The region stayed under the control of the central government and the
Comprehensive Peace Agreement did not give the Nuba Mountains the right to join
South Sudan in its vote for independence in 2011. Residents of the Nuba Mountains were required to hold ill-defined "
popular consultations" to determine their future. Not only the Nuba Mountains but the whole of South Kordofan state would be eligible to vote, essentially to accommodate the
Messiria. Additionally, the Sudanese government maintained a heavy military presence in the region and even prospective "popular consultations" were seen likely to be barred. As of June 2011, South Kordofan's governor
Ahmed Haroun had suspended the process of popular consultations and conflict between
Sudan People's Armed Forces and Nuba fighters of the
SPLM-N followed (see
Sudan–SPLM-N conflict (2011)). The war in Sudan began in 1983 until the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) signed on 9 January 2005 with independence vote set for 9 July 2011-the vote on 9 July 2011 succeeded the south into Africa's newest country, the
Republic of South Sudan. The capital is located in
Juba. The Nuba Mountains are geographically in the north in the area called
South Kordofan (see Wikipedia for in-depth review). The people of the Nuba Mountains (a five mountain chain rising from the desert to 1,000 metres (3,000 feet)) were not aligned with the north under
sharia law nor the
Arabic language. This cultural dispute was in part the reason for people in Nuba being prosecuted by indiscriminate bombing, attacks on civilians and mines at entry points to the Nuba Mountains.
Samuel Totten described the campaign of the Sudanese government in the Nuba Mountains as a "genocide by attrition" using starvation as a tool of extermination. In 2002, due to the extreme starvation of the people of the Nuba Mountains and under the international pressure from the UN,
Khartoum under President Bashir (at that time, the government was termed the National Islamic Front) authorizes an interim cease fire to provide food and medical equipment/support to the people of the Nuba Mountains. In exchange, the Sudan People's Liberation Army/SPLA agree not attack the south-north pipeline to
Port Sudan on the
Red Sea coast. An international group of observers/advisers deployed to
South Kordofan Province/
Kadugli with several US advisers deployed directly into the Nuba Mountains, specifically to be co-located with the SPLA. One of the advisers/observers was Randolph Hampton (US) located in
Kauda co-located with the SPLA command element. Reports of indiscriminate bombing of civilians and mining entry points primarily for relief operation was reported and documents (with photos) during this time. Abdel Aziz Adam El Hilu was at that time, the governor of the Nuba Mountains and former military leader for the SPLA. He is currently (as of March 2012) back in the Nuba Mountains supporting relief and security operations. The international community, including a number of celebrities such as actor
George Clooney and reporter
Nicholas Kristof, in 2015 travelled to the Nuba Mountains and documented the continued genocidal activities of the Bashir government. President Bashir is an indicted
war criminal at the International Criminal Court (ICC) as a result of the genocidal activities of Sudan in
Darfur.
Human Rights Watch says that
cluster bombs are used in the region. The ongoing war continues as the international community continues to debate a resolution to the issue of the Nuba Mountains. As of 2025 in the course of the civil war, most of the state including the largest city of
Kologi are controlled by the secular free-market democrats under
al-Hilu. ==See also==