The Black Book: Imbalance of
Power and Wealth in the Sudan, known commonly as the
Black Book (Arabic: الكتاب الأسود al-kitab
al-aswad), is a manuscript purporting to detail a pattern of
disproportionate political control by the people of northern
Sudan
and marginalization of the rest of the
country. It was published in two parts, the first in May
2000 and the second on August 2002.
While published anonymously, it was later
revealed that the writers had strong ties to the Justice and Equality Movement,
a rebel group active in the conflict
that later erupted in Darfur
to the
west.
Contents
Population (1986 census)
and representation
| Region |
Population |
% |
Repre-
sentation
|
% |
| Northern |
1,026,406 |
5.4 |
58 |
79.5 |
| Eastern |
2,222,779 |
11.8 |
1 |
1.4 |
| Central |
4,908,038 |
26.5 |
2 |
2.8 |
| Southern |
4,407,450 |
23.7 |
12 |
16.4 |
| Western |
6,072,872 |
32.6 |
0 |
0 |
The first page of
the Black Book, Part I, states its
thesis: "This publication unveils the level of injustice practised
by successive governments, secular and theocratic, democratic or
autocratic, since the independence of the country in 1956 to this
date."
The
main argument is that the riverine Arabs near Khartoum
have
centralized power around themselves, proven by a statistical analysis. The first of the
many charts details the populations of the various regions and
number of Federal/National-level representatives, as a percentage
of the total, since independence. It pointed out that every single
president had come from the North.The book goes on to break down
these numbers of representation by regime since independence,
constitutionally mandated posts, and state governorships, all
illustrated through charts. After dealing with the central point
about inequality in positions of high office, the
Black
Book goes on to detail similarly disproportionate results in
the number of Attorneys General, executive staff in the Ministry of
Finance and the National Council for Distribution of Resources,
which allocates
oil wealth, as well to note the
cultural domination of the national media by northerners.
Practically every major sector of society is analyzed to show a
pattern of northern control.
Academic Abdullahi El-Tom, in his critique of the book, states that
the latter half is not nearly as well-argued as the heavily
statistical beginning, making points that are then not
substantiated and sometimes falling into polemical statements. For
example, the
Black Book states that the equipment that was
to be used for the Western Highway Project was diverted to the
Northern Highway Project, which is both widely rumored and
believed, but no evidence is provided to back it up. El-Tom further
makes the following observations: it has an implicit view of Sudan
as
Islamic; it emphasizes the grievances of
Western Sudan (i.e.
Darfur
and Kordofan) over the other marginalized regions; and
it has an unforgiving stance towards all the north, rather than
just the three clans identified as controlling
the government (i.e. the Shaigiya, the
Jaaliyeen and the Danagla).
Part II was originally supposed to concentrate on policy
recommendations stemming from the analysis in Part I. However, the
Sudanese government so strongly attacked the findings of the first
part that the writers instead took the opportunity to back up the
original publication. Part II thus consists of the listing of every
single government official counted in the first part, with their
regional and clan affiliation.
Distribution and reaction
The
Black Book had a dramatic introduction.
People leaving
mosques in Khartoum
after Friday
evening prayers were greeted by polite young men passing out thick
photocopied stapled versions on A4 paper. Such an activity
in
censored Sudan was unusual; the fact
that the document being passed out was an indictment of the
national power structure has been termed "
revolutionary". Scholar
Gérard Prunier notes that
it said nothing to the average Northern Sudanese that
they did not know already.
What created a shock were not the contents of the book
but simply the fact that an unspoken taboo had been broken and that
somebody […] had dared to put into print what everybody knew but
did not want to talk about.
The fact that the writers identified themselves only as "The
Seekers of Truth and Justice", without a place of publication or
copyright notice, only added to the mystery. Over three days, 1600
copies were handed out—800 in Khartoum, 500 in other parts of Sudan
(except the South) and 300 abroad. Copies were reportedly left on
the desks on President
Omar al-Bashir
and other senior government officials while they were out for
prayers.
Government newspapers launched attacks on the publication in front
page articles, denouncing the authors as "tribalists". Security
forces attempted to discover the authors, while it was rumored that
several junior government staffers had been fired after copies were
found on ministers' desks. Publishing houses were checked and
journalists, academics and other known writers were questioned to
determine the book's origin. However, the book was already out and
being photocopied and spread. One estimate put the total number of
photocopies secretly made by individuals at 50,000. An owner of a
photocopying shop in Khartoum was quoted as saying, "I made no less
that 100 copies for our customers. We sometimes charged them more
due to the risk involved in duplicating illegal documents." Given
the high levels of
illiteracy in Sudan,
most people heard of the
Black Book by word of mouth. The
document, as controversial as it was, quickly became central to
Sudanese political discourse. Political factions campaigning for
support in the West found that political discussion revolved around
the western highway project, salaries for
civil servants, especially
teachers, and the
Black Book.
Regional revenue and expenditure,
1996–2000 averages (% of value for North)
| Region |
Total
expenditure
per capita
|
Total
revenue
per capita
|
Effective
subsidy
per capita
|
Development
expenditure
per capita
|
| North |
100.0 |
100.0 |
100.0 |
100.0 |
| Central |
104.0 |
134.1 |
16.8 |
245.5 |
| Khartoum |
161.5 |
213.7 |
13.3 |
532.9 |
Central ex.
Khartoum |
60.6 |
70.9 |
23.8 |
35.5 |
| East |
73.7 |
98.4 |
1.6 |
79.5 |
| West |
44.1 |
43.9 |
43.3 |
17.0 |
| Darfur |
40.6 |
41.5 |
35.1 |
17.2 |
| Kordofan |
49.9 |
47.6 |
57.5 |
15.5 |
|
In an
attempt to double-check the book's central conclusion of national
inequity, Alex Cobham of the University of Oxford
did a parallel study in 2005, including an analysis
of income generation and expenditure by region to determine if
there was a pattern of subsidies between regions. He
concluded,
There can be no doubt that the current dictatorship has
been pernicious for the human development of the regions outside of
the North and Khartoum. There can be no question that the data
support the claims made in the Black Book that the Sudan
has been governed to benefit those regions disproportionately at
the expense of all others.
Authorship and context
In the early 1980s
Islamist Hassan al-Turabi had returned from exile,
and in 1989 took power in a military
coup.
Al-Turabi appeared to promise political Islam as a solution; that
with hard work and honesty as part of the
Ummah, people could solve the political and social
problems afflicting the country. Many Muslims from the
disadvantaged regions of West, East and Central Sudan flocked to
al-Turabi and his message. However by the mid-1990s, the Islamist
project was collapsing due to entrenched
corruption and widespread anger at the
waste of lives in the
Second
Sudanese Civil War with the south. In 1998, al-Turabi managed
to position himself as Speaker of the House under the new
National Congress. However,
Ali Osman Mohamed Taha,
al-Turabi's former follower, defected to the side of al-Bashir and,
in December 1999, al-Bashir declared a state of emergency,
stripping al-Turabi of his position and power.
The book's critics, mainly government officials connected to
al-Bashir, have consistently claimed that it was made at the
direction of al-Turabi. Al-Turabi has denied any connection with
either the book or with the JEM. In interviews, writers have stated
that they, al-Turabi and the ruling government were all connected
through the
National Islamic
Front, but that al-Turabi had nothing to do with the writing of
the
Black Book.
The
writers trace their roots to 1993, when a cell of NIF members,
including Khalil Ibrahim, the former
Darfur Minister of Education, began meeting in secret in al-Fashir
to discuss the possibility of reforming the NIF
from within. A second clandestine cell formed in 1994 in
Kurdufan, and third in Khartoum in 1997.
Most of the Khartoum cell were university graduates and most were
Islamists. The year that the Khartoum cell was formed, the
dissidents decided that their first step should be to inform the
populace of the structural problems; a 25-man committee was set up
to gather information and begin writing. Julie Flint and
Alex de Waal call the
Black Book "the
obituary of the Islamic revolution". However, by the time of its
publication, the cell members had already decided that internal
reform was impossible and that armed resistance was the only course
of action. In 2001, they sent twenty of their leaders to begin
openly organizing and, in August 2001, Khalil Ibrahim announced the
existence of the
Justice
and Equality Movement, a group that would form a minority
partner with the secular rebel
Sudan Liberation Movement (SLM)
already active in Darfur. Exactly a year after the announcement,
Part II of the
Black Book was put up on the JEM website.
Almost all of the authors joined the JEM or secular resistance
movements. As of October 2006, the JEM continued its armed
rebellion in Darfur in a conflict that had
displaced hundreds of thousands.
Notes and references
- Black Book
- Abdullahi El-Tom, The Black Book of Sudan: Imbalance of Power and
Wealth in Sudan in Journal of African National
Affairs. 2003, Vol 1,2:25-35. (hosted by ossrea.net)
- Flint, Julie and Alex de Waal, Darfur: A Short History of a
Long War, Zed Books, London March 2006, ISBN 1-84277-697-5, p.
17
- Gérard Prunier, Darfur: The
Ambiguous Genocide, Cornell University Press, 2005, ISBN
0-8014-4450-0, p. 73
- William Wallis, "The Black Book history or Darfur's darkest chapter",
The Financial Times (copy hosted by
Sudan
Tribune), 20
August 2004
- Alex Cobham, "Causes of conflict in Sudan: Testing the Black Book",
Queen Elizabeth House Working Paper Number 121, University of
Oxford, January 2005, p. 17
- Flint and de Waal, p. 18
External links