Analysis: Conflict and Aid Dynamics, Southern Sudan: Conference Paper

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    Humanitarian Aid, Social Services and Conflict Dynamics: Exploring the case ofSudan

    By Robert Kevlihan

    Ph.D Candidate in International Relations,

    American University,

    Washington D.C.

    Paper prepared for delivery at the World International Studies Conference (WISC)

    First Global International Studies Conference, Bilgi University, Istanbul, Turkey,24 27 August 2005

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    Introduction

    Sudan is a country that has suffered from civil war for most of its almost 50 years of

    independence. The recent phase of the conflict began in 1983, and has been the subject of

    considerable analysis (for examples see (Keen 1994), (Deng 1995), (Burr and Collins

    1995), (Jok 2001), (Johnson 2003)). While most often portrayed as a conflict between the

    Arab, Muslim north and Christian / Animist south, the recent upsurge in violence in

    Darfur has highlighted the considerably more complicated nature of political violence in

    Sudan, with centre / periphery issues in resource allocation, extraction and exploitation,

    identity politics, mobilization around differences in confessional religions and

    sectarianism within religious denominations all contributing the the dynamics of the

    conflict.

    Humanitarian assistance has been one of the most consistent and sustained

    international interventions with respect to the Sudanese conflict, particularly since the

    establishment of Operation Lifeline Sudan (OLS) by the United Nations in 1989. This

    assistance has been necessitated by considerable humanitarian needs caused or

    exacerbated (in the case of natural disasters such as drought or floods) by the conflict and

    the collapse of state provided services throughout most of the country, particularly in

    those areas most affected by the war the south, areas to the east bordering Eritrea, the

    Nuba Mountains and most recently Darfur.

    This paper seeks to explore the manner in which the provision of social services

    (including humanitarian aid) has been influenced the conflict itself. It breaks with

    existing literature on the subject in two ways ontologically by bracketing humanitarian

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    assistance within social services more generally, rather than specifying it as a separate

    type, and epistemologically by adopting a relational approach, drawing on the work of

    McAdam, Tarrow and Tilly (McAdam, Tarrow et al. 2001), in an effort to begin to

    identify causal mechanisms that are of analytical utility to the situation in Sudan and

    possibly to other similar situations more generally.

    Social Service Delivery and Humanitarian Aid

    This paper frames social services to include both those services provided by the state and

    those provided by non-state actors, including national and international NGOs and church

    groups. While social services is a broad term, in practice in Sudan it refers to health and

    nutritional services, education and housing / shelter. Framing social services to include

    humanitarian aid draws on the work of both Duffield (Duffield 1999; Duffield 2001), and

    Chandler (Chandler 2002) in their characterization of NGO activities. Both point to the

    effective privatization of social welfare provision in developing states because of the debt

    crisis of the 1970s and subsequent impact of structural adjustment in the 1980s, with

    international NGOs taking on increasingly longer-term commitments for service

    provision in weaker states. Duffield characterizes this development as part of the

    hollowing out of developing states, with such institutional arrangements supporting the

    interests of metropolitan states through the projection of authority through non-state

    actors and non-territorial networks of international assistance.

    However, hollowing out does not necessarily mean dissolution. As this paper

    demonstrates, even hollowed out states can exercise considerable influence on the

    manner on which services are provided. Bringing the state back in to the analysis

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    necessitates a turn toward considering humanitarian aid under the broader umbrella of

    social services. This paper argues that the provision of food, health, shelter, educational

    and other assistance to populations may be regarded as social services, regardless of the

    institutional mechanism of delivery (i.e. government, NGO, church). Differences in

    weighting between national and international sources of finance and institutional

    mechanisms for delivery (between state systems and NGOs) certainly apply, but the

    broad aim of these services is typically the same regardless of institutional delivery

    structure or financing source to provide a safety net for those most vulnerable.

    Furthermore, the nature of services provided health, nutrition, shelter, water /

    sanitation, etc, are essentially the same in both instances - public goods that in the

    broader international context are sometimes provided by states, in others by NGOs and

    often, by a mixture of the two.

    Furthermore, distinctions on the ground between state and non-state institutions

    can become blurred, even in humanitarian emergencies. NGOs often operate out of semi-

    functional government institutions such as hospitals and health clinics, and work with

    government staff. This has bearing on the nature of the state in such circumstances. Local

    institutional configurations and, in particular, the way in which the state does or does not

    influence the manner in which services are provided are also often not considered by the

    current literature on this subject. In addition to determining geographical areas of NGO

    operations, at the micro level a subtle form of patterning of how aid is provided can

    occur, simply because of this tendency to operate out of pre-existing infrastructure.

    Indeed, this patterning can go beyond pre-existing infrastructure.

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    In situations such as Sudan Peoples Liberation Army (SPLA) held areas of

    southern Sudan, NGO planning for new operations often include reference to maps that

    are long since out of date settlement and service provision patterns established in

    colonial times (through the establishment of government outposts and mission stations)

    are often re-produced by NGOs where these outposts were previously burned out and

    deserted because of conflict. The processes involved in the reproduction of pre-existing

    patterns while somewhat mundane at one level, are reminiscent of Benedict Andersons

    map derived imaginings in Imagined Communities (Anderson 2002)

    Relational approach to analyzing social services in conflict situations

    The issue of conflict as process; i.e. the manner in which conflict dynamics play out

    during times of conflict, has been addressed by McAdam, Tarrow and Tilly (MTT).

    Examining what they describe as contentious politics1, MTT identify over twenty causal

    mechanisms including brokerage (defined as the linking of two or more currently

    unconnected sites that operate and concatenate in different sequences - termed episodes),

    resulting in different outcomes. By adopting a relational approach to analysis, MTTs

    concept of brokerage is central - it refers to the manner in which nodes in networks

    interact with each other. The challenge, building on MTTs work, is to identify different

    forms of brokerage that have relevance to the manner in which social services are

    delivered in conflict situations. Tillys bookDurable Inequality (Tilly 1998) offers

    additional concepts in this respect, with its focus on how certain mechanisms such as

    exploitation, opportunity hoarding, emulation and adaptation act to create durable

    1MTT seek to reframe revolutions, along with nationalism and democratization, as well as social movements literature, as comprised

    of contentious episodes with sufficient commonalities to allow for a unitary analytical approach instead of a vertically differentiated

    thematic approach often presented by scholars of comparative politics.

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    inequalities within societies. While Tilly does not make this link, I argue that these

    mechanisms can be described as different forms of brokerage that have relevance to the

    case of Sudan.

    Background to Social Services in Sudan

    The current configuration of urban settlement and consequent service provision based out

    of these urban settlements in Sudan owes much to the legacy of the Anglo-Egyptian

    condominium that governed the country from the defeat of Mahdist forces in the late 19 th

    century, particularly in the south. Urban centers in Sudan owe their existence to two main

    historical processes the establishment of centers as part of trade routes in the pre

    colonial period, and the consolidation of these centers and establishment of new towns as

    administrative centers in the colonial period. This consolidation led to the urbanization of

    elites in small centers that served as mechanisms of extraction from surrounding areas

    (Ahmed and Abdel-Rahman 1979). While limited services existed in (mostly northern)

    urban centers in the early part of the 19th century, notably those established while much of

    Sudan was controlled by Egypt in the early 19th century (Trout-Powell 2003), it was only

    in the later colonial period that a concerted effort was made to expand services of some

    description throughout the country. The origins of modern elites in Sudan owe much to

    access to state schools in the north and mission schools in the south (Ahmed 2003b).

    Colonial policy favored northern elites in the central zone around the river Nile

    and the capital Khartoum to the detriment of peripheral regions in the south, east and

    west. This in part reflected previous centralization of control under the Mahdiyya and

    compromises made by the colonial administration with local elites. Civil administration

    in the north began to evolve in the 1920s, but unlike the south, was largely devoid of

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    religious overtones, as missionary activity in northern Muslim areas was circumscribed.

    (Sikainga 2002). Sikainga also comments on the rehabilitation of an educated class in

    the north, with the 1930s seeing an expansion in educational facilities, particularly

    teacher training institutes and in the establishment of the Gordon Memorial College. The

    majority of educated Sudanese of the time being the sons of tribal and religious leaders in

    northern and the central parts of the country. In the north this led to the creation of a new

    urban elite with strong ties to traditional rural power bases (Ahmed 2003a).

    Colonial policy with respect to southern Sudan also played a large role in how

    services were established in that region. The Anglo Egyptian condominium portioned off

    the southern part of Sudan and allocated zones to various missionary groups, who became

    the primary providers of social services in many areas. Dinka areas of Bahr El Ghazal

    went to the Catholic Verona Fathers; Equatoria and Upper Nile provinces were assigned

    to Protestant and Non-Conformist Churches. This pattern of religious influence remained

    in place until the expulsion of missionaries from south Sudan in 1962 (Gordon 1984).

    Mission stations typically comprising a church, school, infirmary and accommodation

    for the missionaries (McLeish 1927), began to be established in parts of southern Sudan

    in the first decade of the 20th century, but penetration was slow paralleling the

    difficulties in consolidation of colonial administration in the south. It was only in the

    1920s that mission stations could be said to have been anything but a marginal influence,

    both in terms of evangelism and service provision (Mawut 1983), (Hutchinson 1996).

    Even then, Johnson argues that the main influence of Christianity came not in the number

    of its converts, but in the subsequent strategic influence its converts achieved through

    their educational qualifications, and their role in administration and politics in the late

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    Condominium and early independence periods (Johnson 2003). Muslim influence in the

    south was restricted to larger towns, where ex-soldiers and civil servants often settled and

    became involved in trade, often establishing religious schools (Johnson 2003).

    Relational analysis at the national level

    At the national level, opportunity hoarding by educated elites (with links to traditional

    bases of power) from Arab areas of the river Nile and related clients in peripheral areas

    appears to be a primary causal mechanism. A precursor to this mechanism occurring was

    the differential access to the colonial education system afforded to northern Sudanese,

    followed by access to junior and mid level posts in the colonial administration and the

    subsequent inheritance by them of the state apparatus at independence.

    In the post independence period the state has been, in effect, captured by educated

    self-identifying Arab groups coming from particular areas of the Nile river that have

    made differing strategic alliances with other groups in peripheral areas at different times

    (Deng 1991; Deng 1995; Sikainga 2002). Economic development has largely favored

    these centre groups and their clients in the peripheries (Fawzy 1975). While political

    shifts within this ruling class has brought differing political elements to the fore over time

    (Sikainda 1993), it consistently favors this center over peripheral regions. Social services

    that have been provided by the state in the post independence period have continued to

    favor northern Arab populations living in the central region around Khartoum. Where

    provided in other areas, services have frequently been used as a means to push

    assimilation of other groups to northern Arab Islamic culture. The conflict itself has been

    conducted mainly (though not exclusively, as the recent violence in Darfur demonstrates)

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    in southern Sudan. Indeed, the recent upsurge in western Sudan highlights the center /

    periphery nature of conflict even further than heretofore.

    Social service provision in Sudan since mid 1980s

    In common with many other African countries, Sudan began to suffer from a debt crisis

    in the late 1970s and early 1980s as interest rates rose. In Sudans case, this was

    exacerbated by a decline in US government assistance Sudan had been the largest

    recipient of US aid in African outside of Egypt during the 1970s. With the government

    increasingly subject to strict conditionality from international financial institutions

    (Faaland 1987), the quality and scope of government provided social services began to

    decline. The famine of 1985 saw a large influx of non-governmental organizations

    (NGOs) into Sudan, and the beginnings of gamesmanship in the delivery of humanitarian

    assistance by the Sudanese government, with extensive restrictions being placed on the

    ability of NGOs and donors to deliver assistance to high need areas considered unfriendly

    towards the government (Keen 1994). Government services in rural areas of the south

    had largely halted in 1983-84 as a result of counter-insurgency operations. This collapse

    of government services in rural areas where the SPLA held sway, combined with the

    absence of NGOs from these areas until the establishment of OLS in 1989, meant that

    international relief essentially supported government garrison towns during much of the

    1980s (Johnson 2003). Again, an example of opportunity hoarding by the Sudanese

    government at the national level in this case, of the inputs afforded from humanitarian

    aid.

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    The response of populations that required access to humanitarian assistance in

    SPLA controlled areas was one of adaptation. While humanitarian aid was not available

    within most SPLA held areas of southern Sudan, it was available across the border in

    Ethiopia in refugee camps for southern Sudanese. Gakmar reports a second type of

    adaptation occurring at the micro level, claiming that the collapse in government services

    may have assisted the SPLA, with many educated southern youths joining up because of

    frustration over lack of opportunities in continuing their education (Gakmar 2002).

    The establishment of OLS in 1989 (which allowed humanitarian assistance to be

    delivered to SPLA held areas) came at a unique time a relatively weak government

    under Prime Minister Saddiq El Mahdi seemed on the verge of brokering a peace

    agreement with the SPLA, and as such was susceptible to international pressure (Burr and

    Collins 1995). However, in June 1989 a coup put the National Islamic Front into power

    in an alliance with hardline elements of the military in the name of the Revolution of

    National Salvation and as a result the war in the south continued unabated (Deng 1995).

    Mechanisms in social service delivery at the national level

    Since the establishment of OLS international humanitarian organizations have been able

    to work on both sides (i.e. government controlled and Sudan Peoples Liberation Army

    (SPLA) controlled areas) of the conflict in Sudan. It is generally recognized that the

    SPLA has been quite successful in taxing assistance going into its areas particularly

    food assistance, in order to support its insurgency (Prendergast 1996; Rone 1996; De

    Waal 1997; Rone 1999a) a form of exploitation in the sense that it does not prevent

    others from accessing the assistance (as with opportunity hoarding), but does insist on its

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    cut. In this respect the SPLA has not been successful in emulating the Sudanese

    government, in terms of the degree of control it can exercise over assistance delivered

    particularly because the Sudanese government itself has a say over deliveries of

    assistance by OLS into SPLA areas.

    Meanwhile, the Sudanese governments military strategy all too often has targeted

    institutions (such as schools and hospitals) in SPLA held towns, while implementing bans

    on OLS relief flights to areas not under their control. The Sudanese government also

    typically maintains a tight control over the operations of humanitarian organizations in

    areas which it controls, frequently allowing aid agencies only to work in areas that suit

    government political and economic purposes and in some cases have denied access to

    government held zones considered sensitive (Keen 1994; Jok 2001; Johnson 2003). This

    combined strategy of opportunity hoarding (through tight control of assistance and

    attempts to impede delivery of assistance in SPLA areas) and exploitation (through

    benefiting directly and indirectly from the assistance delivered) represents a more potent

    mix of mechanisms than the largely exploitation based strategies of the SPLA.

    Nevertheless, social services, largely financed from external assistance, have served the

    interests of both parties in a resource poor environment.

    Micro level mechanisms: A Case study of famine in Wau, 1998

    Wau, the capital of Western Bahr El Ghazal province, lies at the southernmost extremity

    of a railway constructed from Khartoum by the British. The town first came under

    colonial control in 1900, having been a centre for slave raiding for most of the 19 th

    century. Developed as an administrative center, it was home to the colonial

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    administration for the Bahr El Ghazal region in the 1920s; district commissioners based

    in the town toured around smaller villages and settlements staying in government

    constructed rest houses (Wyndham 1936). At independence, Wau was one of the larger

    towns in southern Sudan and a stopping point on the overland route (as opposed to the

    river route) to the southern capital of Juba.

    The town itself is home to diverse tribal groupings including Dinka, Jur and Fertit

    as well as Arab merchants and traders. The Catholic church has remained influential in

    the town, having been originally assigned Bahr El Ghazal as one of its zones of

    operations during colonial times. Attempts have been made to increase the Islamic

    influence in the town, particularly under the current government; during a visit by the

    author there in 1999 local people commented on the construction of a mosque to a greater

    height than that of the local Catholic Cathedral. Because of its status as a garrison town,

    it also is home to large number of soldiers and other irregular pro-government forces.

    In early 1998, conflict erupted in Wau and surrounding regions which led to a

    major humanitarian crisis. This case study describes the events in Wau in 1998 and draws

    some preliminary conclusions with respect to causal mechanisms of interest associated

    with this episode. The immediate circumstances leading to the humanitarian crisis of

    1998 are complex. Poor rains meant that populations in Bahr El Ghazal province were

    due to face a difficult harvest year in 1998 (Santoro 1998; Murphy and Salaama 1999).

    The dry season in southern Sudan, which stretches from January to June also heralds a

    time of traditional conflict between Government forces and the SPLA in the south. The

    situation in Bahr El Ghazal state was complicated by Government use of ethnic Arab

    Murahileen militia from neighboring Kordofan state to harass civilian populations seen to

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    be sympathetic to the rebels and the varying loyalties of other local warlords in the area

    (Rone 1999b). Recent research estimates that between 1983 and 2002, more than 12,000

    people were violently abducted from areas of Bahr El Ghazal and Abyei as a result of

    over 2,000 raids (Ryle, Jok et al. 2003). The events of 1998 were one peak in that on-

    going series of violent encounters between government backed militias and the local

    population living in regions north and northeast of Wau, especially in areas close to the

    railway and adjacent to Arab dominated areas in Kordofan province.

    In relation to the emerging crisis in Bahr El Ghazalin early 1998, the role of one

    southern militia leader, Kerubino Bol, proved crucial. Formerly an SPLA commander,

    and of Dinka extraction, Kerubino split with John Garangs mainstream SPLA in 1994,

    and aligned himself with the Government through the signing of a peace agreement in

    April 1997. Post April 1997, Sudanese government strategy was characterized by the

    deliberate and systematic raiding of civilian (predominantly Dinka) targets, in

    collaboration with Kerubinos forces and the Murahileen. In the course of these raids,

    thousands of civilians were arbitrarily killed. Many more were displaced from their

    homes. Villages were burnt and looted, cattle stolen and thousands of civilians, mostly

    women and children, abducted for forced labor purposes to Arab areas (Amnesty

    International 1999). As a consequence agricultural production was disrupted,

    exacerbating an already precarious food security situation.

    The combination of drought, sporadic flooding and the hostilities described above

    led to a weakening of community structures and traditional coping mechanisms, and to

    population movements. At the end of January 1998, fighting erupted in Wau, Awiel and

    Gogrial (three major government held towns in Bahr El Ghazal) between Sudanese

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    government forces and those of Kerubino, who had re-defected to the SPLA. Within a ten

    day period, more than 110,000 people fled the area, crossing combat lines into SPLA

    controlled regions. This massive influx of people under strain further eroded

    humanitarian conditions (Operation Lifeline Sudan 1998). The humanitarian situation

    worsened from February through to early April, due to the refusal of the Sudanese

    government to grant access to humanitarian agencies or relief flights under OLS auspices

    (Department for International Development 1998). The month of May saw further

    disruption in Bahr El Ghazal, with militias and other irregular forces continuing their

    campaign of rural destabilisation and pillage (Operation Lifeline Sudan 1998), and the

    beginning of a massive return of Dinka into Wau. In the space of approximately three

    months, 72,000 Dinka (and some Jur) flooded back in to the town, although it is

    estimated that only about one third of them were former residents of Wau or its displaced

    camps (Rone 1999a).

    Dynamics of social service provision in Wau

    International NGOs, including World Vision, had been operational in Wau in response to

    similar famines in the mid to late 1980s (Keen 1994), however, by 1997 there were no

    western international NGOs in the town. UNICEF maintained a field office there, staffed

    by a Sudanese national. Social services in the town were largely provided by the Catholic

    church, and an assortment of local NGOs (including some Islamic NGOs and Sudanese

    Red Crescent, which was receiving some support from ICRC). Mdicins Sans Frontires

    Holland (MSF-H) had also conducted an assessment in late 1997 and planned to

    establish operations there in early 1998. The MSF assessment focussed on the public

    hospital in Wau, which was barely operational at the time and characterized by poor staff

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    attendance, unavailability of drugs and general absence of any public system of care for

    patients.2

    In the wake of the fighting and out-flux of (mainly Dinka) people from Wau in

    January, the Sudanese government imposed a flight ban on all relief assistance from the

    4th February 1998 until the 31st March 1998 (Franco 1999; Keen 1999), despite food relief

    drops already having been started to those displaced from Wau by the WFP (UNDP-EUE

    1998). This in effect cut Wau and surrounding areas off from humanitarian assistance of

    any kind. While this had only a limited impact on the situation in Wau itself because of

    the large scale out-flux of people from the town, the real damage was done by the

    absence of OLS assistance in rural areas outside the town (airdrops being the only

    feasible means of delivering assistance). While limited assistance did get in to some of

    these areas through humanitarian agencies working outside of the OLS framework,

    government restrictions drastically reduced what could be put in.

    Meanwhile, in Wau, after considerable diplomatic efforts, MSF-H were allowed

    to place one international staff person in the town in April 1998. The Sudanese

    government subsequently refused access to other international aid workers into Wau until

    mid July. As a consequence, the few agencies operational on the ground had to cope with

    the massive influx of people in severe difficulties from May until July. It was not until

    late July that other NGOs were able to begin to establish operations, with food relief

    operations beginning to scale up in late July (World Food Programme 1998). The scale of

    the disaster peaked during these summer months, with recorded malnutrition amongst

    children under five reaching 43.5% in early August (IRIN 1998).

    2 Interview with humanitarian aid worker based in Wau in 1998 / 99, Washington D.C., January 2005.

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    Towards a delineation of causal mechanisms at the micro level

    So much for the historical chronology; let us now consider some underlying processes

    associated with this episode processes that may be replicated in similar situations

    within Sudan and elsewhere. Returning to MTT concept of brokerage, we can see that in

    the case of Wau, the Sudanese government exercised a key role. At the national level, the

    authorities in Khartoum were able to block access by humanitarian agencies to

    populations within its direct control (in Wau town) and to populations in rural areas

    outside of its control.

    In thinking about humanitarian actors as part of a single system of social service

    provision, this reflects the types of institutional environments discussed by Scott, to the

    extent that individual NGOs, UN agencies and donors ended up negotiating with

    particular government units acting as gatekeepers to programming and / or access (Scott

    1995).

    The government gate-keeping unit in question in Sudan was the Humanitarian

    Aid Commission (HAC). Access to Wau (and other war affected regions of Sudan) was

    controlled through the issue of travel permits by HAC to international staff. HAC

    procedures tended to be somewhat byzantine, with applications to sensitive areas

    frequently being held up for significant periods of time, rather than being refused

    outright. The Sudanese government has proved itself to be effective in turning access off

    when it suits them, as in the first half of the year in Wau. Only one international NGO

    worker was permitted into Wau between January and early July, and he was reluctant to

    leave once he did get down in April because of fear that he would not be let back in

    again.3 Eventually, after significant international pressure, further assistance was

    3 Interview with humanitarian aid worker based in Wau in 1998 / 99, Washington D.C., January 2005.

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    permitted but the Sudanese effectively exercised their ability to prevent sufficient

    assistance reaching Wau over a period of six months. This parallels similar processes

    described by Keen in the 1980s in the same region (Keen 1994), and represent de facto

    opportunity hoarding. However, while Keens analysis emphasizes the material interests

    of merchants and local military engaged in speculative trading as reasons for the

    restrictions on assistance, in the case of Wau in 1998, it would seem that broader strategic

    interests were at stake, as the restriction of assistance occurred at a time when a large part

    of the population had fled the town and before humanitarian conditions deteriorated with

    the new influx in May. It was indeed opportunity hoarding but with a different aim

    military success rather than commercial gain (at least until May). The denial of assistance

    in rural areas around Wau placed increased pressure on populations in SPLA controlled

    areas by depriving them of much needed food assistance, and as a result, consolidating

    what had been their own tenuous hold on key urban areas in Bahr El Ghazal, including

    Wau.

    Equally at the local level, the government was able to exercise considerable

    control. Authorities in Wau restricted NGO access within the town itself, through curfews

    and by preventing access to areas outside a well defined security perimeter around the

    town. NGOs in Wau were kept under tight control during this time, with close scrutiny of

    personnel movements and communications. The actual locations where assistance could

    be provided were also subject to the control of local authorities as exemplified by

    decisions taken in September 1998 to relocate internally displaced persons (IDPs) to

    camps located outside of Wau, effectively placing them as human shields in the event of

    further attacks on the town.

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    In areas outside of their direct control, the Sudanese government was able to

    exercise its sovereignty rights, confirmed under the terms of the OLS agreement, to deny

    the UN permission to drop supplies to populations who had fled Wau. OLS has to request

    flight permissions from the Sudanese government to fly supplies into southern Sudan,

    even to areas controlled by the SPLA and other rebel groups. This did not prevent some

    NGOs for establishing what the Sudanese government would regard as illegal operations

    in SPLA areas sovereignty rights in the absence of coercive capacity clearly have their

    limitations, indicating the ways in which some NGOs on the southern side adapted

    themselves to the situation, given their own humanitarian imperatives.

    Within Wau itself, when NGOs did begin to establish operations, a substantial

    portion of these activities overlapped with pre-existing structures - MSF-H, the first

    international NGO on the ground, inserted itself into the near defunct hospital and

    established therapeutic feeding activities for children and adults. GOAL, an Irish NGO,

    provided manpower and drugs support to the Catholic health centers from August 1998

    onwards. This shows evidence of the type of patterning previously mentioned, which

    effectively comprises a form of emulation; agencies emulating pre-existing patterns of

    service provision.

    However, in the case of Wau, existing infrastructure was insufficient to meet the

    overwhelming needs in the town as a result a number of agencies, including

    International Rescue Committee, CARE, Action Contre la Faim and ICRC established

    their own operations independently when access was finally granted, again a form of

    adaptation to conditions prevailing on the ground.

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    Conclusions

    Tilly listed four basic mechanisms in Durable Inequality - opportunity hoarding,

    exploitation, emulation and adaptation. In the case of Sudan, these analytical categories

    appear to have utility, particularly at the local level. The analysis of the Wau case study

    benefits from the analytical tools provided by Tilly; mechanisms described include gate-

    keeping and coercive military force used as tools to facilitate opportunity hoarding;

    similar gate-keeping on the SPLA side as a means of exploitation, the establishment of

    illegal operations in SPLA areas by some international NGOs as an adaptive response;

    and both emulation and adaptation by NGOs within Wau in establishing their operations.

    In thinking through the relationship between the institutions of service provision

    and populations affected by the war, it would appear that those institutions (or units

    within broader institutional configurations) that have greater relative power (or at least

    the power to prevent others from acting) in these situations such as Sudanese

    government departments tasked with overseeing humanitarian assistance, or SPLA

    equivalents, primarily engaged in opportunity hoarding and exploitation. Indeed, it would

    appear that at the micro level there may be something of a hierarchy mechanisms

    available to these actors, with opportunity hoarding primarily available to the Sudanese

    government, largely because of higher levels of coercive control in areas under its

    control, its ability to exercise sovereignty rights with respect to OLS flights and its

    attempted use of military power to prevent or disrupt deliveries of assistance in SPLA

    areas. By way of contrast, SPLA tactics do not seem to have attained the level of

    opportunity hoarding primarily because of the SPLAs inability to prevent the Sudanese

    government from carrying on as it did. However the SPLA did attain the ability to exploit

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    the delivery of humanitarian assistance through taxing. It is noteworthy that even that

    may have its limitations as the influx of people into government held Wau from SPLA

    areas may in part have been because of over taxing by the SPLA.4

    On the other hand, for those institutions and groups with relatively less power,

    adaptation and emulation appear to better define their courses of action. Adaptation, to

    the extent that agencies respond to power realities while continuing to seek to deliver

    assistance; and the extent to which vulnerable populations exercise their exit option as a

    response to attempts by state or quasi state (as in the SPLA) institutions to coerce them

    (Herbst 2000), and emulation a process in much less evidence here, to the extent that

    humanitarian agencies overlap with pre-existing indigenous infrastructure (both state and

    non-state, in the case of Catholic Church run operations), in the process essentially re-

    establishing the state social service system and reinforcing parallel local systems.

    This latter process has some potentially interesting implications. Hutchinson, an

    anthropologist that worked extensively with the Nuer in southern Sudan, mentions the

    distinction they made by Nuer between the government of the left and the government

    of the right. The government of the left (police, regional networks of government chiefs,

    courts, district officers and the like) were characterized as aspects of governance with

    which people agree / which want people to live, and the government of the right - or

    army, which brings only death (Hutchinson 1996). It is noteworthy that support to

    defunct government social service structures such as the public hospital represented, in

    the case of Wau, the virtual re-establishment of the government of the left in a town that

    for the preceding portion of the year, had been the sole preserve of the government of

    4 Per interview with humanitarian aid worker based in Wau in 1998 / 99, Washington D.C., January 2005.

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    the right. What impact that may have had on inter-group and conflict dynamics in the

    town is a subject for further analysis.

    Bibliography