Discovering South Sudan,
the end of Africa’s longest war sees the first tourists arrive in the world’s
newest country. By Peter Martell is the BBC correspondent for South Sudan. He has
lived in the capital, Juba since 2008
The first whitewater rafts pulled into the green and steamy
banks of South Sudan’s ramshackle capital to cheers. It was no really about the
achievement itself-the five-day journey down the slow waters of the White Nile
river, travelling through the wild forests from the Ugandan border ,wad
disturbed only by snorting hippos and an occasional elephant. The celebration
was because of a greater achievement, a sing that for a land still reeling from
Africa’s longest war, the south is, very slowly, opening up to tourists.
It wasn’t all straightforward. The paddlers, who included
one of the most senior UN peacekeeping officials in the south, were even
briefly held by soldiers suspicious of their boats.
South Sudan is the world’s newest nation, splitting from
former civil war enemies in the north and dividing Sudan in two. Holidaying in
a grossly underdeveloped land like this is not for the faint-hearted, light of
pocket or unprepared. But there is huge potential. Over 60 different ethnic
groups live here. There are jungles, wetlands and vast grasslands that host the
world’s second largest migration of mammals, made by gazelles and antelopes.
Much remains practically inaccessible. For now, easiest to
access is perhaps the south’s most important asset – a people happy with
independence, ready to welcome adventurous visitors to their fledgling state.
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