In order to assess the credibility of 
                      the New Sudan Council of Churches, one must examine the 
                      situation within those areas in which it exists. These are 
                      areas controlled by the SPLA.
                      
                    
                    This organisation has 
                      been described by the New York Times, no friend of 
                      the Sudanese government, as "brutal and predatory" 
                      and "an occupying army, killing, raping and pillaging". 
                      SPLA leader John Garang has been described by the same newspaper 
                      as a "pre-eminent war criminal". In December 1999, 
                      Human Rights Watch stated that:
                     
                      The SPLA has a history 
                        of gross abuses of human rights and has not made any effort 
                        to establish accountability. Its abuses today remain serious.
                    
                    Human Rights Watch has 
                      pointed to summary executions, arbitrary arrests and food 
                      aid theft from civilians in famine areas by the SPLA. Established 
                      and respected humanitarian organisations such as CARE, Save 
                      the Children, World Vision, Church World Service and the 
                      American Refugee Committee have jointly stated that the 
                      SPLA is guilty of "the most serious human rights abuses". 
                      The SPLA's involvement in ethnic cleansing in parts of southern 
                      Sudan is also clear. Most recently, for example, the BBC 
                      has reported growing friction in SPLA-controlled areas of 
                      southern Sudan, specifically within Didinga areas:
                     
                      The Didinga have accused 
                        the SPLA of becoming an army of occupation in the area. 
                      
                    
                    In addition, the Roman 
                      Catholic Church in southern Sudan has accused the SPLA rebel 
                      movement of stealing 65 percent of the food aid going into 
                      those parts of southern Sudan controlled by the SPLA. Agence 
                      France Press also reported that:
                     
                       
                        Much of the relief 
                          food going to more than a million famine victims in 
                          rebel-held areas of southern Sudan is ending up in the 
                          hands of the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA), 
                          relief workers said Tuesday.
                      
                    
                    This food aid was often 
                      quite literally taken out of the mouths of starving southern 
                      Sudanese men, women and children at the height of the 1998 
                      famine. 
                    While the New Sudan Council 
                      of Churches is publicly committed to speaking on behalf 
                      of southern Sudanese people, particularly in respect of 
                      political, civil and human rights, the NSCC is silent on 
                      all these and many other gross violations of human rights 
                      by the SPLA throughout southern Sudan. Leaving aside its 
                      politicised origins, it is only fair to note as African 
                      Rights has stated, that the NSCC exists "in a society 
                      which is dominated by armed.movements", and that its 
                      leaders are "personally vulnerable", 
                    It is a matter of record, 
                      for example, that the chairman of the New Sudan Council 
                      of Churches, the Roman Catholic Bishop of Torit, Bishop 
                      Paride Taban, has, in the words of African Rights, been 
                      subjected to "vicious treatment". Bishop Taban 
                      was imprisoned and publicly humiliated by the SPLA. African 
                      Rights also reported that nuns under his care had been raped 
                      by John Garang's forces. Church property was looted or destroyed. 
                      Bishop Taban was again imprisoned and mistreated by SPLA 
                      gunmen in 1992. Church property was again stolen. Given 
                      this level of intimidation, it is perhaps unsurprising that 
                      any NSCC criticism of human rights abuses has been mostly 
                      directed at the government.
                    Nonetheless, the inability 
                      or disinclination of the New Sudan Council of Churches to 
                      speak out on the appalling human rights violations amongst 
                      their very own parishioners can only but detract from their 
                      objectivity and reliability as commentators and witnesses 
                      on Sudanese affairs.
                    The New Sudan Council 
                      of Churches' political orientation, forced or otherwise, 
                      has certainly followed a pro-Garang line. This was clearly 
                      manifested in the wake of the fragmentation of the SPLA 
                      in 1991 when several senior rebel commanders broke away 
                      from John Garang, accusing him of "war lordism", 
                      human rights abuses and using child soldiers. Commenting 
                      on this support for Garang, the SPLA-United grouping, one 
                      of the breakaway rebel factions, stated that the NSCC was 
                      not a neutral body. A SPLA-United leader, Dr Lam Akol, said 
                      that: "Most of the Church leaders happened to be in 
                      the area where Garang was, and could not resist the pressures 
                      of taking sides." The NSCC has also been accused of 
                      bias in its allocation of aid. African Rights quotes the 
                      leader of another rival grouping to the SPLA as saying that: 
                      "As a structure, NSCC is behind Garang. He was the 
                      one who started it, and they are still close to him. Their 
                      resources are almost all channelled to his areas." 
                    
                    African Rights' study 
                      of churches in southern Sudan, Great Expectations: The 
                      Civil Roles of the Churches in Southern Sudan, placed 
                      on record the fatal limitations on the New Sudan Council 
                      of Churches:
                     
                       
                        Church leaders in 
                          the New Sudan recall the anti-church stand of the SPLA 
                          in its early days, and observe continuing repression 
                          against dissenters. Even the most courageous Church 
                          leaders have been selective in their criticisms, choosing 
                          not to name certain commanders responsible for abuses.
                      
                    
                    Even currently serving 
                      SPLA national executive members such as Dr Peter Nyaba have 
                      described SPLA abuses, abuses seemingly ignored by the NSCC: 
                    
                     
                       
                        (W)ithout sufficient 
                          justification, the SPLA turned their guns on the civilian 
                          population in many parts of the South.the SPLM/A.degenerated 
                          into an agent of plunder, pillage and destructive conquest.The 
                          SPLA became like an army of occupation in the areas 
                          it controlled and from which the people were running 
                          away.
                      
                    
                    Given that African Rights 
                      also makes it clear that little if any attention is paid 
                      to complaints by the New Sudan Council of Churches, or individual 
                      churches, about allegations of SPLA murders, ethnic cleansing, 
                      armed robbery, rape, forced labour, food aid diversion, 
                      punishment beatings or theft, the effectiveness of the NSCC 
                      on the issue of human rights is unclear, save perhaps in 
                      its directed, "selective" and somewhat propagandistic 
                      use by the SPLA against the government of Sudan.
                    An example of this use 
                      were the comments made by Haruun Ruun, the executive director 
                      of the NSCC, to an American church group, when he described 
                      the SPLA as:
                     
                       
                        a guerilla movement 
                          of mostly Christian and animist Africans fighting for 
                          autonomy from the Arab Muslims based in the north. The 
                          reasons behind this movement are unequal opportunity 
                          in economics and education, racial and religious discrimination, 
                          and suppression of human rights, especially freedom 
                          of religion.
                      
                    
                    Ruun is conspicuously 
                      silent about the well-documented pattern of human rights 
                      abuse and suppression of human rights and civil liberties 
                      in the parts of southern Sudan in which the NSCC is itself 
                      active, choosing instead to echo SPLA positions.
                    Despite the fact that 
                      it is clearly compromised, the New Sudan Council of Churches 
                      is presented to, and accepted by, many outsiders as an independent 
                      body in southern Sudan. An all too typical example was the 
                      presentation of Runn, and the NSCC program director, Emmanuel 
                      Lowila, by World Relief, the humanitarian arm of the National 
                      Association of Evangelicals, as Sudanese church leaders 
                      who were to "provide perspective on critical Sudan 
                      issues at consultation for U.S. Church Leaders", and 
                      that Ruun and Lowila would share "their hopes and goals" 
                      and would help "their American counterparts work through 
                      their questions and concerns" about Sudan. Sudan Church 
                      Leaders. There can be little surprise that so many American 
                      and Canadian perspectives on Sudan have been flawed with 
                      groups such as the NSCC providing a skewed and demonstrably 
                      "selective" reading of events within Sudan. 
                    This state of affairs is not a healthy one. Given its political 
                    affinity with the SPLA, and a marked reluctance to criticise 
                    the SPLA to any meaningful extent, for international observers 
                    to unreservedly accept NSCC perspectives on human rights, 
                    political developments and peace in Sudan can only but serve 
                    to further distort an already muddied picture. At best the 
                    NSCC serves as an apologist for the SPLA, and at worst a propagandist. 
                    Considerable caution must be exercised in assessing statements 
                    and claims made by the New Sudan Council of Churches.