Although the Sudan was still nominally under the dual sovereignty of Britain and Egypt, the British were firmly in the dominant position. It was under British auspices that a Legislative Assembly was convened in December 1948, though this hardly represented the people of Sudan. As one British official remarked in 1950, the Legislative Assembly is ânot a fully representative body' and âa large and important section of the Muslim population has no share in the government of the country'.
15
The Legislative Assembly appealed to the old official prejudices in favour of ânatural leaders', the sheikhs, chiefs and petty princes. It was this predilection for natural leaders which, perhaps more than any other political impulse,
defined the British Empire. The publicity agent for the Sudan government, E. N. Corbyn, based in London, could not conceal his delight at the new Sudanese Legislative Assembly as he observed its first session in the spring of 1949:
Looking down the list of names anyone who has long known the Sudan will find the sons of the tribal leaders, with whose fathers he used to ride on camel-back over their wide tribal areas years ago. These men who have come to Khartoum to the Legislative Assembly are the natural leaders of the real Sudan . . . Thus the Sudan's first Legislative Assembly is a wholesome one.
16
Furthermore, these natural leaders were âmen of strong personality and independent minds', exactly the kind of men who, if they had been British, would have been recruited to the Sudan Political Service.
The natural leaders were also generally men of property who wielded influence as tribal leaders. They were decidedly not part of the urban intelligentsia or effendia class, whom most British officials despised. âEffendi' is a Turkish term, widely heard in Egypt and the Sudan in colonial times, which now, in modern Turkish, is used where an English-speaker might say âMr'. In the colonial period, the effendi were the educated classes, the intellectuals, who often adopted a strongly nationalist stance against British colonial rule. Years later, when reflecting on mistakes made by the British in the Sudan, Sir James Robertson accepted that this class of person had been foolishly overlooked. The Sudan government had âtended to put too much emphasis on the Nazirs and the Sheiks and not enough on the small educated class'. The British âwere much more friendly with the country members than with the “effendia”'. Sir James went on to suggest candidly, âI suppose we thought that the “effendia” were aiming to take our place.' Other âgrave errors' included the failure to do âanything until 1944 to create some central body in which the Sudanese could voice their opinions', and, lastly, the failure to âdevelop the South' after the âSouthern Policy' of MacMichael had been adopted in 1930.
17
Meanwhile, the Sudan accelerated towards independence, prompting Robertson, who by 1956 was safely ensconced as Governor General of
Nigeria, to regret âthe haste and untidiness of it all'.
18
The rapidity of the move to full independence, which occurred only eleven years after the end of the Second World War, surprised British officials in the Sudan more than it did the civil servants in Whitehall. The process was certainly âuntidy'. The date for independence had been set for 1 January 1956, but disturbances and serious unrest had taken place even before the British had left. The âSouthern Policy', described as a âcomprehensive plan to build up a series of self-contained racial and tribal units . . . based upon indigenous customs, traditional usage and beliefs', had been hated by the Arabic-speakers of the north, who saw it as a symbol of the British tendency to divide and rule. In the south, the Juba conference was resented, because it sealed the emergence of a single, unitary state. The south, as independence drew near, wanted a federal system, which the northerners rejected, while the British were increasingly anxious to get out of the Sudan, even before the Sudanese had agreed on a permanent constitution.
The situation was heading towards a crisis. The 1950s saw a rising tide of Arab nationalism across the Middle East, as people struggled to free themselves from what they saw as Western imperialism, or from feudal constitutions which, as in the case of Iraq and Egypt, placed countries under monarchical rule. The abolition of the Egyptian monarchy by the Free Officers' coup led by Gamal Abdel Nasser in July 1952 was followed by the new Egyptian government's abandonment of any lingering claims of sovereignty over Sudan.
19
Arab nationalism had its effect in making northern Sudanese politicians more focused on achieving independence and less willing to accommodate the south, which, in terms of population, comprised only a quarter of the country. As the British Foreign Office drily observed, the ânationalistic self-confidence which is now the mood of all independent Middle Eastern states is not conducive to successful colonial rule'.
20
The explosive situation reached its climax in August 1955 when troops of the Sudan Defence Force based in the south mutinied. The structure of the Force had made such an event likely, as it was split into battalions which had been selected along ethnic lines. There were âblack battalions' from the south and then there were the Camel Corps and the Eastern Arab Corps, which, as their names implied, were units composed exclusively of
Arabic-speakers.
21
The south protested, in a violent way, against the increasing dominance that northern Arabic-speakers began to wield in their territory. As the British began to leave the Sudan in the early 1950s, the vacuum which had been left in the south of the country was filled by officials from the north. This arrangement led to even more confusion. The Sudanese civil service was now dominated by northerners to such an extent that, in 1954, only six out of 800 senior officials were from the south. The presence of northern administrators, teachers and traders in the south was resented, and rekindled old fears which stemmed from the days when northern raiders would literally hunt down the peoples of the south to take them into slavery.
22
On 18 August 1955 a company of soldiers from the Equatoria Corps staged a mutiny at Torit. This southern unit had been summoned to Khartoum, where the men believed they would have been rounded up and executed, before being replaced by soldiers from the north. Instead, the soldiers began turning on Arabic-speaking northern officers, administrators and merchants and their families. The situation was aggravated when the majority of the 400 or so police officers in the region joined the mutineers. Ismail al-Azhari, the Sudanese Prime Minister, still under the jurisdiction of the Governor General, ordered northern soldiers to be transported to the south to restore order. The troops were taken in British aircraft, which caused resentment towards the British on the part of the southern Sudanese. The northerners, in turn, were furious that the British authorities in Uganda refused to extradite people whom they believed had instigated the coup. The mutiny itself was viewed in sections of the northern Sudan press as part of an imperialist plot. Omdurman Radio was explicit about this: âThe rash sedition in the South was deep-rooted, as a result of 50 years during which Imperialism filled the hearts of Southerners with spite and hatred against the Northerners.' The radio broadcast even suggested that the âSouthern Army mutinied under a premeditated plan which we believe was perpetrated by a foreign hand'.
23
The British, according to the broadcast, were duplicitous, offering to help the Sudan on the one hand while shielding the mutineers on the other. The newspaper
Ayam
, a northern Sudanese publication, stated that it was the Governor General's job âto see to it that the mutineer refugees in
Uganda are brought back to the Sudan at the first opportunity for their trial', and that, if the Ugandan government refused to hand them over, the âwhole affair' would reveal âBritain's conspiracy against the Sudan'.
24
Those mutineers who had escaped to Uganda were the lucky ones, as many others surrendered believing the Governor General Sir Knox Helm's promises of âfair trial, clemency and safe conduct'. He left the Sudan for good on 13 December 1955, and the mutineers were simply tried by courts martial; the courts martial handed down about 180 death sentences, most of which were subsequently carried out.
25
Yet for northerners to complain about Britain's actions was unfair. Throughout the crisis, the Foreign Office in London had been determined that the north's desire to keep the country united should be realized. An âindependent, unified and stable administration' was needed in the Sudan as a buffer and a barrier against Egyptian expansion. For this reason, âHer Majesty's Government must do all that is in its power to retain the confidence of the present Sudan Government and of the Northern Sudanese.' This would entail âsome temporary sacrifice of effective administration in the Southern Sudan and possibly of the interests of the Southerners'. In short, the Foreign Office view was that anarchy in the south was preferable to the disintegration of the new state that the British were leaving behind.
26
In the last months of 1955, British control of the Sudan had more or less collapsed. The northern Sudanese were moving into positions of power in Khartoum and elsewhere in the northern regions, while in the south the âtwo and a half million inhabitants' were, so far as the British authorities in London were concerned, now âvirtually unadministered'.
27
It is clear from the sources that the British themselves felt some responsibility for the events in the Sudan. In a report to the Foreign Secretary, Selwyn Lloyd, written in October 1956, Chapman Andrews observed that the âpolicy pursued over a long period by the British Administration and [the] influence of Missionaries were also important causes of the trouble . . . For whatever reason, and however justifiable, both combined to separate the South from the North and therefore to make the rule of the Northerners unacceptable.' The problem, in all this confusion, as British officialdom saw it, was the old bugbear of Arab nationalism and the âunstable emotionalism which affects all Arabs', which âmust certainly have an adverse effect
on the Negroid Southerners'. Andrews concluded that âwe are not solely responsible for that past', but it was inescapable that âfor 50 years, or two generations, we were in charge and the policy that inspired our stewardship during that period cannot be left out of account'.
28
For the southern Sudanese, the events of 18 August 1955 quickly became a symbol of their struggle for independence. In August 2007, the
Sudan Tribune
, a southern publication, could state proudly that âwhat happened in Torit on August 18th, 1955 is a great part of Southern Sudanese history that will live with people of South Sudan for centuries to come'.
29
The mutiny was an important symbol of southern resistance, but more significantly it marked the beginning of a nightmare for the Sudan, during which civil war raged for nearly forty of the country's first fifty years of independence. The various wars which plagued the Sudan during that time assumed different guises, but always, underlying the fighting, was a fundamental conflict between the Arabic-speaking north and the African southâdespite the reluctance of northern politicians to see matters in such starkly racial, or ethnic, terms.
It was clear from the outset of the first civil war, which continued sporadically from 1955 until 1972, that the conflict had a racial dimension, and many commentators observed the ârace war' element with fascination. Sudan's first civil war has been characterized as âsecret, silent and hidden', a war that was âsmothered by a grass curtain'. Vague rumours filtered out from the south at times, telling of ânorthern atrocities, of harassed refugees . . . even of deliberate genocide', but such reports were vehemently denied by the government in Khartoum.
30
Yet the war was known about in the West. A report in the
Daily Telegraph
in March 1967 spoke of âKhartoum's Arab Army' which had been âsystematically killing men, women and children of the Southern Sudanese Nilotic tribes and burning their villages and crops for over three years'. The reporter, a âspecial correspondent', indignantly observed that it was an extraordinary comment on âinternational values that a war of racial extermination (the genocide of Nuremberg) has been going on for years in Central Africa, without anything being done or even very much written about it'. Right-wing apologists for Ian Smith's illegal regime in Rhodesia were quick to point out the double standard in the seemingly complacent attitude of the
West to Sudan and the moral indignation felt by many towards the racist government in Rhodesia. In a letter to
The Times
on 7 April 1967 headed âWhere Racialism is Ignored', Sir David Renton, a Conservative MP, referred to the Sudanese Arab army âsystematically killing the Nilotic people of the Southern Sudan, most of whom are Christian'. He went on to compare the situation in Sudan with that of Rhodesia: âcompared with that [Sudanese] brutality the refusal to allow the principle of one man one vote in Rhodesia would be insignificant'. Renton then drew the conclusion that it âwould be a sad world if coloured people could do what they like to each other while the United Nations declines or is powerless to intervene'.
31
In the same month, the BBC's
24 Hours
painted a grim picture of government ârepression and squalor' in the southern Sudan, a broadcast which brought a complaint from the Sudanese Ambassador in London, Jamal Mohammed Ahmed. A couple of days later, the Ambassador also made a formal complaint to the Minister of State at the Foreign Office.
32
Some African politicians were quick to exploit the troubles of the Sudan for their own ends. In 1969, Hastings Banda, the leader of Malawi, used the civil war in the Sudan to beat the drum of African nationalism, defining the conflict in purely racial terms: âif Malawi was to fight anyone, such enemies would be the Arabs of the Sudan, because they oppress Africans'. In Banda's crude view, skin colour should determine where people lived: âIf whites in South Africa, Mozambique or Angola belonged to Europe, then Arabs in Africa should also belong to Asia.' It was an unsophisticated view, but it captured the mood of racial strife across Africa in the late 1960s.
33
The war which was fought in Sudan from 1955 lacked the intensity or ferocity of other orgies of violence which subsequently scarred the continent of Africa, like the Rwanda genocide of 1994, but, by early 1971, the UN estimated that over 500,000 people had been killed in Sudan in the previous sixteen years.
34