borders or protect its eight
million citizens.
Sudan's majority Christian south fought its Muslim north for 38 of its 54
years of independence from Britain, and the hangover of that war is almost a
million guns, mostly in civilian hands in the south.
The southern army, born from the rebel force which fought the war, is bloated
with troops and drains as much as 60 per cent of South Sudan's annual
budget. One diplomat in Juba quipped that it was "in essence the
state's welfare system".
The police force, provincial administration, courts and tax systems are, at
best, stumbling, raising the risk of widening public anger among a
population expecting an instant windfall from independence.
"We need to be modest in managing the expectations of what South Sudan
can achieve, and how quickly," said George Conway, deputy head of the
UN Development Programme's office in Juba, South Sudan's capital.
"There has been good progress since the end of the war, but real change
is going to be generational." In reality, the Republic of South Sudan
will from its first days easily fulfil most requirements of a failed state.
Separated from the more advanced north, it will also immediately knock
Zimbabwe off the bottom spot on the index of human development.
At least 80 per cent of the population is illiterate - rising to 92 per cent
for women - the majority of civil servants did not finish secondary school
and there are estimated to be fewer than 500 trained doctors in a country
the size of France.
A 15-year-old girl is more statistically more likely to die in childbirth than
she is to finish school.
"It's fair to say that these are political and security challenges that
would tax even the most developed countries," said a senior Western
diplomat in Juba.
"South Sudan is facing all of them, and all at once." There was
little evidence of the severity of that challenge in Juba yesterday.
Ahead of tomorrow's independence ceremonies, roads that were dirt a year ago
are now freshly laid with asphalt.
Armies of women swept streets as government gardeners hastily planted
bougainvillea bushes on the main roads preparing for an onslaught of VIPs.
William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, leads the delegation from London. Susan
Rice, the US ambassador to the UN, will represent the Obama administration.
So many presidential planes from other African countries are due to land at
the city's ramshackle airport in the coming hours that civilian flights have
been cancelled for two days.
"We are very happy to show the world the best of our new country,"
said Abraham Mayom, 32, a mechanic working on a Chinese-made motorcycle by
the roadside.
"But what of next week, or next month, or next year? We are like a baby
not yet able even to crawl. We will need help for long before we are up on
our two feet walking alone." Almost f90 million of British aid will
flow through the small Department for International Development office in
Juba this year - almost f12 for each Southern Sudanese man, woman and child.
DfID is also outsourcing chunks of its work in Sudan to private British firms,
including Mott McDonald, Atos Consulting and the Adam Smith International,
which manage schemes focused on security, justice and government practice.
Even Sudanese refugees who fled to Britain during the civil war are returning
home to invest money and spread technical know-how picked up during their
education overseas.
Albert Rehan, 38, who won asylum in Britain in 1995, now runs a recruitment
consultancy with offices in Juba and in Holborn, London, specialising on
filling technical and managerial level jobs in South Sudan's booming private
sector.
"I'm still struggling to find good candidates," he said, sipping
sweet black tea under a mango tree in central Juba.
"But that's because now clients demand people with the right skills for
the job, not just the right family name. That in itself gives us reason to
be optimistic." That optimism must be tempered, however, by key planks
in the peace deal that have still not been secured.
There is no agreement on sharing oil, which lies mostly under southern soil
but must be refined and exported through the north. It is unclear how
foreign debts, borrowed when Sudan was unified, will be repaid once it
splits.
Of most concern, however, is the border between the two new neighbours.
Its precise route has not yet been decided. Already Omar al-Bashir, the
president in the north, is accused of supporting loyal militia in the south
to raise rebellion, especially in the oil-rich Abyei state.
Tens of thousands of northern civilians are still fleeing south after repeated
bombing raids against them by the Sudan Air Force, under the instructions of
Mr Bashir who is already wanted for war crimes by the International Criminal
Court.
"The increasing violence and human rights violations this year
underscore the need for a robust and flexible peacekeeping presence in South
Sudan," said Daniel Bekele, Africa director at Human Rights Watch.
