INDEPENDENT
SUDAN
The Azhari government temporarily
halted progress toward self-determination for Sudan, hoping to promote
unity with Egypt. Although his pro-Egyptian NUP had won a majority in the
1953 parliamentary elections, Azhari realized that popular opinion had
shifted against union with Egypt. As a result, Azhari, who had been the
major spokesman for the "unity of the Nile Valley," reversed the NUP's
stand and supported Sudanese independence. On December 19, 1955, the Sudanese
parliament, under Azhari's leadership, unanimously adopted a declaration
of independence; on January 1, 1956, Sudan became an independent republic.
Azhari called for the withdrawal of foreign troops and requested the condominium
powers to sponsor a plebiscite in advance of the scheduled date.
The Politics of Independence
Sudan achieved independence without
the rival political parties having agreed on the form and content of a
permanent constitution. Instead, the Constituent Assembly adopted a document
known as the Transitional Constitution, which replaced the governor general
as head of state with a five-member Supreme Commission that was elected
by a parliament composed of an indirectly elected Senate and a popularly
elected House of Representatives. The Transitional Constitution also allocated
executive power to the prime minister, who was nominated by the House of
Representatives and confirmed in office by the Supreme Commission.
Although it achieved independence
without conflict, Sudan inherited many problems from the condominium. Chief
among these was the status of the civil service. The government placed
Sudanese in the administration and provided compensation and pensions for
British officers of the Sudan Political Service who left the country; it
retained those who could not be replaced, mostly technicians and teachers.
Khartoum achieved this transformation quickly and with a minimum of turbulence,
although southerners resented the replacement of British administrators
in the south with northern Sudanese. To advance their interests, many southern
leaders concentrated their efforts in Khartoum, where they hoped to win
constitutional concessions. Although determined to resist what they perceived
to be Arab imperialism, they were opposed to violence. Most southern representatives
supported provincial autonomy and warned that failure to win legal concessions
would drive the south to rebellion.
The parliamentary regime introduced
plans to expand the country's education, economic, and transportation sectors.
To achieve these goals, Khartoum needed foreign economic and technical
assistance, to which the United States made an early commitment. Conversations
between the two governments had begun in mid-1957, and the parliament ratified
a United States aid agreement in July 1958. Washington hoped this agreement
would reduce Sudan's excessive reliance on a one-crop (cotton) economy
and would facilitate the development of the country's transportation and
communications infrastructure.
The prime minister formed a coalition
government in February 1956, but he alienated the Khatmiyyah by supporting
increasingly secular government policies. In June some Khatmiyyah members
who had defected from the NUP established the People's Democratic Party
(PDP) under Mirghani's leadership. The Umma and the PDP combined in parliament
to bring down the Azhari government. With support from the two parties
and backing from the Ansar and the Khatmiyyah, Abd Allah Khalil put together
a coalition government.
Major issues confronting Khalil's
coalition government included winning agreement on a permanent constitution,
stabilizing the south, encouraging economic development, and improving
relations with Egypt. Strains within the Umma-PDP coalition hampered the
government's ability to make progress on these matters. The Umma, for example,
wanted the proposed constitution to institute a presidential form of government
on the assumption that Abd ar Rahman al Mahdi would be elected the first
president. Consensus was lacking about the country's economic future. A
poor cotton harvest followed the 1957 bumper cotton crop, which Sudan had
been unable to sell at a good price in a glutted market. This downturn
depleted Sudan's reserves and caused unrest over government-imposed economic
restrictions. To overcome these problems and finance future development
projects, the Umma called for greater reliance on foreign aid. The PDP,
however, objected to this strategy because it promoted unacceptable foreign
influence in Sudan. The PDP's philosophy reflected the Arab nationalism
espoused by Gamal Abdul Nasser, who had replaced Egyptian leader Naguib
in 1954. Despite these policy differences, the Umma-PDP coalition lasted
for the remaining year of the parliament's tenure. Moreover, after the
parliament adjourned, the two parties promised to maintain a common front
for the 1958 elections.
The electorate gave a plurality
in both houses to the Umma and an overall majority to the Umma-PDP coalition.
The NUP, however, won nearly one-quarter of the seats, largely from urban
centers and from Gezira Scheme agricultural workers. In the south, the
vote represented a rejection of the men who had cooperated with the government--voters
defeated all three southerners in the preelection cabinet--and a victory
for advocates of autonomy within a federal system. Resentment against the
government's taking over mission schools and against the measures used
in suppressing the 1955 mutiny contributed to the election of several candidates
who had been implicated in the rebellion.
After the new parliament convened,
Khalil again formed an Umma-PDP coalition government. Unfortunately, factionalism,
corruption, and vote fraud dominated parliamentary deliberations at a time
when the country needed decisive action with regard to the proposed constitution
and the future of the south. As a result, the Umma-PDP coalition failed
to exercise effective leadership.
Another issue that divided the parliament
concerned SudaneseUnited States relations. In March 1958, Khalil signed
a technical assistance agreement with the United States. When he presented
the pact to parliament for ratification, he discovered that the NUP wanted
to use the issue to defeat the Umma-PDP coalition and that many PDP delegates
opposed the agreement. Nevertheless, the Umma, with the support of some
PDP and southern delegates, managed to obtain approval of the agreement.
Factionalism and bribery in parliament,
coupled with the government's inability to resolve Sudan's many social,
political, and economic problems, increased popular disillusion with democratic
government. Specific complaints included Khartoum's decision to sell cotton
at a price above world market prices. This policy resulted in low sales
of cotton, the commodity from which Sudan derived most of its income. Restrictions
on imports imposed to take pressure off depleted foreign exchange reserves
caused consternation among town dwellers who had become accustomed to buying
foreign goods. Moreover, rural northerners also suffered from an embargo
that Egypt placed on imports of cattle, camels, and dates from Sudan. Growing
popular discontent caused many antigovernment demonstrations in Khartoum.
Egypt also criticized Khalil and suggested that it might support a coup
against his government. Meanwhile, reports circulated in Khartoum that
the Umma and the NUP were near agreement on a new coalition that would
exclude the PDP and Khalil.
On November 17, 1958, the day parliament
was to convene, a military coup occurred. Khalil, himself a retired army
general, planned the preemptive coup in conjunction with leading Umma members
and the army's two senior generals, Ibrahim Abbud and Ahmad Abd al Wahab,
who became leaders of the military regime. Abbud immediately pledged to
resolve all disputes with Egypt, including the long-standing problem of
the status of the Nile River. Abbud abandoned the previous government's
unrealistic policies regarding the sale of cotton. He also appointed a
constitutional commission, headed by the chief justice, to draft a permanent
constitution. Abbud maintained, however, that political parties only served
as vehicles for personal ambitions and that they would not be reestablished
when civilian rule was restored.