Authors
08.04.2014

South Sudan: From Fragility at Independence to a Crisis of Sovereignty

Clingendael CRU and Knowledge Platform Security& Rule of Law
Sudan

What started as a political conflict in South Sudan in December 2013 has created a
community security crisis drawing in a range of uniformed, community and foreign security
actors. At the heart of the crisis, are fundamental questions about democratic values, about
accountability and justice, and about overcoming narratives of marginalisation, impunity and
ethnic bias.

This conflict is a contest between social orders in which the authority of the prevailing order
is being challenged. The relevance of the systems through which resources are accumulated
and dispersed is also being challenged. This is a crisis of the legitimacy of the state. The state
represents the formal expression of a range of highly subjective interfaces and partnerships
through which power is shared and order finds expression.

This paper outlines some of those interfaces and partnerships, and the dynamics that affect
them. It is by no means an exhaustive analysis but rather a tracing of threads of interaction
at local, national and regional levels as a way of mapping some of the webs that connect
across space and time in South Sudan. The overall approach is one that seeks to understand
how South Sudan moved from fragility at independence to a full-blown crisis of internal
and external sovereignty in December 2013. The paper is divided into sections addressing
different aspects of state behaviour – the search for internal legitimacy; the search for
security; and the search for economic growth and development. These sections provide an
overview of the domestic context and key dynamics determining the national agenda. After
the internal focus, the paper provides an overview of regional relationships that affect South
Sudan’s internal and external political behaviour.

The main argument presented here is that the current crisis in South Sudan is the result of
challenges to the internal legitimacy of the SPLM as part of the state formation process and
the expression of sovereign authority. The current configuration of power in Juba has proven
an astute capacity to build and break alliances across different interests and to dominate the
narrative in a way that limits response options. This is not a nascent government anymore
but one which is demonstrating how it wants to run internal affairs and how it will exercise
sovereign authority. The narrative of this internal legitimacy is based on overcoming the
threat of rebels and a coup; it is a narrative firmly rooted in the politics of ethnicity and the
focused use of coercion, and which seeks to reinforce the centrality of the party as liberator
and guarantor of order. But for the South Sudanese state (and by extension the ruling SPLM),
the ability to exercise sovereign authority remains dependent on managing increasingly
competitive external relations.

When the dust has settled on this latest crisis, the question that remains will be one of the
level of violence which is acceptable for a state to employ against its citizens under extreme
circumstances. The current crisis in South Sudan is reshaping not only internal relationships
between the organs of state and the people but also the parameters of relationships between
the government and international actors in the region and beyond. These are highly lucrative
relationships at all levels leaving much still to be fought over. This crisis has become a civil
war in which the state is beginning to deal with its legitimacy and sovereignty issue

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