You probably saw the story. It was in the section of the BBC website called Also in the news , keeping aloof company with an article entitled ‘Trappist Monk escapes Belgian beer fire’. The title of the story was ‘Southern Sudan unveils plan for animal-shaped cities’. The Government of Southern Sudan had apparently announced a ‘$10bn plan to rebuild the region’s cities in the shapes of animals and fruit’.There was little other context, and I can easily predict the reaction of the listeners: they have gone bananas in Southern Sudan; I imagine my mother being indignant – in a country of grinding poverty they are going to spend all that money making towns into pineapples. Many have smugly predicted that Sudan is the first ‘failed state’ to fail before it has even been formally announced as a state; fruit cities seem par for the course. Juba, soon to be the world’s newest capital city, will be transformed into a rhinoceros; the Presidential Office, the eye. As new clashes break out between the army and rebel forces in the north-east of the country, and at a time when government control of some parts of its territory is strictly nominal, the plan to make animal cities might also seem like a fantasy of power; a zoomorphic panopticon. The truth is a good deal more interesting.
animal cities
In January, the people of Southern Sudan voted overwhelmingly to secede from the north, and become Africa’s newest state. It was a single moment of clarity for an uncertain nation.
| city form building a country by joshua craze
Juba - A woman transports her belonging on her head, heading towards the Juba Temporary Port and crossing a cemetery now used as dumping ground and open-air latrine from the inhabitants of the nearby informal settlement.
Guilio Petrocco
65
Made with FlippingBook interactive PDF creator