Summary:This interim Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (I-PRSP) was prepared
following the secession of South Sudan in July 2011. It was approved by the Council
of Ministers as well as by Parliament on 20 July 2012, respectively. The preparation of
this I-PRSP was initiated before the secession of South Sudan. Since then, the
governance structures for the new Sudan have remained the same, based on the 2005
Interim National Constitution (INC) that underpinned the Comprehensive Peace
Agreement (CPA). Until the signature of the CPA, Sudan had experienced an alternation
of civilian and military governments and two protracted North-South wars that took a
heavy toll on human life and economic resources. The leadership in Sudan has initially
been preoccupied with the difficult negotiations of the economic and political relations
with South Sudan, but began in June 2012 to deal with the implications of the massive
revenue shocks caused by the loss of the share of the revenues from oil production in
South Sudan. The Sudanese government’s attention was also captured by internal
conflicts and threats of new ones in several areas of the new country; the situation is
being aggravated by the urgent resettlement and reintegration of millions of internally
displaced persons (IDPs) from past conflicts in the territory and international refugees
from conflict-affected neighboring countries. In this complex environment, the
authorities are seeking to normalize Sudan’s relations with the international
development community, while opening up access to post-conflict recovery and
development assistance, including relief from its onerous external burden.
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