Sudan Country Profile 2004
Sudan Country Profile 2004
December 2004
COUNTRY
Capital: Khartoum.
Other Major Cities: Omdurman, Khartoum North, Port Click to Enlarge Image
Sudan, Kassala, Al Ubayyid, and Nyala (according to decreasing
size, 1993 census).
Independence: Sudan gained independence from the United Kingdom and Egypt on January 1,
1956.
Public Holidays: Sudan observes the following public holidays: Independence Day (January 1,
2004), Feast of the Sacrifice/Id al-Adha (February 1, 2004*), Islamic New Year (February 22,
2004*), Uprising Day, anniversary of 1985 coup (April 6, 2004), Coptic Easter Monday/Sham
an-Nassim (April 12, 2004*), Birth of the Prophet/Mouloud (May 2, 2004*), Revolution Day
(June 30, 2004), end of Ramadan/Id al-Fitr (November 14, 2004*), and Christmas (December 25,
2004). The asterisk indicates holidays with variable dates according to the Islamic or Coptic
calendar.
Flag:
Sudans flag has three horizontal bands of red (top), white, and
black with a green isosceles triangle based on the hoist side.
Prehistory and Early History: Northern Sudan was inhabited by hunting and gathering peoples
by at least 60,000 years ago. These peoples had given way to pastoralists and probably
agriculturalists at least by the fourth millennium B.C. Sudans subsequent culture and history
have largely revolved around relations to the north with Egypt and to the south with tropical
Africa, the Nile River forming a bridge through the Sahara Desert between the two. The
Ancient Egyptians sent military expeditions into Nubia, the region between the first and second
Nile cataracts, and at times occupied Nubia as well as Cush, the land between the second and
sixth cataracts, the population becoming partially Egyptianized. From the early eighth century to
the mid-seventh century B. C., the Cushites conquered and ruled Egypt. By the early sixth
1
Library of Congress Federal Research Division Country Profile: Sudan, December 2004
century B.C., a Cushitic state, Meroe, had emerged that eventually extended southward almost to
present-day Khartoum. Meroe maintained commercial relations with the Roman world,
developed a distinctive culture and written language, and became the locale of an iron-working
industry. It succumbed to invasion in the mid-fourth century A. D.
By the sixth century, three states had emerged as the political and cultural heirs of the Meroitic
kingdom. All were ruled by warrior aristocracies who converted to Christianity, accepting the
Monophysite rite of Egypt. The church encouraged literacy, the use of Greek in liturgy
eventually giving way to the Nubian language. Arabic, however, gained importance after the
seventh century, especially as a medium for commerce. With the disintegration of the Christian
Nubian kingdoms by the fifteenth century, Islamic civilization and religion spread throughout
northern and eastern Sudan. Pastoralists from Egypt filtered into the land, gradually giving rise to
a new population composed of local Nubians and Muslim Arabs.
Islam and the Mahdi: The coming of Islam gradually changed the nature of Sudanese society
and facilitated the division of Sudan into northern and southern halves, one Arab, the other,
African. In the sixteenth century, the Ottoman Turks, governors of Egypt, claimed Nubia as a
dependency but exerted little authority beyond the Nile. Meanwhile, in central Sudan, a new
state called Funj arose with its capital at Sannar on the Blue Nile. The Funj checked the
expansion of the Arabs, in the process becoming devout Muslims themselves. In the west, the
Fur people formed the state of Darfur and similarly adopted Islam. Both states engaged in the
slave trade with Egypt.
Early in the nineteenth century, the Egyptians sent another military expedition into Sudan,
establishing a new administration known as the Turkiyah, or Turkish regime. The Egyptians
divided Sudan into provinces, and in 1835 Khartoum became the seat of a governor general.
They fostered the growth of Islamic law and institutions and organized and garrisoned the new
provinces of Bahr al Ghazal, Equatoria, and Upper Nile, home to the Nilotic Dinka, Nuer, and
Shilluk as well as the nonNilotic Azande. In 1874 Egypt conquered and annexed Darfur.
Slavery and the slave trade, age-old practices in Sudan, intensified during the nineteenth century.
Annual raids for slaves resulted in the capture of thousands of black Sudanese, the destruction of
the regions stability and economy, and a deep hatred of Arabs among the Southerners.
In the early 1880s, an Islamic cleric, seeking to create a purified form of Islam and to throw off
Ottoman rule from Egypt, took the title of Mahdi (the rightly guided one), and launched a
revolt against the Ottomans as well as against the British, who in 1882 had assumed control of
affairs in Egypt. By late 1885, the Mahdis forces, the Ansar, had driven the Egyptians out of
Sudan. Mahdist control of central and northern Sudan lasted until an Anglo-Egyptian army
defeated the Ansar in 1898. The next year, the Anglo-Egyptian Condominium in Sudan was
proclaimed, which provided for joint overlordship but which in effect placed control in British
hands.
Colonial Era: British authorities created a new administration in Sudan under a governor
general and provincial governors. Some economic development occurred, but it was confined to
the Nile Valleys settled areas. In 1916 the British terminated Darfurs independence by
annexing that sultanate. The three southern provinces, Bahr al Ghazal, Equatoria, and Upper
2
Library of Congress Federal Research Division Country Profile: Sudan, December 2004
Nile, were separated from the North economically and politically to allow the South to develop
in its own way, but in reality the region remained isolated and economically undeveloped.
Western missionaries introduced Christianity, established mission schools, and provided some
social services to the black population. Sudanese nationalism developed after World War I as an
Arab and Muslim phenomenon with its support base in the northern provinces. The nationalists
were divided between those who favored unification with Egypt and a pro-independence
movement. The latter prevailed, and on January 1, 1956, Britain granted independence to Sudan.
Negotiations between the regime and the SPLA produced results only after international
mediation. In June 2002, both sides agreed that a referendum on self-determination for the South
would be held within six years of a peace agreement and that in the interim the sharia would not
apply to non-Muslim Southerners. Subsequent negotiations produced a cease-fire in much of the
South, provisions governing national institutions, security arrangements, a formula for sharing
oil revenues, and a federal governing structure. These negotiations, however, were
overshadowed by a separate rebellion in Darfur that began in 2003 over alleged economic and
political marginalization. The al Bashir regime sent Arab militias into Darfur, whose atrocities
drew international condemnation, threats of sanctions from the United Nations, and, in late 2004,
emplacement of cease-fire monitoring troops from the African Union.
GEOGRAPHY
3
Library of Congress Federal Research Division Country Profile: Sudan, December 2004
Republic (1,165 kilometers), Chad (1,360 kilometers), Democratic Republic of the Congo (628
kilometers), Egypt (1,273 kilometers), Eritrea (605 kilometers), Ethiopia (1,606 kilometers),
Kenya (232 kilometers), Libya (383 kilometers), and Uganda (435 kilometers).
Disputed Territory: Two regions along the border with Egypt between the Nile River and the
Red Sea are in dispute, but Egypt administers the larger of the two contested parcels.
Length of Coastline: The length of Sudans Red Sea coastline is 716 kilometers.
Topography: The country is generally a broad, flat plain, with low mountains in the northeast
near the Red Sea coast, in the west, and on the southeast. An outcropping of low mountains in
the south-central region is known as the Nuba Mountains. The Nile River system divides the
eastern third from the western two-thirds of the country. In the North, the Nubian Desert lies to
the east of the Nile, the Libyan Desert to the west. Both are stony, virtually rainless, and dune-
covered. South of Khartoum, the vegetation gradually changes from dry grassland and woodland
to verdant savannah.
Principal Rivers: The Nile is the dominant geographic feature of Sudan, flowing 3,000
kilometers from Uganda in the south to Egypt in the north. Most of the country lies within its
catchment basin. The Blue Nile and the White Nile, originating in the Ethiopian highlands and
the Central African lakes, respectively, join at Khartoum to form the Nile River proper that flows
to Egypt. Other major tributaries of the Nile are the Bahr al Ghazal, Sobat, and Atbarah rivers.
Climate: The climate varies from tropical wet and dry seasons in the South to arid desert in the
North. Annual temperatures vary little at any single location. The rainy season (April to
November) and the length of the dry season constitute the most significant climatic variables.
Natural Resources: Petroleum is Sudans major natural resource. The country also has small
deposits of chromium ore, copper, gold, iron ore, mica, silver, tungsten, and zinc.
Land Use: Sudans total land area amounts to some 251 million hectares. About half of this land
is suitable for agriculture, of which about 17 million hectares are actually cultivated.
Environmental Factors: Sudan suffers from inadequate supplies of potable water, declining
wildlife populations because of warfare and excessive hunting, soil erosion, desertification, and
periodic droughts.
Time Zone: Local time in Sudan is Greenwich Mean Time plus three hours.
4
Library of Congress Federal Research Division Country Profile: Sudan, December 2004
SOCIETY
Population: Sudan has not had a comprehensive census since 1983. The most recent survey
occurred in 1993, which produced a population figure of 24.9 million, but it omitted the South
because of insecurity. As a result, most if not all demographic and social statistics are based on
dated and incomplete information. In 2003 the United Nations Population Division estimated
Sudans population at 33.6 million, a figure compatible with other estimates, although one or two
estimates were higher by several million. According to the United Nations, the annual growth
rate was 2.8 percent. The United Nations estimated the population density at 13.4 persons per
square kilometer, a misleading measurement because half of the population lives on
approximately 15 percent of the land, and the northern third of the country is quite thinly
populated. Estimates of urbanization ranged from 31 percent to 37 percent, with the greatest
concentration in the greater Khartoum area.
Demography: In 2004, 44 percent of the population (male 8,730,609; female 8,358,569) was
less than 15 years of age; 54 percent (male 10,588,634; female 10,571,199) was between the
ages of 15 and 64 years, and those aged 65 years and older accounted for slightly more than 2
percent (male 490,869; female 408,282). In the overall population, there were 1.02 males for
every female. The number of births per 1,000 population was 38; the number of deaths, 10. The
infant mortality rate per 1,000 live births was estimated at 69. The average number of lifetime
births per female was 5.4. Life expectancy at birth was an estimated average of 57 years (56
years for men, 58 years for women).
Ethnic Groups: Ethnic identity is highly fluid in Sudan and depends upon the criteria by which
individual groups of Sudanese distinguish themselves from other groups. The largest commonly
recognized ethnic groups are Arabs, Nubians, Beja, and Fur (all Northerners and Muslims), and
the Dinka, Nuer, Shilluk, and Nuba, all Nilotic peoples of the South. The Arabs and Dinka are
the largest groups within their respective regions. All of these ethnic groups are subdivided into
tribal or other units. In rough percentages, Sudans population is composed of 50 percent black
Africans, 40 percent Arabs, 6 percent Beja, and 34 percent other.
Languages: Sudan is home to a large number of languages. One authoritative source lists 134
spoken languages, with other estimates running up to 400, including numerous dialects. Arabic is
the official language and is the primary language in northern and central Sudan. English is
widely spoken as a second language in the North and to a lesser extent in the South. Other major
languages in the North are Nubian and Ta Bedawie (Beja). A diverse collection of languages
spoken in the South belong to the Niger-Kurdufanian and Nilo-Saharan language families.
Religion: On the basis of rough estimates, more than half of Sudans population is Muslim. Most
Muslims live in the North; however, significant non-Muslim groups are found in the Red Sea
Hills, the Nuba Mountains, and in the western part of the country. Estimates of the Christian
population range between 4 and 10 percent; Christians live mostly in the South and in Khartoum.
At least one-third of Sudanese, many of them Southerners, adhere to traditional religion.
Education and Literacy: Education is free and compulsory for children aged 6 to 13 years.
Primary education consists of six years, followed by three years of middle school and three years
5
Library of Congress Federal Research Division Country Profile: Sudan, December 2004
of secondary or technical instruction. The primary language at all levels is Arabic. Schools are
concentrated in urban areas; many in the South and West have been damaged or destroyed by
conflict. In 2001 the World Bank estimated that primary enrollment was 46 percent of eligible
pupils and 21 percent of secondary students. Enrollment varies widely, falling below 20 percent
in some provinces. Sudan has 19 universities; instruction is primarily in Arabic. Education at the
secondary and university levels has been seriously hampered by the requirement that most males
perform military service before completing their education.
According to World Bank estimates for 2002, the literacy rate in adults aged 15 years and older
was 60 percent. In 2000 the comparable figure was almost 58 percent (69 percent for males, 46
percent for females); youth illiteracy (ages 1524) was estimated at 23 percent.
Health and Welfare: Sudan is one of the poorest nations in the world, and what wealth the
country possesses is not widely distributed. Poverty is widespread, particularly in rural areas.
Outside urban areas, little health care is available, helping account for a relatively low average
life expectancy of 57 years and an infant mortality rate of 69 deaths per 1,000 live births, low by
standards in Middle Eastern but not African countries. For most of the period since independence
in 1956, Sudan has experienced civil war, which has diverted resources to military use that
otherwise might have gone into health care and training of professionals, many of whom have
migrated in search of more gainful employment. In 1996 the World Health Organization
estimated that there were only 9 doctors per 100,000 people, most of them in regions other than
the South. Substantial percentages of the population lack access to safe water and sanitary
facilities. Malnutrition is widespread outside the central Nile corridor because of population
displacement from war and from recurrent droughts; these same factors together with a scarcity
of medicines make diseases difficult to control. Child immunization against most major
childhood diseases, however, had risen to approximately 60 percent by the late 1990s from very
low rates in earlier decades. Spending on health care is quite lowonly 1 percent of gross
domestic product (GDP) in 1998 (latest data). The United Nations placed the rate of human
immunodeficiency virus/acquired immune deficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS) infection in late
2003 at 2.3 percent for adults, quite low by regional standards. The United Nations suggested,
however, that the rate could be as high as 7.2 percent. Between 400,000 and 1.3 million adults
and children were living with HIV, and AIDS deaths numbered 23,000. As of late 2004, some 4
million persons in the South had been internally displaced and more than 2 million had died or
been killed as a result of two decades of war. Comparable figures for Darfur were 1.6 million
displaced and 70,000 dead since fighting began there in early 2003.
ECONOMY
Overview: Sudan has significant natural resources, but since independence its economy has been
constrained by civil war, debt, and mismanagement. Although it has recently turned its economy
around with sound economic policies and infrastructure investments, it still faces formidable
economic problems, one of them the low level of per capita output. Since 1997 Sudan has been
implementing International Monetary Fund (IMF) macroeconomic reforms. In 1999 Sudan
began exporting crude oil and in the last quarter of 1999 recorded its first trade surplus, which,
along with improvements in monetary policy, has stabilized the exchange rate. Increased oil
6
Library of Congress Federal Research Division Country Profile: Sudan, December 2004
production, revived light industry, and expanded export processing zones yielded gross domestic
product (GDP) growth of an estimated 5.9 percent in 2003. Agriculture remains Sudan's most
important sector; however, most farming is rain-fed and susceptible to drought. Oil production
continues to rise annually and in 2003 constituted more than 80 percent of export earnings.
Chronic instability, including the long-standing civil war between the Muslim North and the
Christian/traditionalist South, the current rebellion in Darfur, adverse weather, and weak world
agricultural prices ensure that much of the population remains at or below the poverty line.
Sudan also suffers from endemic corruption, an undeveloped and neglected physical
infrastructure, and a financial system still in need of major reform. Wealth is concentrated in the
central Nile corridor region, the northern, eastern, southern, and western regions being markedly
less prosperous.
Gross Domestic Product (GDP): GDP was US$12 billion in 2001 and was estimated at
US$13.4 billion in 2002 and US$15.4 billion in 2003. Per capita GDP was about US$415 in
2002. Since 1999, economic growth has averaged about 6 percent annually, helping account for
an estimated doubling in the size of the economy between 1996 and 2003. In 2003 estimates,
GDP by sector was: agriculture, 39 percent; industry, 19 percent; and services, 4 percent.
Government Budget: The budget has been in chronic deficit from the early 1980s, largely as a
result of outlays for military campaigns against the Sudan Peoples Liberation Army. With the
advent of the structural adjustment program in 1997, new fiscal controls combined with new
revenues from the oil sector reduced the deficit from nearly 13 percent of gross domestic product
(GDP) in 1990 to less than 1 percent in and after the late 1990s. In 2002 total revenue amounted
to Sudanese dinars (SD) 470.6 billion (US$1.8 billion), and expenditures to SD503.4 (US$1.9
billion), including capital expenditures of SD118.6 billion (US$450 million). The deficit
amounted to SD32.8 billion (US$125 million).
Inflation: Sudan experienced high rates of inflation during the early 1990s, reaching 133 percent
in 1996. Since then, rates have declined through double digits to 8.4 percent in 2002 and 7.8
percent in 2003.
Agriculture, Forestry, and Fishing: Agriculture is the most important sector in Sudans
economy, employing some two-thirds of the population and contributing about 40 percent of
gross domestic product (GDP) in recent years. Grains (primarily sorghum) and livestock (camels,
cattle, goats, and sheep) form the backbone of the traditional economy. Sudan also produces
significant quantities of gum arabic, millet, peanuts, sesame, and sugarcane. Under the British,
the al Gezira irrigation project was developed and became a cotton-producing and exporting
region. More recently, dam and irrigation projects have been established at Kusti, Al Qadarif,
and Kassala. In the early 2000s, sesame and livestock are Sudans most important agricultural
exports. Forest products include gum arabic and charcoal. The Nile and its tributaries contain
abundant fish, Nile perch being commercially exploitable.
Mining and Minerals: Sudans mineral endowment consists of oil as well as asbestos, chromite,
copper, diamonds, gold, iron ore, mica, silver, talc, tungsten, uranium, and zinc. Aside from oil,
gold is the most valuable mineral export. Oil was discovered in the early 1980s in the South but
not exploited until the late 1990s because of insecurity. Although some petroleum is refined for
7
Library of Congress Federal Research Division Country Profile: Sudan, December 2004
the local market, most is exported as crude. Production in 2003 was about 300,000 barrels per
day, of which 200,000 barrels were exported and some 70,000 barrels per day consumed locally.
Production is expected to reach 500,000 barrels per day by late 2005. Reserves total 800 million
barrels, with estimates of up to three billion barrels.
Industry and Manufacturing: Despite recent investment and improved production, Sudans
manufacturing sector is quite small. Several refineries produce enough petroleum products to
meet local demand, with some available for export. Refined sugar and textiles are the chief
manufactures, sugar being a major export. Sudan also manufactures cement, cigarettes, edible
oils, soap, and shoes. The industrial sector grew more than 11 percent in 2000 after sluggish
growth during the 1990s.
Energy: In 2000 Sudans total installed electrical generating capacity was rated at more than
2,500 megawatts, but actual production was lower than rated capacity. About 46 percent was
produced by hydropower. New dams presently in the planning stage will increase hydropower
significantly. Much of the country lies outside the national power grid and uses diesel fuel to
generate power.
Services: Aside from banking and finance, communications, and transportation, Sudans
services sector is quite small. Despite considerable potential, tourism is restricted because of a
lack of reliable transport, hotel facilities, and general insecurity. In 2001, 50,000 tourists entered
the country, producing receipts of US$56 million.
Banking and Finance: The banking and financial sector has been troubled since at least 1970,
when all banks were nationalized and placed under control of the Bank of Sudan. Following the
coup of 1989 that brought the al Bashir regime to power, banking and finance were conducted
according to Islamic principles, which among other restrictions forbid payment of interest on
deposits. These restrictions, problems with capitalization, and non-performing loans greatly
reduced the profitability of banks and resulted in low levels of private investment during the
1990s. The sector was one of the targets of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) economic
restructuring program in 1997, which has led to some improvements. There are 25 banks, and in
the early 2000s half of them were wholly or partially privately owned. Since 2000, private-sector
credit has grown markedly, but a planned merger of banks into six banking groups to improve
financial strength and international competitiveness has not yet been implemented.
Labor: In 1999 the labor force numbered an estimated 9.7 million, of which two-thirds were
employed in agriculture.
Foreign Economic Relations: Until the late 1990s, Sudans external trade was largely confined
to Middle Eastern countries, Saudi Arabia and Libya in particular. The development of the oil
industry, however, reoriented Sudans trading patterns. China and Japan have emerged as the
chief destinations for oil, and China now supplies the majority of imports, with Saudi Arabia in
second place. Refined petroleum imports from Libya have virtually ceased, and although Saudi
Arabia continues as a major market for livestock and agricultural produce, the value of this trade
is well below that of oil. France, Germany, and the United Kingdom supply essential
manufactures. South Africa, South Korea, and Malaysia are other trading partners. Beginning in
8
Library of Congress Federal Research Division Country Profile: Sudan, December 2004
1993, Sudan was denied access to loans and financial support from the World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) because of unpaid debt arrearages. Although the IMF helped
design the structural adjustment program in 1997, IMF financing remains in suspension. In 1997
the United States charged Sudan with violations of human rights and support for international
terrorism and imposed economic sanctions, measures that were still in effect in 2004.
Imports, Exports, and Trade Balance: Development of the oil export industry drastically
altered the structure of Sudans foreign trade account, which has passed from average yearly
deficits of more than US$600 million during the 1990s to surpluses of US$300 million annually
from 2000 to 2002. In 2002 imports amounted to about US$1.7 billion on a free on board basis,
and exports totaled about US$1.9 billion on a free on board basis, leaving a trade balance of
more than US$200 million. Sudans major imports were machinery and equipment,
manufactured goods, refinery and transport equipment, wheat, and wheat flour. Oil and oil
products were the overwhelming export commodities at US$1.1 billion, followed by livestock
and meat at US$103 million.
Balance of Payments: Sudan had a record of large balance of payment deficits averaging
US$621 million annually during the 1990s. In 2002 the deficit was US$747 million, as positive
balances in trade and current transfers (largely remittances from Sudanese working abroad) were
more than offset by outflows for services and return of capital and profits to foreign firms in the
oil sector. For 2003 the deficit was estimated at US$1.4 billion. During the next few years, as
repayment of foreign capital for development of the oil industry declines, analysts estimate that
the balance of payments should approach equilibrium.
External Debt: Sudan accumulated a sizable foreign debt in the 1970s and 1980s, partly to
finance a development program but also because of rising interest rates and prices for imported
oil. Repayment has so far proven to be beyond the countrys means. Between 1999 and 2002,
total foreign debt averaged US$15.9 billion. In 2003 the World Bank estimated the debt at
US$17.1 billion. The International Monetary Fund (IMF), however, placed the figure at more
than US$24 billion. Most of the debt represents government borrowings from bilateral and
multilateral lenders, an estimated 90 percent of it in arrears.
Foreign Investment: In 2003 foreign direct investment rose to US$1.4 billion, double the
previous years total and much higher than investments of the 1990s. Most of these funds were
invested in the oil and electric power sectors.
Foreign Aid: Sudan receives a significant amount of relief aid from international organizations
to alleviate the effects of civil wars in the South and in Darfur. Amounts vary according to the
intensity of the conflicts and rainfall patterns, both of which affect food production. Much aid is
channeled through the United Nations, which sought to raise US$225 million for its programs in
200304.
Currency and Exchange Rate: Sudans currency is the Sudanese dinar (SD). On March 1,
1999, the Sudanese pound was replaced by the Sudanese dinar, equivalent to 10 Sudanese
pounds. The pound was withdrawn from circulation on July 31,1999. In late 2004, the exchange
rate per US$1 was SD255.7.
9
Library of Congress Federal Research Division Country Profile: Sudan, December 2004
Roads: Sudan has between 20,000 and 25,000 kilometers of roads. Of these, only about 3,500
kilometers are paved, and 4,000 kilometers are all-weather gravel roads; the remainder are tracks
passable according to weather conditions. The main road, accounting for half of the paved
surface, connects Port Sudan with Khartoum via Kassala.
Railroads: Sudan has 4,725 kilometers of narrow-guage, single-track railroads that serve the
northern and central portions of the country. The main line runs from Wadi Halfa on the
Egyptian border to Khartoum and southwest to Al Ubayyid via Sannar and Kusti, with
extensions to Nyala in Southern Darfur and Waw in Bahr al Ghazal. Other lines connect Atbarah
and Sannar with Port Sudan, and Sannar with Ad Damazin. A 1,400-kilometer line serves the al
Gezira cotton-growing region. A modest effort to upgrade rail transport is currently underway to
reverse decades of neglect and declining efficiency. Service on some lines may be interrupted
during the rainy season.
Ports: Sudan has two ports on the Red Sea coast, Port Sudan and Sawakin. Major inland ports,
all on the White Nile, include Khartoum, Kusti, Malakal, Juba, and Nimule on the border with
Uganda.
Inland Waterways: Sudan has more than 4,000 kilometers of navigable waterways centered on
the Nile and its tributaries, but only about 1,700 kilometers are navigable year-round. Barriers to
navigation include the six cataracts on the main Nile north of Khartoum, variations in seasonal
flow, a series of dams, and the Sudd, the vast papyrus-choked swamp on the upper White Nile.
Since the mid-1980s, security problems associated with the rebellion in the South have hindered
navigation south of Malakal.
10
Library of Congress Federal Research Division Country Profile: Sudan, December 2004
Civil Aviation and Airports: The national carrier, Sudan Airways, provides international
service to Europe, Africa, and the Middle East as well as domestic service, over which it holds a
monopoly. In the past, it has experienced problems with a lack of trained personnel, scheduling,
and maintenance. Currently, efforts are underway to privatize the company. Sudan has an
estimated 63 airports, but only 12 have paved runways. The most important is Khartoum
International Airport, followed by Port Sudan, Al Ubayyid, and Al Fashir.
Pipelines: In August 1999, a 1,610-kilometer pipeline was completed to carry oil from oil fields
in the South to an export terminal on the Red Sea near Port Sudan. By 2003 the pipeline had
been extended by 600-plus kilometers, and an 810-kilometer line carried refined petroleum
products. A 156-kilometer line carries natural gas.
Government Overview: The national government is an authoritarian regime with the trappings
of a parliamentary system. A new constitution, approved in 1998, provides for separate
executive, legislative, and judicial functions and contains guarantees of freedom of association,
religion, and thought. Some clauses have been in suspension since late 1999. The executive
branch is headed by a president, who currently serves also as prime minister and commander in
chief of the armed forces. Cabinet members are appointed by the president with approval by
parliament. The legislative branch is composed of the 360-seat National Assembly, of which 270
members are popularly elected and 90 specially selected by a National Congress composed of
influential interest groups. Parliamentarians serve four-year terms and have been supportive of
the government. Sudans government is run by an alliance of the military and the National
Congress Party, formerly the National Islamic Front, and has generally pursued an Islamist
agenda. The current president is Lieutenant General Umar Hassan Ahmad al Bashir, who came
to power in a military coup in 1989. He was popularly elected in 1996 and 2000.
Administrative Divisions: Sudan is divided into 26 states (wilayat): A'ali an Nil, Al Bahr al
Ahmar, Al Buhayrat, Al Jazirah, Al Khartum, Al Qadarif, Al Wahdah, An Nil al Abyad, An Nil
11
Library of Congress Federal Research Division Country Profile: Sudan, December 2004
al Azraq, Ash Shamaliyah, Bahr al Jabal, Gharb al Istiwa'iyah, Gharb Bahr al Ghazal, Gharb
Darfur, Gharb Kurdufan, Janub Darfur, Janub Kurdufan, Junqali, Kassala, Nahr an Nil, Shamal
Bahr al Ghazal, Shamal Darfur, Shamal Kurdufan, Sharq al Istiwa'iyah, Sinnar, and Warab.
Provincial and Local Government: Beginning in 1983, Sudan was divided into five regions in
the North and three in the South, each headed by a military governor. In 1997 the eight regions
were replaced with 26 states, whose senior officials are appointed by the president. State budgets
are also allocated from Khartoum.
Judicial and Legal System: The constitution provides for a High Court, an attorney general, and
civil and special religious courts; it also grants recognition to tribal courts. The legal system is
based on English common law and Islamic law. As of March 1991, strict Islamic Law was
imposed on the country except for the three southern provinces. It applies in the northern states
regardless of religious affiliation.
Electoral System: A national electoral commission determines guidelines for elections and
referendums. Voting eligibility is defined as 17 years of age. The last national elections, held in
December 2000, were boycotted by opposition parties, who viewed them as unfair.
Political Parties: Following the military coup of 1989, all political parties were banned. The
constitution of 1998 permits political associations provided that they register with the
government, accept the legality of the 1998 constitution, and do not practice violence or advocate
the overthrow of the present regime. More than 30 parties are registered with the authorities.
Among the most important parties and their leaders are: the National Congress Party (NCP)
under President al Bashir and party secretary general Ibrahim Ahmed Umar, successor to the
former National Islamic Front (NIF); Popular National Congress (PNC) under Hassan al Turabi;
Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) under Osman al Mirghani; and Umma Party (UP) under Sadiq
al Mahdi. The National Democratic Alliance (NDA), a grouping of several opposition parties
under the chairmanship of Osman al Mirghani, is based in Asmara, Eritrea. Among its members
are the Sudan Peoples Liberation Army (SPLA), under Colonel John Garang, and the Sudan
Peoples Liberation Movement (SPLM), under Mansour Khalid (the SPLM is the political wing
of the SPLA).
Mass Media: Sudan has a large number of local and national newspapers. The major national
dailies are published in Arabic or English. Sudan Television broadcasts 60 hours of
programming a week. The Sudan National Broadcasting Corporation airs radio programming in
Arabic, English, French, and Swahili. Radio and television stations are state-controlled entities
and serve as outlets for the government viewpoint. Journalists and the papers they serve,
although subject to government censorship, operate with more freedom and independence than in
most neighboring countries or Arab states. The Voice of Sudan, sponsored by the National
Democratic Alliance, broadcasts in Arabic and English. The Sudan Peoples Liberation Army
issues its own newspapers and journals.
Foreign Relations: Throughout the 1990s, Sudans foreign relations have been governed by the
desire to spread Islamism throughout eastern Africa and the Middle East, in keeping with the
program of the National Islamic Front, and by the course of the civil war between Northerners
12
Library of Congress Federal Research Division Country Profile: Sudan, December 2004
and Southerners. Relations with Arab countries as well as its neighbors have varied from cordial
and supportive to antagonistic and quarrelsome according to the degree that the regime pursued
or relaxed its Islamist agenda or pressed or accommodated its Southern opponents. At times,
Sudan has supported regional insurgencies against several of its fellow Arab states. In 1995 the
government was accused of complicity in the attempted assassination of Egyptian president
Hosni Mubarak. Although this action brought down international sanctions upon the country,
Egypt eventually withdrew its charges and the matter passed. Relations with Libya, Eritrea,
Ethiopia, and Uganda have experienced wide swings; in the case of the latter three, the degree of
their support or opposition to the Sudan Peoples Liberation Army (SPLA) and other opposition
groups has been the overriding consideration. By the late 1990s, Sudans relations with its
neighbors were either strained or broken. Since 2000, the al Bashir regime has sought to improve
its standing through rapprochement and accommodation. Relations with several European
nations have been relatively good, especially those with France. Relations with the United States
have been far less so, although there has been some improvement since 2000.
Sudan is also a party to all twelve international conventions and protocols relating to terrorism,
including the African Unions Convention on the Prevention and Combating of Terrorism;
Convention of the Organization of the Islamic Conference on Combating Terrorism; and
International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism.
NATIONAL SECURITY
Armed Forces Overview: As of 2004, the Sudanese People's Armed Forces numbered an
estimated 105,000 members. The army is by far the largest unit, the air force and navy being
13
Library of Congress Federal Research Division Country Profile: Sudan, December 2004
much smaller. Irregulars, including former rebel militias and tribesmen, supplement the armys
strength.The armed forces are charged with defense of Sudans external borders and with
preservation of internal security. Sudans military forces have historically been hampered by
limited and outdated equipment, poor maintenance capabilities, and inadequate training.
Capabilities were further eroded during the 1990s by dismissals in the professional officer corps.
These constraints are such that Sudans army must rely on Arab militias and even former rebels
as it campaigns against opposition forces in southern and eastern provinces and in Darfur. At
least some of the rebels in these regions are former army personnel. Since the late 1990s, the
government has used oil revenues to purchase modern weapons, most of which come from
Libya, China, and Russia. Other sources of modest military support include Syria, Iran, and, in
the past, Iraq. There is no evidence that Sudan has access to biological, chemical, or nuclear
weapons.
Foreign Military Relations: China, Russia, and Libya are the major suppliers of military
equipment, with lesser amounts coming from Iran and Syria. The Sudan Peoples Liberation
Army (SPLA) receives assistance from Kenya and Uganda; in the past, Zimbabwe and Namibia
also supplied the SPLA with equipment. The National Democratic Alliance receives both
military and political support from Eritrea. The extent of foreign assistance to the Darfur rebels is
unknown at present.
External Threat: Although Sudan has had troubled relations with several of its neighbors in the
past, Eritrea in particular, it faces no significant external threats at present.
Defense Budget: The International Institute for Strategic Studies estimated the defense budget
for 2004 at US$465 million.
Major Military Units: The Sudanese army numbers 105,000 soldiers, including 20,000
conscripts, organized into 10 divisions, including 1 armored, 1 mechanized, and 6 infantry
divisions. The navy, with bases at Port Sudan and Marsa Gwiyai on the Red Sea and at
Khartoum, has 1,800 personnel, and the air force, 3,000, including air defense forces. All figures
are 2004 estimates from the International Institute for Strategic Studies.
Major Military Equipment: The army has 270 tanks, 218 reconnaissance vehicles, 316
armored vehicles, 470 artillery pieces, 635 multiple rocket launchers, 40 recoilless launchers, 40
attack guns, 1,000 air defense guns, and 54 surface-to-air missiles. The navy has 2 inshore patrol
craft and about 16 river patrol boats. The air force has an estimated 27 combat aircraft
(serviceability questionable), 10 armed helicopters, 25 unarmed helicopters, and 5 batteries of
surface-to-air missiles.
Military Service: Eligibility for service begins at age 18 and runs to age 30. Conscripts serve for
two years.
Paramilitary Forces: The Popular Defense Force, the military wing of the National Islamic
Front, consists of 10,000 active members, with 85,000 reserves. It has been deployed alongside
regular army units against various rebel groups.
14
Library of Congress Federal Research Division Country Profile: Sudan, December 2004
Foreign Military Forces: Sudan and Uganda have agreed to allow their armed forces to operate
across their mutual border in pursuit of various groups of insurgents. As of mid-2004, the
Uganda Peoples Defense Forces were in pursuit of Ugandan rebel forces in southern Sudan. In
mid-November 2004, the African Union had nearly 800 military observers and peacekeeping
troops in Darfur to monitor a cease-fire between the government militia and local rebels. More
than 3,000 peacekeepers are foreseen by early 2005.
Police: Sudans police are composed of a number of separate units known collectively as the
United Police Forces. These include the States Police, who function on the federal level as well
as in each of the 26 states, and the Utilities Police, who work in various state utilities,
institutions, and corporations. All are under the control of the Ministry of Interior.
Internal Threat: The central government faces armed resistance from a number of opposition
groups, several of which have joined together in the National Democratic Alliance: the Sudan
Peoples Liberation Army (SPLA), consisting of 20,00030,000 men divided into four factions
and located mainly in southern Sudan; Sudan Alliance Forces, with an estimated strength of 500
fighters, who operate along the Eritrean border; Beja Congress Forces, with an estimated
strength of 500 men, who operate on the Eritrean border; and New Sudan Brigade, whose forces
number some 2,000 and who are also located on the Eritrean border. Since February 2003, two
guerrilla groups, the Sudanese Liberation Army and the Justice and Equality Movement, have
taken up arms in Darfur. The SPLAs fortunes have waxed and waned, and at times it has
controlled wide swaths of territory in the South. Its successes have helped compel the al Bashir
regime to enter into peace negotiations on several occasions, most notably since 2002. The
smaller groups along the Eritrean border are far less significant, but the Darfur groups control
territory in the far West and attack government outposts and towns at will. Aside from these
major groups, a number of smaller rebel units pursue their own agendas. Government control is
tenuous outside the central populated region surrounding Khartoum.
Terrorism: Sudan has a long history of protecting terrorists and of condoning their actions. In
March 1973, Palestinian terrorists murdered the American ambassador to Sudan. In the early to
mid-1990s, Khartoum was home to several well-known international terrorists, including Abu
Nidal and Osama bin Laden, and in 1995 the Sudanese government was accused of complicity in
the attempted assassination of Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak in Addis Ababa. In 1993 the
United States designated Sudan as a state sponsor of terrorism because of the National Islamic
Fronts reported links with international terrorist networks, and in 1998 the United States
launched missiles at an alleged chemical munitions factory in Khartoum in response to terrorist
attacks in East Africa. Sudan also has been accused of providing training facilities for various
terrorist organizations. Since 2000, Sudan has reversed its policies and begun to cooperate with
international counterterrorism efforts. Sudan is a party to all twelve international conventions
and protocols relating to terrorism.
Human Rights: The governments attitude toward human rights has been conditioned by its
Islamist convictions. The al Bashir regime has regarded Islam as a state religion and sharia as the
law of the land without regard for other religious beliefs and practices. It has pursued policies of
Arabization and Islamization, although recently there has been some relaxation of this stance
with regard to Southerners. It has placed important restrictions on freedoms of assembly, speech,
15
Library of Congress Federal Research Division Country Profile: Sudan, December 2004
religious practice, and political association. The media, although tightly controlled, operate with
a greater degree of independence than in many neighboring countries. Personal rights are often
not respected, especially with regard to women. The judicial system is not independent and is
subject to government interference, including proceedings in the countrys courts. Conditions in
prisons are harsh and long sentences common. Security forces, including the police, routinely
disregard basic human rights; similar abuses have been perpetrated by Southern opposition
forces. Recent accords between Southerners and the government provide for respect of legal and
religious differences in the South. In Darfur, soldiers and government-sanctioned militias
continue to destroy villages and crops, engage in murder and rape, and drive the inhabitants into
refugee camps. The al Bashir regime has restricted or blocked delivery of humanitarian aid in
Darfur, but access to the South has improved significantly. Northerners continue their age-old
practice of enslaving black Africans from the South; Southerners practice their own version of
enslavement.
16