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[PCUSANEWS] Ex-PC(USA) missionary accepts advisory post in Sudanese


From PCUSA NEWS <PCUSA.NEWS@ECUNET.ORG>
Date Wed, 18 Jan 2006 14:34:11 -0600

Note #9071 from PCUSA NEWS to PRESBYNEWS:

06019
Jan. 18, 2006

Ex-PC(USA) missionary accepts
advisory post in Sudanese government

Haruun Ruun will serve 'the poorest nation
on the poorest continent in the world'

by Alexa Smith

LOUISVILLE - A former Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) missionary has been named
one of 12 special advisors to the president of the interim government of a
united Sudan.

Haruun Ruun, 65, a former executive director of the New Sudan Council
of Churches, left last week for Khartoum, where he will assume his new post
immediately.

Ruun was appointed by President Omar al-Bashir.

After more than 50 years of civil strife, Sudan's power-sharing
government functions as a confederation of two states. The predominantly
Muslim north operates on religious or sharia law, while the mostly black,
mostly Christian south has a secular government.

More than two million Sudanese have been killed in the last two
decades of the war, and more than twice that many have been forced from their
homes.

The unity model was advocated by John Garang, a Presbyterian former
guerrilla leader who unified warring southern tribes to negotiate with
Khartoum. Garang was killed in a helicopter crash last August, weeks after he
was sworn in as the coalition government's vice president.

Elections scheduled for 2009 will install a central government. Two
years later, southerners will vote in a referendum to stay with the unity
government or create a separate nation.

Ruun said the issue now is economic development.

"Sudan ... is the poorest nation on the poorest continent in the
world," he told the Presbyterian News Service (PNS) in a telephone interview
before leaving for Khartoum. "If we do not address the poverty, we are not
addressing the conflict. If we address the poverty, we eliminate some of the
problems."

Those problems include a shortage of safe water to drink, a lack of
sanitation facilities, poor medical service and widespread illiteracy.

While the political process seems sluggish, Ruun said it's an
important start.

"As the Americans say, 'The proof is in the pudding,'" he told PNS.
"The Sudanese have a saying: 'We can smell it, but we've not tasted it yet.'
Our challenge is to implement (the unity-government model)."

Ruun said the international church can help by supporting the
delicate political balance - without meddling in Sudanese affairs - and
helping with support of reconciliation efforts, humanitarian aid and advocacy
for justice, peace and human rights.

"What the church is doing is appropriate in most cases," he said.
"The challenge for the international church is to avoid fatigue, to do more,
to be advocates for peace. Peacemaking is not an option for Christians; it is
essential. ... With its advocacy the church must be bold, to advocate
everywhere for peace and human rights."

Ruun, a Sudan native, studied Christian communications at Daystar
International Institute in Kenya; graduated from a Bible college in South
Carolina; and ultimately earned a master's degree in education and a doctor
of ministry degree from Columbia Biblical Seminary and School of Missions.

In 2003, he was awarded the prestigious Spirit of Raoul Wallenberg
Humanitarian Award for peacemaking work.

He and his wife, Mary Akwot Ajak, have five children.

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