Bona Malwal
Bona Malwal Madut Ring was a South Sudanese journalist, politician and government official known for his advocacy for self-determination and secession for southern Sudan. A member of the Dinka ethnic group, he pursued his education in journalism and economics in the United States, earning degrees from Indiana University and Columbia University. His career transitioned from an early stint as an Information Officer to journalism, including Editor-in-Chief positions at various Sudanese newspapers including the Southern Front's mouthpiece, The Vigilant.
Malwal co-founded the Southern Front, served in the national assembly, and held ministerial positions, advocating for cultural, informational policies, and economic development before and during Gaafar Nimeiry's era.
He also notably resigned in protest against the imposition of Sharia law and Arabic as Sudan's official language after the 1977 National Reconciliation, before later joining the Southern Sudan Autonomous Region's government. In the 1990s, he advocated against human right abuses in Sudan while in self-exile.
He played a role in peace negotiations and South Sudan's independence, occasionally aligning with controversial figures like Omar al-Bashir, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court for orchestrating the Darfur genocide. Malwal's advocacy for South Sudanese self-determination alongside his critical stance against both northern and southern leaders stirred controversies, including accusations of exacerbating ethnic tensions and his involvement in conflicts and divisive statements, including his views on other ethnic groups. Malwal's family remains influential in South Sudanese politics and diplomacy.
Early life and education
Bona Malwal Madut Ring was born in Twic Mayardit County, Bahr El Ghazal, Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. He is from the Dinka ethnic group and is the son of a Gogrial Dinka chief. Malwal completed a diploma in journalism from Indiana University in 1963 on a scholarship, followed by a bachelor's degree in economics and a Master of Arts in journalism and communications, both from Columbia University in 1969.Journalistic career
In his early years, he became an Information Officer in Wau between 1951 and 1961, but then Malwal pursued a career in journalism, joining the government newspaper Sudan Dailys editorial board in 1961.Malwal became the editor-in-chief of the Southern Front's mouthpiece, The Vigilant, an English-language newspaper in Sudan. The journal was founded on 23 March 1965. Publication of The Vigilant was interrupted between July 1965 and January 1966, following the publishing of articles about the massacres in Juba and Wau. The Vigilant was closed in May 1969 following Gaafar Nimeiry's 1969 coup d'état. In March 1974, he became an editorial board member of Al Sahafa newspaper. He later founded and became the editor-in-chief for Sudanow Magazine, The Sudan Times, and Sudan Democratic Gazette.
Malwal also worked as a senior research fellow at Columbia University, and senior research fellow and visiting academic at St. Antony's College, University of Oxford, as part of the Sudanese Programme. The Sudanese Programme was co-founded in 2002 by Malwal and Ahmed al-Shahi within the Middle East Centre and the African Studies Centre at St Antony's College.
Among many books, Malwal authored Sudan and South Sudan: From One to Two, published in 2015, which is regarded as his political memoir and provides insights into the history and challenges of the two nations. The book reflects his strong advocacy for self-determination and secession for South Sudan.
Political career
Malwal co-founded and served as the secretary-general of the Southern Front, a political organisation, in 1965. He was elected to the National Assembly in April 1968, but was later dismissed after a coup by General Nimeiry in 1969.Nimeiry era
Following the 1972 peace agreement that ended the First Sudanese Civil War in southern Sudan, Malwal served as the undersecretary of the Minister of Culture and Information starting in July 1972. He became the minister in May 1973 and served until July 1978. He was also involved in the government's foreign affairs, being appointed at the Political Bureau of the ruling and the only legal political party, the Sudanese Socialist Union. He was a member of the National Assembly between 1974 and 1978.In March 1976, Malwal arranged for the release of Ibrahim El-Salahi, who was due to be executed. El-Salahi was Malwal's undersecretary at the Ministry of Culture and Information until his arrest in September 1975 following an anti-government coup.
In July 1976, a force of one thousand insurgents under Sadiq al-Mahdi, armed and trained by Libya, crossed the border from Ma'tan as-Sarra. After passing through Darfur and Kordofan, the insurgents engaged in three days of house-to-house fighting in Khartoum and Omdurman that killed some 3000 people. Malwal and Abel Alier continued to broadcast the news from Juba instead of Omdurman. During that time, President Gaafar Nimeiry was able to rally the nation via Radio Juba, and his government was saved after a column of army tanks entered the city to end the coup attempt. Some 3,000 were killed during the coup. 98 people were officially implicated in the plot, including Muhammad Nour Saad, and they were executed.
In 1977, a National Reconciliation took place in Port Sudan between Sadiq al Mahdi and Nimeiry, which saw the return of Hassan Al-Turabi, an Islamist leader who had been imprisoned and then exiled after the May Revolution, as the Justice Minister and Attorney General in 1978. Relations between Khartoum and the South Sudan leadership worsened after the National Reconciliation. Malwal publicly opposed the National Reconciliation. In 1978, he resigned in protest against the shift to Sharia law, and Arabic becoming the country's official language. Afterwards he left for the US.
In 1980, Malwal returned to Sudan and became the Regional Minister of Industry and Mining in Abel Alier's government for the Southern Sudan Autonomous Region. Later, in August 1981, he was moved to the Regional Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning after a disagreement with the Minister of Industry and Mining, Sherif El-Tohamy, for his decision to place an oil refinery in Kosti instead of Bentiu. During his tenure, the World Bank funded a rice project in Aweil, which initially faced opposition from the local Dinka community but was eventually accepted and implemented. The project, covering a million acres, aimed to make Sudan self-sufficient in rice. But once the Sudanese Civil War started, it reduced the project productivity and disrupted transportation, affecting marketability. Malwal also leveraged his contacts for a US$9 million for the southern region's development.
Malwal was later dismissed from Alier's regional government due to his vocal opposition to Nimeiry's Islamist stance. He was detained in Kobar Prison in October 1981 until 1984. After he was released, he fled to the UK and later the US. He returned after the April 1985 revolution as a journalist, establishing The Sudan Times with Mahjoub Mohamed Salih, and opposing Sadiq al Mahdi's new government that came after the 1985 coup d'état. During that time, he documented how the north's policies, during the Second Sudanese Civil War, led to the 1988 famine in Bahr El Ghazal, which killed approximately 250,000 to 500,000 people. Malwal also later testified in front of the US Congress in 1987 about Slavery in Sudan.
Malwal left for the UK again following the 1989 Sudanese coup d'état led by Brigadier Omar al-Bashir and supported by Hassan al-Turabi, the leader of the National Islamic Front.
Al-Bashir era
Malwal and his family was granted leave to remain in the UK in 1989. While in self-exile in the UK up to April 2001, Malwal was a visiting academic at St. Antony's College, University of Oxford, established the Sudan Democratic Gazette, published Crisis in the Sudan: Re-Thinking the Future in 1994 with Peter Nyot Kok, and co-founding the Sudanese Programme in 2002. With other exiled southern Sudanese politicians, Malwal launched the South Sudan Democratic Forum. In 1989 and 1991, Malwal shared his opinion about the "Democratic Revolution in Africa" and his personal experience in "Surviving Dictatorship" in seminars sponsored by the National Endowment for Democracy, US. In 1993, he appeared on the Charlie Rose talk show with Paul Simon, Judith Ann Mayotte, and Suzan Mazur to discuss the ongoing civil war in Sudan. In the UK, in 1998, he testified to the Parliament of the United Kingdom about the famine in Sudan in 1998, which mostly affected Bahr el Ghazal region in southwestern Sudan and killed more than 70,000.In 2004, Malwal returned to Sudan to supported the ongoing negotiations for a peace agreement between the Sudan People's Liberation Movement and the Government of Sudan. In September 2005, after the Comprehensive Peace Agreement that ended the Second Sudanese Civil War and set up a timeline for a Southern Sudanese independence referendum, Malwal became an adviser to President Omar al-Bashir. In March 2008, Malwal called for the creation of a reconciliation body in South Sudan stating that
In October 2008, Malwal voiced concerns about the potential arrest warrant for al-Bashir by the International Criminal Court. He dismissed the ICC's move as a politically motivated and defended al-Bashir, claiming that indicting him would target Sudan as a sovereign nation and could negatively impact existing peace agreements. He emphasised that al-Bashir, as a leader, could not be able to order the extermination of any group. On 4 March 2009, al-Bashir became the first sitting head of state to be indicted by the ICC, for directing a campaign of mass killing, rape, and pillage against civilians in Darfur.
Malwal was the co-director for the al-Bashir campaign for April 2010 Sudanese general election which al-Bashir won. Malwal accompanied al-Bashir during his South Sudan campaign visit to Juba, Yambio, Rumbek, Tonj, and Kuacjok. Malwal also stood for election for National Legislature in Warrap but later withdrew his candidacy citing "detention and harassment" by the Sudan People's Liberation Army, which the SPLA denied. Malwal facilitated the reconciliation between 23 southern political parties and armed factions, and the SPLA.
In June 2011, after South Sudan was declared and recognised following the 2011 South Sudanese independence referendum, Malwal announced that he was retiring from politics. In his retirement statement, Malwal warned against "tribal politics", and, reflecting on his time working with al-Bashir, he praised al-Bashir saying that "I commend his wisdom, fortitude, perseverance and statesmanship and applaud him and thank him for this."