August 20th, 2008
posted by
Louisa Lombard
Developments in international justice have filled the papers in recent weeks, with the capture of Serbia’s Radovan Karadžić and the charges leveled against Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir. Far from this spotlight, former DR Congolese rebel leader and vice-President Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo has moved from arrest to Belgian jail to the custody of the International Criminal [...]
Read the rest of Justice for Whom? The ICC in the Central African Republic.
Posted in Central African Republic, ICC, Making Sense of Darfur | 0 Comments » |
August 19th, 2008
posted by
Tristan Reed
Apropos of Ibrahim Adam’s call to increase foreign direct investment in Sudan, it’s worth considering whether a strategy, pushed by American divestment activists, that bringing firms to the negotiating table offers a more productive soft power strategy than sanctions. In my view, there is a small chance that it does.
What began as a push by [...]
Read the rest of Have Activists Found A Soft Power Policy More Powerful than Sanctions?.
Posted in Making Sense of Darfur, Socio-economic Issues | 0 Comments » |
August 19th, 2008
posted by
Daniel Millenson
On August 14th in this space, Ibrahim Adam argued for the removal of United States sanctions and an end to the international targeted divestment campaign meant to turn the screws on Khartoum. The argument is convincing only if you accept Mr. Adam’s implied premises: that the war in Darfur is merely a result of economic [...]
Read the rest of Sanctions and Targeted Divestment: Still Needed.
Posted in Making Sense of Darfur, Socio-economic Issues | 2 Comments » |
August 15th, 2008
posted by
Sara Pantuliano
The implementation of the CPA in Southern Kordofan has been subject to numerous delays in many different areas. The most significant delays have been around the formation of the state government and the passing of the state constitution. The lack of genuine integration between the NCP and the SPLM in the state government is the [...]
Read the rest of Stability Threats in South Kordofan.
Posted in Kordofan, Making Sense of Darfur | 0 Comments » |
August 14th, 2008
posted by
Ibrahim Adam
The US government and the American people sincerely want to do the right thing by Sudan. Help turn it into a democratic, stable, equitable, prosperous and, preferably, united country. Trouble is they don’t seem to know how. At least that’s what it looks like judging by America’s neurosis with placing new, and keeping old, economic [...]
Read the rest of High Time to Lift Sanctions.
Posted in Making Sense of Darfur, Socio-economic Issues | 0 Comments » |
August 12th, 2008
posted by
Julie Flint
I came across SPLA-2 while in the Nuba Mountains in April. Al Bulola had just been visiting senior SPLA commanders, in South Sudan and in South Kodofan, claiming that he had 40,000 men ready to join the movement and looking for logistical support. The SPLA’s high military command in Juba had never heard [...]
Read the rest of More on SPLA-2.
Posted in Kordofan, Making Sense of Darfur | 4 Comments » |
August 11th, 2008
posted by
Alex de Waal
Professor Abdel Rahman Musa, leader of the SLM-Free Will group and Minister of State for Cabinet Affairs, passed away on Sunday. He was a fine Darfurian scholar and intellectual committed to peace for his people.
Abdel Rahman grew up in Kutum, a member of a well-known Tunjur family. He studied at the University of Khartoum and [...]
Read the rest of In Memoriam: Prof. Abdel Rahman Musa Abakar.
Posted in Making Sense of Darfur, Rebels | 2 Comments » |
August 10th, 2008
posted by
Alex de Waal
Jeffrey Gettleman’s article in today’s New York Times, “Darfur Withers as Sudan Sells a Food Bonanza,” is an excellent overview of the issues surrounding food production and food relief. Excepting solely the current context of high international food prices, it could have been written at any time in the last thirty years.
In the 1970s, [...]
Read the rest of Food, Farms and Power in Sudan.
Posted in Books and Articles Relevant to Darfur, Land, Making Sense of Darfur, Socio-economic Issues | 1 Comment » |
August 9th, 2008
posted by
Alex de Waal
The intense war in the Nuba in the late 1980s and early 1990s is an important piece of Sudanese modern history. The memory of this all-too-recent trauma, which culminated in an government attempt to destroy Nuba identity, is alive in South Kordofan. Confidence has not been rebuilt and the leadership in Khartoum ignores the deeply-felt [...]
Read the rest of Not Forgetting the Nuba War.
Posted in Kordofan, Making Sense of Darfur | 2 Comments » |
August 7th, 2008
posted by
Hafiz Mohammed
Yesterday it was reported in al Rayaam newspaper that there is a new rebellion in the Nuba mountains. In fact the rebellion has been going on for some time. Two months ago one of Sudan Liberation Movement’s commanders on a visit to London told me that they have been approached by a commander from the [...]
Read the rest of The Risk of Rebellion in Kordofan.
Posted in Kordofan, Making Sense of Darfur | 0 Comments » |