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Gordon Muortat Mayen was born on 1922 in Karagok (near Rumbek), Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, (Now South Sudan), is a South Sudanese politician (born 1922). Discover Gordon Muortat Mayen's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 86 years old?

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Occupation Politician & Freedom Fighter
Age 86 years old
Zodiac Sign
Born 1922
Birthday 1922
Birthplace Karagok (near Rumbek), Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, (Now South Sudan)
Date of death 12 April, 2008
Died Place Rumbek, Sudan
Nationality Egypt

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1922. He is a member of famous politician with the age 86 years old group.

Gordon Muortat Mayen Height, Weight & Measurements

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Gordon Muortat Mayen Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Gordon Muortat Mayen worth at the age of 86 years old? Gordon Muortat Mayen’s income source is mostly from being a successful politician. He is from Egypt. We have estimated Gordon Muortat Mayen's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
Salary in 2023 Under Review
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Timeline

1922

Gordon Muortat Mayen Maborjok (1922–2008) was a South Sudanese veteran politician and an advocate for the rights and freedom of the South Sudanese people.

Gordon Muortat Mayen was born in 1922 at Karagok village 10 miles South East of Rumbek.

His father was a local chief of Patiop Clan of the Agar Dinka.

1936

Muortat was educated at Akot elementary from 1936 to 1942.

1942

He then attended Loka Nugent Junior Secondary School in Western Equatoria from 1942 to 1945.

1951

In 1951 he was among the first southern Sudanese to graduate from Sudan Police College and was commissioned as a police inspector where he rose through the ranks to become Chief Inspector of Police.

1955

He was the President of the Nile Provisional Government (NPG) which led the Anyanya; Southern Sudan's first armed resistance to Khartoum which started in 1955.

Muortat also served as Vice-President of the Southern Front (SF) and Foreign Minister in the Southern Sudan Provisional Government (SSPG).

1956

He held this view due to the fact that southern Sudanese were not involved in the politics which led to the independence of Sudan from the colonial power in 1956.

He therefore argued that southern Sudanese must be given the right to determine their political future in a referendum, to be carried out in the south which should be supervised and monitored internationally.

This view was also shared by other members of the Southern Front, namely Clement Mboro, Bona Malwal and Hilary Paul Logali.

1957

In 1957, Muortat was denied a transfer to southern Sudan, so he resigned his position and joined the Sudan Civil Administration.

He was appointed assistant district commissioner and served throughout Bahr el-Ghazal and Upper Nile provinces.

1964

In 1964, Gordon Muortat became one of the founders of the Southern Front (SF), a political party that would represent the rights of the people of southern Sudan.

1965

In 1965, under the transitional government of Prime Minister Sirr Al-Khatim Al-Khalifa, Muortat was appointed to be Minister of Works and Mineral Resources in his cabinet.

However, when Prime Minister Muhammad Ahmad Mahgoub came to office, Muortat was dismissed.

He headed the Southern Front delegation in the Round Table Conference between the north and south in 1965 and is remembered for demanding that the south be given the right to self-determination.

The great massacres of Juba, Wau and all over the south that were carried out by the Sudanese Armed Forces in July 1965 convinced Gordon Muortat that the northern Arab rulers were not interested in the peaceful resolution of the 'South Sudan Question'.

Thus in August 1965 at the meeting of the Southern Front executive committee, he proposed that the party should be dissolved and that the entire committee should move into exile with the objective of merging with the Anyanya political and military wings.

1967

Muortat joined the Anyanya 1 insurgency, fighting in the First Sudanese Civil War to liberate the territories of Southern Sudan in 1967 and was appointed foreign minister in the Southern Sudan Provisional Government (SSPG) under Aggrey Jaden.

After the collapse of the SSPG due to internal political wrangling, the second Anyanya government, the Nile Provisional Government (NPG) was formed.

Gordon Muortat Mayen was elected unanimously as president, with his army fighting a fully fledged war against the north, advocating for the complete independence of the south.

During this time, Southern Sudan was renamed the Nile Republic with its citizens being referred to as Nileans.

The name Southern Sudan was rejected by Muortat and his government due to the name being just a reference to a geographic zone which has little relevance to the people of the Southern Sudan.

It is also a name which was used by colonial powers to inadequately describe the Nilotic and Nilo-Hamitic tribes living on the upper region of the river Nile, first by the Egyptians, and later by the British.

Dr. John Garang de Mabior, future leader of the SPLA, was among the batches of Muortat's soldiers sent to Israel for military training under the NPG.

1970

The NPG was dissolved in 1970, after the failure to restore Israeli arms shipments to their forces.

1971

The weapons were instead being diverted to Joseph Lagu who formed the Southern Sudan Liberation Movement (SSLM) in January 1971 after staging a successful coup d'état against Muortat and his rebel government.

At the time, Andrew Makur Thou, commander of the Anyanya forces under the NPG was willing to continue to fight under Muortat's leadership and quell the coup attempt, however Gordon Muortat declined.

In 1971, Gordon Muortat was elected president of the African National Front, which was one of the southern factions that were against the Addis Ababa negotiations and did not actively participate in them, however they sent a clear message to negotiators on how proceedings could move.

This included; that talks ought to be held between North and Southern true Representatives i.e. those mandated and not opportunists acting on complicity with the Arabs and their agents.

Talks ought to take place without any pre-condition like the Arabs imposition of Local Autonomy.

The talks ought to take place under the auspices of impartial organisations like the UN or the OAU.

The Arabs must know that what they are now committing in Addis Ababa will never help in defeating the Southern Sudan.

1972

However, despite this, the Addis Ababa peace agreement was signed in 1972.

1999

In a 1999 interview, Muortat, talking on the dissolution of the NPG stated, "I went to the bush in order to fight for the liberation of the South Sudan. And since Lagu had managed to secure arms for the liberation of our people, I did not see any reason to continue with a parallel struggle. So I decided to stand down. Because it is my belief that South Sudan cannot be liberated from the Arabs unless all of the Africans in the South unite and fight as one people, for one goal, the independence of South Sudan".

He encouraged all loyal forces to join Lagu and continue the fight against the Arab dominated government in the North.

While Muortat was leader of the Southern movement, he declined offers of ceasefire with Khartoum as he was not willing to accept the terms Gaafar Nimeiry was offering; local autonomy for the region of Southern Sudan.

He was only willing to enter peace talks if the succession of Southern Sudan was on the agenda.

Shortly after Joseph Lagu had taken over power as the leader of the movement, the SSLM under Lagu, entered peace negotiations with Khartoum to form the Addis Ababa Agreement which accepted regional autonomy for the South.