I | INTRODUCTION |
Sudan, republic in northeastern Africa, the largest
country of the African continent. The country’s north and south stand in stark
contrast to one another: The dry, desert north is populated largely by Arab
Muslims, while the wet, swampy south is populated by black African Christians
and animists. The site of several powerful ancient states, Sudan was controlled
by Egypt and Britain until the 20th century. An estimated 1.5 million Sudanese
people died in a long and brutal civil war between the north and south, lasting
from 1983 to 2004. Another conflict that erupted in the western region of Darfur
in 2003 has claimed more than 200,000 lives and left more than 2 million people
displaced from their homes. The conflict in Darfur continued in 2007 despite
international mediation efforts.
Sudan is bounded on the north by Egypt; on the
east by the Red Sea, Eritrea, and Ethiopia; on the south by Kenya, Uganda, and
Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC, formerly Zaire); and on the west by the
Central African Republic, Chad, and Libya. Sudan has a total area of 2,505,800
sq km (967,490 sq mi). Khartoum is the capital and largest city.
II | LAND AND RESOURCES |
Sudan has a maximum length from north to south
of more than 2,250 km (1,400 mi); the extreme width of the country is about
1,730 km (about 1,075 mi). It is divided into three separate natural regions,
ranging from desert in the north, covering about 30 percent of all Sudan,
through a vast semiarid region of steppes and low mountains in central Sudan, to
a region of vast swamps (the As Sudd region) and rain forest in the south.
Major topographical features of Sudan are the
Nile River, its headstreams the White Nile and Blue Nile, and the tributaries of
these rivers. The White Nile traverses the country from the Uganda border to a
point near Khartoum, where it joins the Blue Nile to form the Nile proper. The
Blue Nile rises in the Ethiopian Plateau and flows across east central Sudan. Of
the Nile tributaries the most important is the ‘Aţbarah, which also rises in the
Ethiopian Plateau. The Libyan Desert, a barren waste broken by rugged uplands,
covers most of Sudan west of the Nile proper. The Nubian Desert lies in the
region east of the Nile proper and the ‘Aţbarah. The Red Sea Hills are located
along the coast. The highest point in Sudan, Kinyeti (3,187 m/10,456 ft), is in
the southeast.
A | Climate |
Sudan has a tropical climate. Seasonal
variations are most sharply defined in the desert zones, where winter
temperatures as low as 4°C (40°F) are common, particularly after sunset. Summer
temperatures often exceed 40°C (110°F) in the desert zones, and rainfall is
negligible. Dust storms, called haboobs, frequently occur. High
temperatures also prevail to the south throughout the central plains region, but
the humidity is generally low. In the vicinity of Khartoum the average annual
temperature is about 27°C (about 80°F); and annual rainfall, most of which
occurs between mid-June and September, is about 250 mm (about 10 in). Equatorial
climatic conditions prevail in southern Sudan. In this region the average annual
temperature is about 29°C (about 85°F), annual rainfall is more than 1,000 mm
(40 in), and the humidity is excessive.
B | Natural Resources |
The primary natural resources of Sudan are
water, supplied by the Nile River system, and fertile soil. Large areas of
cultivable land are situated in the region between the Blue Nile and the
‘Aţbarah and between the Blue Nile and the White Nile. Other cultivable land is
in the narrow Nile Valley and in the valleys of the plains region. Irrigation is
extensively employed in these areas. Sudan has significant reserves of
petroleum, chromite, gold, and iron ore.
C | Plants and Animals |
Vegetation is sparse in the desert zones of
Sudan. Various species of acacia occur in the regions contiguous to the Nile
Valley. Large forested areas are found in central Sudan, especially in the river
valleys. Among the most common trees are the hashab, talh, heglig, and several
species of acacia, notably sunt, laot, and kittr. Trees such as ebony, silag,
and baobab are common in the Blue Nile Valley. Ebony, mahogany, and other
varieties of timber trees are found in the White Nile Basin. Other species of
indigenous vegetation include cotton, papyrus, castor bean plants, and rubber
plants.
Animal life is abundant in the plains and
equatorial regions of Sudan. Elephants are numerous in the southern forests, and
crocodiles and hippopotamuses abound in the rivers. Other large animals include
giraffes, leopards, and lions. Monkeys, various species of tropical birds, and
poisonous reptiles are also found, and insects—especially mosquitoes, seroot
flies, and tsetse flies—infest the equatorial belt.
D | Environmental Issues |
Scarce resources, drought, and warfare led
to widespread famine and environmental destruction in Sudan during its civil
war. Expanding human settlements threaten the country’s forests. Traditional
fuels such as wood provide 75 percent (1997) of Sudan’s energy supply, and the
demand for charcoal has led to the clearing of many Sudanese forests.
Deforestation, overgrazing, and poor land management practices all speed the
process of desertification, as the Sahara encroaches onto previously arable and
forested land.
Sudan has designated 4.7 percent (2007) of
its land as protected areas, but poaching threatens animal populations in these
areas and throughout the country. Comprehensive conservation efforts are
hampered by ongoing civil conflicts.
III | POPULATION |
The population of Sudan is composed
principally of Arabs in the north and black Africans in the south; many Arabs
are of mixed ancestry. Other ethnic groups in northern Sudan include the Beja,
Jamala, and Nubian peoples. The northern two-thirds of Sudan is an area of
Islamic culture. The major black ethnic groups in southern Sudan are the Azande,
Dinka, Nuer, and Shilluk. European culture and religion have influenced the
southern peoples, but traditional customs remain strong.
A | Population Characteristics |
The 2008 estimated population was
40,218,455, giving the country an overall population density of 17 persons per
sq km (44 per sq mi). The most densely settled area is at the juncture of the
White Nile and the Blue Nile. Sudan’s population is growing at a rate of 2.13
percent (2008) annually.
B | Principal Cities and Political Divisions |
The principal city is Khartoum, the
capital; other major cities include Omdurman and Khartoum North, major
industrial centers, and Port Sudan, a seaport on the Red Sea. Sudan is divided
into 26 states.
C | Religion and Language |
About 70 percent of the people of Sudan
are Muslims, some 15 percent are Christians, and most of the remainder follow
traditional religions. The people of northern Sudan are predominantly Sunni
Muslims (Sunni Islam). Most of the people in the south are either animists, who
adhere to indigenous religious beliefs, or are Christians. The official language
of Sudan is Arabic; English is widely spoken, and African languages are used in
the south.
D | Education |
Education is free and compulsory in Sudan
between the ages of 6 and 13. About 60 percent (2002–2003) of primary
school-aged children are enrolled in school; 35 percent of secondary school-aged
children attend school. About 63 percent (2005) of Sudanese people are literate,
and significantly more men are literate than women. Institutions of higher
education include the University of Khartoum (1956), Omdurman Islamic University
(1912), the University of Juba (1975), and Al-Neelain University (1955), located
in Khartoum.
D1 | Libraries |
The University of Khartoum Library is
noted for its African and Sudanese collection. Other libraries in Sudan include
the Flinders Petrie Library (named after British Egyptologist Sir Flinders
Petrie), the Geological Research Authority of the Sudan Library, and the Sudan
Medical Research Laboratories Library, all of which are in Khartoum. A major
collection of historical documents is housed in the National Records Office, in
Khartoum.
D2 | Museums |
The Sudan National Museum, in Khartoum,
has collections of ancient artifacts. The Khalifa’s House, in Omdurman, contains
a collection of relics of the Mahdists (for more information, see the History
section of this article). Also of interest are the Sudan Natural History
Museum and the Ethnographical Museum, both in Khartoum.
IV | ECONOMY |
Agriculture continues to dominate the
economy of Sudan. Some 70 percent of economically active people are engaged in
agricultural or pastoral activities. Economic growth was virtually nonexistent
between the mid-1960s and 1992, when drought and civil war caused the annual
gross domestic product (GDP) to fall to a mere $6 billion, or $234 per capita.
The GDP began to increase in the mid-1990s; by 2006 it was $37.4 billion, or
$993 per capita.
A | Agriculture |
The majority of Sudan’s population derives
its living from crop farming or grazing, but only 7 percent of the country’s
land area is cultivated. Agriculture accounts for about 32 percent (2006) of
Sudan’s GDP. Chronic droughts lead to decreased agricultural production and have
plagued Sudan for decades. Sudanese farmers raise grains (particularly sorghum,
millet, and wheat), vegetables, and livestock (particularly sheep, goats, and
cattle) for subsistence. Major export crops include cotton, sugar, sesame seeds,
wheat, sorghum, and groundnuts. Livestock, in particular, sheep, also represents
an important export commodity.
B | Forestry and Fishing |
The major forest product of Sudan is gum
arabic, which is an ingredient in candy, perfumes, processed food, and
pharmaceuticals. It is also used in printing. Most of the world’s supply of gum
arabic comes from Sudan. Other forestry products include beeswax, tannin, senna,
and timber, especially mahogany. Most of the trees cut in Sudan are used for
fuel. Fishing is carried on along the rivers and on the coast.
C | Mining |
Petroleum was discovered in western Sudan
in the 1970s, but Sudan did not actively pursue oil production until the 1990s.
The country began exporting oil in 1999. Other exploited minerals include
chromite, gold, and iron ore.
D | Manufacturing |
Sudanese manufacturing is largely centered
on the processing of raw materials such as petroleum, cotton, and sugar.
Sudanese factories also produce paper, textiles, cement, cigarettes, and
beverages.
E | Energy |
In 2003 Sudan produced 3.2 billion
kilowatt-hours of electricity, up from 334 million kilowatt-hours in 1968.
Electricity is generated by large hydroelectric installations at Khashm
al-Qirbah and Sennar and by thermal power plants burning refined petroleum. In
2003 about 42 percent of Sudan’s electricity was generated by hydroelectric
facilities and about 58 percent by thermal plants.
F | Currency |
The official unit of currency is the
Sudanese pound, divided into 100 piastres. In January 2007 the
pound was introduced to replace the dinar, which had replaced a currency
also called the pound in 1992. The currency conversion in 2007 was a requirement
of the peace agreement that ended the civil war between north and south in 2004.
The dinar had not been accepted or commonly used in the predominantly Christian
and animist south, where it was considered a symbol of the government’s
“Arabization” policies. Islamic law had been applied to banking practices in
1991.
G | Foreign Trade |
In 2003 imports totaled $2.90 billion and
exports, $2.48 billion. Oil dominates Sudan’s exports. Other important exports
are sheep, gold, sesame seeds, cotton, and gum arabic. The principal imports are
machinery, transportation equipment, iron and steel, cereals, and textiles. The
main purchasers of Sudan’s exports are China, Japan, South Korea, France, and
Saudi Arabia; chief sources of imports are China, Saudi Arabia, Germany, the
United Kingdom, and France.
H | Transportation and Communications |
The Sudanese railroad system, comprising
5,478 km (3,404 mi) of track, links most of the major cities and towns.
Supplementing the railroad system is traffic on 5,300 km (3,300 mi) of navigable
waterways and 11,900 km (7,394 mi) of roads. Only about 36 percent (1999) of
Sudan’s roads are paved. A government-owned airline, Sudan Airways, maintains
regular services throughout the country and operates scheduled international
flights. Several other domestic and foreign airlines also serve Sudan.
The privatized Sudan Telecommunications
Company provides mainline and mobile telephone services and Internet service.
The government’s Sudan National Broadcasting Corporation provides radio service
in Arabic, English, French, and Swahili. Sudan Television broadcasts about 60
hours of programming per week. A number of daily newspapers circulate in Sudan;
all are subject to government censorship.
V | GOVERNMENT |
A 1989 military coup brought the
Revolutionary Command Council, under the leadership of General Omar Hassan
al-Bashir, to power in Sudan. A southern Sudanese rebel group, the Sudanese
People’s Liberation Army (SPLA), fought government forces until the two sides
signed a peace accord in 2004. The peace accord led to a new interim Sudanese
constitution, promulgated in 2005, which established a national unity government
to oversee a six-year transitional period. The constitution granted significant
autonomy to southern Sudan, and allocated 34 percent of the offices in the
national unity government to southerners. In 2011, near the end of the six-year
transitional period, the people of southern Sudan were to decide by public
referendum whether to remain part of Sudan or declare their independence.
A | Executive |
Under the 2004 peace accord, Bashir
remained president. In 2005 a member of the Sudanese People’s Liberation
Movement (SPLM), the political wing of the SPLA, was named first vice president.
B | Legislature |
Under the interim constitution, legislative
power is vested in a 450-member National Assembly. The constitution calls on the
president, in consultation with the first vice president, to appoint 52 percent
of the seats to the National Congress Party, 28 percent to the SPLM, 14 percent
to northern opposition parties, and the remaining 6 percent to southern
opposition parties.
C | Judiciary |
Sudan’s judicial system is divided into two
major branches, a civil branch handling most cases and an Islamic branch
handling only personal and family matters. The civil branch includes a supreme
court, courts of appeal, major courts, and magistrates courts.
D | Local Government |
Sudan is divided into 26 states. Each state
is administered by an appointed governor. The 2005 interim constitution allowed
for the election of a president of the government of southern Sudan and the
establishment of a transitional Southern Sudan Assembly.
E | Defense |
In 2004 the armed forces of Sudan numbered
about 104,800 active personnel. The army had 100,000 members; the navy, 1,800;
and the air force, 3,000.
VI | HISTORY |
From remote antiquity until relatively
recent times the northern portion of the territory comprising modern Sudan
formed part of the region known as Nubia. The history of Nilotic, or southern,
Sudan before the 19th century is obscure. Egyptian penetration of Nubia began
during the period of ancient Egypt's Old Kingdom (about 2575-2134 bc). By 1550 bc, when the 18th Dynasty was founded,
Nubia had been reduced to the status of an Egyptian province. The region between
the Nubian Desert and the Nile River contains numerous monuments, ruins, and
other relics of the period of Egyptian dominance, which was ended by a Nubian
revolt in the 8th century bc. A
succession of independent kingdoms was subsequently established in Nubia. The
most powerful of these, Makuria, a Christian state centered at Old Dunqulah and
founded in the 6th century ad,
endured until the early-14th-century invasion of the Egyptian Mamluks. Another,
Alwa, its capital at Soba in the vicinity of present-day Khartoum, was
overwhelmed in about 1500 by the Funj, black Muslims of uncertain origin, who
established a sultanate at Sennar.
During the 16th century, the Funj emerged as
a powerful Islamic state, and Sennar became one of the great cultural centers of
Islam. Dissension among the leading Funj tribes vastly weakened the kingdom
during the final years of the 18th century. In 1820 it was invaded by an
Egyptian army. The ensuing war ended in 1822 with a complete victory for Egypt
(at that time a province of the Ottoman Empire). The greater part of Nubia
thereupon became an Egyptian province, known as the Egyptian Sudan.
Turkish-Egyptian rule, which was marked by southward expansion of the province,
endured for 60 years. Internal unrest, resulting from the slave trade and
general administrative incompetence, mounted steadily during this period.
Between 1877 and 1880, when British general and administrator Charles George
Gordon served as governor of Egyptian Sudan, efforts were made to suppress the
slave trade and other abuses.
A | Mahdist Revolt |
The anarchic state of affairs that
developed after Gordon’s resignation culminated in 1882 in a revolution led by
Muhammad Ahmad, who in 1881 had proclaimed himself the Mahdi, the person who,
according to an Islamic tradition, would rid the world of evil. The rebels won
successive victories, including the annihilation of an Egyptian army in November
1883 and the capture of Khartoum in January 1885. With the latter victory, in
which Gordon was killed, the Mahdists won complete control over the
province.
Conditions in Egyptian Sudan deteriorated
under the rule of the Mahdi and of the caliph Abdullah al-Taashi, who succeeded
the Mahdi in 1885. The caliph waged incessant war against the Nilotes, adding
large sections of territory to Egyptian Sudan, and undertook various other
military adventures, notably an abortive attempt to conquer Egypt in 1889.
Economic and social chaos engulfed Sudan during the closing years of the
caliph’s reign. Meanwhile, Egypt had become a virtual possession of Britain. In
1896 the British and Egyptian governments, alarmed at the spread of French
influence in Nilotic Sudan, dispatched a joint military expedition against the
caliph. This expedition, led by General Horatio Herbert Kitchener, routed the
caliph’s forces at Omdurman on September 2, 1898. The Anglo-Egyptian victory
brought about the complete collapse of the Mahdist movement. On January 19,
1899, the British and Egyptian governments concluded the agreement that provided
for joint sovereignty in Sudan.
B | British-Egyptian Sovereignty |
Despite growing discontent among Egyptian
nationalists, who demanded termination of British authority in Sudan, the
Egyptian government concluded a treaty with Britain in 1936 that confirmed,
among other things, the convention of 1899. Egyptian antagonism over the
arrangement became especially acute following World War II (1939-1945). In 1946
the two nations began negotiations to revise the treaty of 1936. The Egyptian
government demanded British withdrawal from Sudan, and the British proposed
certain modifications of the existing regime. The negotiations between the two
countries ended in deadlock.
On June 19, 1948, after consultations with
certain Sudanese officials, the British governor-general in Sudan promulgated
reforms purportedly calculated to give the Sudanese experience in
self-government as a prerequisite to decisions concerning the ultimate political
status of Sudan. The newly authorized legislative assembly was elected in
November. Supporters of political groups advocating union with Egypt boycotted
the election. In December 1950 the legislative assembly, dominated by groups
favoring Sudanese independence, adopted a resolution asking Egypt and the United
Kingdom to grant full self-government to Sudan in 1951.
During 1950 and 1951 the Egyptian
government continued to demand British withdrawal from Sudan. The legislature
denounced the joint sovereignty agreement and the 1936 treaty in October 1951,
and it proclaimed Faruk I king of Egypt and Sudan. Anglo-Egyptian negotiations
on the status of Sudan were resumed following the forced abdication of King
Faruk in July 1952. On February 12, 1953, the two governments signed an
agreement providing self-determination for Sudan within a three-year
transitional period.
C | Sudanization and Independence |
In compliance with the provisions of the
agreement, the first Sudanese parliamentary elections were held late in 1953.
The pro-Egyptian National Unionist Party won a decisive victory. The first
all-Sudanese government assumed office on January 9, 1954. Designated “Appointed
Day,” the date marked the official beginning of the transitional period of
“Sudanization,” a process of replacing all foreigners in responsible
governmental and military posts by Sudanese.
The Sudanization program, which was
completed in August 1955, accentuated the geographic and social differences
between northern and southern Sudan. A mutiny of southern units of the Sudanese
army broke out on August 19, and it was put down by government forces. On August
30 the parliament approved a measure stipulating that Sudan should determine its
future status by means of a plebiscite. Meanwhile, the United Kingdom and Egypt
agreed to withdraw their troops by November 12, 1955. On December 19 the
Sudanese parliament, bypassing the projected plebiscite, declared Sudan an
independent state.
The Republic of Sudan was formally
established on January 1, 1956. Egypt and the United Kingdom immediately
recognized the new nation. Sudan became a member of the Arab League on January
19 and of the United Nations on November 12.
D | Abboud’s Rule |
The first general parliamentary elections
after Sudan attained independence were held on February 27, 1958. The Umma Party
won a majority and formed a new government on March 20. It was overthrown on
November 17 by Lieutenant General Ibrahim Abboud, the commander in chief of the
armed forces. Abboud, reputedly an advocate of closer relations with Egypt,
dismissed parliament, suspended the constitution, declared martial law, and
established a cabinet with himself as prime minister.
In November 1964, President Abboud
resigned. He was replaced by a supreme council of state. A revolt in southern
Sudan that had begun under Abboud against domination by the Arab north continued
as a civil war until March 1972, when the south was granted some autonomy. A
shift toward a pro-Arab foreign policy was evident after the Arab-Israeli War of
1967 (see Six-Day War).
E | Nimeiry’s Regime |
In 1969 a group of radical army officers,
led by Colonel (later Field Marshal) Gaafar Muhammad al-Nimeiry, seized power
and set up a government under a revolutionary council. Political tension
continued, however, and several coups were attempted. During this period
Nimeiry, who became the first elected president of Sudan in 1972, consolidated
his power. In early 1973 a new constitution was promulgated. Initially, Nimeiry
turned to the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) and Libya for support,
but after coup attempts (1976) allegedly backed by Libya and local Communists,
he turned to Egypt, conservative Arab states, and the West for political and
economic aid. Relations with the United States, disrupted by the murder of two
American diplomats by Arab terrorists in Khartoum in 1973, were also repaired.
Nimeiry was the only Arab leader to back Egyptian president Anwar al-Sadat in
his peace negotiations with Israel. Sadat’s assassination in 1981 left Sudan
considerably more vulnerable to the enmity of Libya. The country’s stability was
also threatened by a large influx of refugees from Eritrea, Uganda, and Chad,
which seriously strained its resources.
President Nimeiry won reelection to a
third term in April 1983. In September he issued a blanket pardon for some
13,000 prisoners and announced a revision of the penal code to accord with
Islamic law (Sharia). Martial law, imposed in April 1984 in the wake of rising
tensions with Libya, protests over food price increases, and opposition in the
predominantly non-Muslim south to Islamization, remained in force until late
September. Renewed unrest led in April 1985 to Nimeiry’s ouster in a bloodless
military coup.
F | Civil War |
After a year of military rule, Sadiq
al-Mahdi, the great grandson of Muhammad Ahmad, was elected prime minister in
the first free election in 18 years. Voting was postponed in 37 southern
constituencies, however, due to a guerrilla war led by southern rebels known as
the Sudanese People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) against the Muslim Arab government.
The newly elected assembly was to draft and approve a new constitution and to
hold elections every four years. However, severe food shortages, guerrilla
unrest, a mounting debt crisis, and other problems weakened the government’s
power.
In June 1989 a military coup headed by
Brigadier Omar Hassan al-Bashir toppled the Mahdi government. A state of
emergency was imposed, and Sudan was ruled through a 15-member Revolutionary
Command Council for National Salvation. Conditions deteriorated in the early
1990s, as the Bashir regime suppressed political opposition and stepped up the
war against non-Muslim rebels in the south. In 1993 Bashir took tentative steps
toward multiparty democracy, including the dissolution of the military
government, but the decision to retain most of his former ministers prompted
many to perceive these changes as largely cosmetic.
In January 1994 about 100,000 refugees
fled to Uganda when Sudanese troops led an offensive against the SPLA. In March
safety zones were established for the transportation of provisions and relief
workers to the war-torn south. Throughout 1994 mediators from the
Intergovernmental Authority on Drought and Development (IGADD), consisting of
representatives from Kenya, Uganda, Ethiopia, and Eritrea, attempted to
negotiate a peace agreement between the Sudanese government and the SPLA. In
September the negotiations resulted in the creation of the Supreme Council for
Peace, an 89-member body with 38 representatives from the rebel-dominated south.
In March 1995 former United States president Jimmy Carter moderated a two-month
cease-fire in an effort to allow relief workers to treat cases of river
blindness and guinea worm disease in the south. The SPLA resumed its attack in
July.
In March 1996 Bashir and his supporters
swept presidential and legislative elections. Hassan al-Turabi, the head of a
powerful Islamic fundamentalist movement called the National Islamic Front and a
national spiritual leader, was elected to the National Assembly and made
speaker. In April Sudan faced international condemnation after evidence surfaced
linking Bashir’s government with a June 1995 assassination attempt on Egyptian
president Hosni Mubarak in Ethiopia. In May 1996 the United Nations (UN) levied
sanctions against Sudan for refusing to extradite to Ethiopia three suspects in
the assassination attempt.
By the mid-1990s the SPLA, led by John
Garang, a former officer in the Sudanese army, controlled most of southern Sudan
and a number of important towns. In mid-1998 peace talks, the SPLA and the
government tentatively agreed to accept an internationally supervised vote on
self-determination in the south. However, no date was set for the vote, and the
talks failed to produce a cease-fire. Peace talks continued through the 1990s,
but they repeatedly stalled over major issues such as the government’s
unwillingness to separate state and religion and disagreement over where the
boundary between north and south would lie. Several temporary cease-fires were
called during this time in support of the peace effort and to facilitate the
delivery of humanitarian aid, including the delivery of food and vaccines, to
the war-torn south.
In December 1999 a power struggle between
Bashir and Turabi came to a head. Turabi attempted to pass constitutional
amendments designed to reduce Bashir’s presidential powers by calling for the
creation of the office of a prime minister, accountable to the National
Assembly, and the removal of presidential control over the selection of state
governors. In response to this threat to his authority, Bashir dismissed Turabi
and declared a state of emergency, dissolving the National Assembly and
suspending parts of the constitution.
Sudan’s main opposition parties boycotted
December 2000 presidential and legislative elections, criticizing the ongoing
state of emergency and the fact that voting would not be held in most southern
constituencies. Bashir was reelected with 86.5 percent of the vote and his
party, the National Congress Party, won 355 of the 360 seats in the National
Assembly.
G | Violence in Darfur |
As the south grew more peaceful in the
first years of the 21st century, violence flared in the western region of
Darfur. In 2003 rebel groups in Darfur attacked government garrisons in the
region. The Darfurian rebels demanded greater autonomy for Darfur and the
settlement of many local grievances, especially over land rights. The government
responded to the garrison attacks with a ferocious counterinsurgency campaign
involving an Arab militia known as the Janjaweed as well as government troops.
In the process, entire villages were destroyed and many civilians were brutally
tortured, raped, and killed.
The government and Darfurian rebel groups
signed a cease-fire in April 2004, but the violence soon resumed. In July 2004
the United Nations (UN) Security Council passed a resolution demanding that the
Sudanese government disarm the Janjaweed militia or face the threat of punitive
measures. However, the government denied sponsoring the militia, which continued
to mount attacks in Darfur. In August the African Union (AU) began sending
peacekeeping forces to Darfur. However, the AU mission, which eventually
included 7,000 troops, proved unable to control the violence. The government of
Sudan resisted international pressure to allow United Nations peacekeeping
forces in Darfur.
The AU convened peace talks in 2006 that
resulted in a detailed peace agreement in May. However, not all of the rebel
groups signed the agreement, and a new round of fighting broke out in Darfur.
Efforts to obtain a lasting peace agreement continued in 2007. In June 2007 AU
and UN officials met with Sudanese government officials in Addis Ababa, the
capital of Ethiopia. The talks resulted in an agreement to allow a joint AU-UN
peacekeeping force of about 20,000 provided that a majority of the troops were
African. In July 2007 the UN Security Council authorized a force of about 26,000
peacekeepers to be deployed in Darfur, including the 7,000 AU forces already
there.
Earlier, in 2005, the International
Criminal Court (ICC) opened an investigation into war crimes committed in
Darfur. The UN estimated that as a result of the conflict in Darfur more than
200,000 people, mostly civilians, died from violence, starvation, or disease. In
addition, more than 2 million people crowded refugee camps in Darfur and
neighboring border areas in Chad, creating a dire humanitarian crisis.
International relief workers faced extreme difficulties reaching those in need
due to the continuing violence and strict restrictions placed on their movements
by the Sudanese government.
H | Peace in the South |
In January 2005 the Sudanese government
and the SPLA signed a comprehensive peace agreement to end Sudan’s 21-year-long
civil war. It was the longest-running conflict in Africa and claimed an
estimated 1.5 million lives. The agreement outlined a six-year transitional
period, during which southern Sudan would establish a separate administration
and enjoy relative autonomy. The agreement established an interim national unity
government with a power-sharing arrangement in which the National Congress Party
would have a 52 percent share of power and the Sudanese People’s Liberation
Movement (SPLM), the political wing of the SPLA, would have a 28 percent share.
Opposition parties in the north would have a 14 percent share, and opposition
parties in the south would make up the remaining 6 percent. Oil revenues would
be divided evenly between the north and south, although most of Sudan’s oil is
located in the south. According to the agreement, at the end of the six-year
period the people of the south were to vote on whether or not to secede from
Sudan.
No comments:
Post a Comment