Buth Diu

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Diedc. 1972
EducationBoth Diu was working as a house servant of the British District Commissioner in Khartoum in the years before Sudan independence. With no formal schooling, he taught himself to read, write and type. Thereafter, he won the post of interpreter, founded a political party, and was elected to parliament in Khartoum.
OccupationPolitician
Sir Both Diu
Born
Diedc. 1972
EducationBoth Diu was working as a house servant of the British District Commissioner in Khartoum in the years before Sudan independence. With no formal schooling, he taught himself to read, write and type. Thereafter, he won the post of interpreter, founded a political party, and was elected to parliament in Khartoum.
OccupationPolitician
Known forEarly political leader from Southern Sudan and becoming the first Nuer politician to be MP, Minister and own a political party.
TitleSir
Political party
Liberal party

Both Diu (d. c. 1972) or Böth Diew was a politician who was one of the leaders of the Liberal Party in Sudan in the years before and after independence in 1956. His party represented the interests of the southerners. Although in favor of a federal system under which the south would have its own laws and administration, Both Diu was not in favor of southern secession. As positions hardened during the drawn-out First Sudanese Civil War (1955–1972) his compromise position was increasingly discredited.

Both Diu was born and raise in Fangak, South Sudan. He belong to Nuer ethnic group.[1] Both Diu did not attend formal education, but managed to obtain a job as a house servant of the British District Commissioner in Khartoum. He taught himself English and learned to read and write and type. With these skills, he became interpreter for the District Commissioner, an influential post.[2] By 1947 he was a local government official.[3]

Southern representative

After the Second World War the mood in Britain was to give the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan independence of both Britain and Egypt.[4] Both Diu was one of the southern leaders who attended a conference held at Juba on 12–13 June 1947 to discuss the recommendations of an earlier conference held in Khartoum at which it had been decided that the south and north of Sudan should be united in one country. Southerners were (and are) very different ethnically and culturally from the people of northern Sudan, but the rationale was that Sudan was huge but poor, and if divided both parts would be extremely weak. No southerners had attended the Khartoum conference.[5]

At the Juba conference, Both Diu said that although northerners claimed they did not want to dominate the South, there must be safeguards. Northerners should not be allowed to settle on land in the south without permission, should not interfere in local government in the south and should not be allowed in law to call a southerner a slave. However, Diu was not in favor of separation. He said the government should select representatives from the south who would go to the North to study and to participate in legislation, finance, and administration. He said that Arabic should be introduced into southern schools without delay so they could catch up to the north.[5]

Both Diu formed an "Upper Nile Political Association" in Upper Nile province.[6] The Governor-General of Sudan announced the formation of the Constitution Amendment Commission in March 1951. Both Diu was the sole southerner of the commission, which had 16 northerners and three British officials including the chairman.[4] When the commission started work on 26 March 1951, Both Diu called for a federal constitution. His proposals were persistently rejected by the northern members of the commission, and he resigned in disgust. The commission continued without southern representation. However, the British members of the commission did insist on some safeguards in the draft constitution to protect southern interests, including a special Minister for the southern provinces and an advisory board for southern affairs. The northerners managed to later remove this provision.[7]

Party leader

Later years

References

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