The Sudanese parliament was dissolved in November 1958 after a military coup by General
Ibrahim Abboud. In December 1960 Ezboni was arrested and sentenced to ten years in prison. In October 1964 General Ibrahim Abboud yielded to pressure and established a caretaker government of senior politicians to form the government until democratic elections could be held the next year.
Sirr al-Katim al-Khalifa was appointed prime minister, with three southerners in his cabinet: Ezbon Mondiri Gwanza,
Clement Mboro and
Gordon Muortat Mayen. The
Southern Front Party, also called the Southern Professional Front, was apparently founded in Khartoum early in 1965 by a group of Southern civil servants, university students and professionals. The Southern Front was officially registered as a party in March 1965 with
Gordon Abei as president,
Darious Beshir as
Vice President and
Hilary Logali as
Secretary General. In March 1965 the front nominated three senior members to take part in the caretaker cabinet: Clement Mboro Bekobo for Interior, Hilary Paul Logali for works and Gordon Muortat Mayen for communications, replacing Ezboni Mondiri. A Round Table conference was held in March 1965 to try to resolve the southern problem. A few months later the new Southern Front Executive Committee was elected. Clement Mboro Bekobo was president, Gordon Muortat Mayen Vice President and Hilary Paul Logali Secretary General. Ezboni Mondiri was a member. In June 1965
Joseph Oduho and his supporters defected from the
Sudan African National Union (SANU) and formed a new secessionist organization called the "Azania Liberation Front" (ALF). The executive of the ALF included Joseph H. Oduho, President, Fr. Saturnino Lohure, Vice President, Ezboni Mondiri, Defense Secretary,
George Akumbek Kwanai, Foreign Secretary and
Joseph Lagu Yanga, Commander-in-Chief. Later Ezboni announced formation of the Sudan Azania government in exile. On 27 February 1972 the government of Sudan and the Southern Sudan Liberation Movement (SSLM) signed the
Addis Ababa agreement to end hostilities, to be formally ratified on 12 March 1972. Ezboni Mondiri Gwonza was the leader of the SSLM delegation. Dr. Mansour Khalid, Minister of Foreign Affairs, signed on behalf of the Sudan government. The agreement ended a 17-year conflict in which half a million southerners had died and many more had been displaced. The agreement gave southern Sudanese religious rights and autonomy within a federal structure for the unified Sudan. Ezboni Mondiri and Joseph Oduho were the two leading "outsider" candidates for presidency of Southern Sudan in 1973, but
Abel Alier was named the SSU candidate before they could mount their challenges. ==References==