Alex de Waal

Posts by Alex de Waal:

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

Imagine if Luis Moreno-Ocampo Were to Indict President Omar al Bashir

Imagine if the Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, were to issue an arrest warrant against Sudan’s President Omar al Bashir on charges relating to Darfur. What would be the consequences?
The charge, the accused, the evidence and the timing are known only to the Chief Prosecutor. I have no insider knowledge of [...]

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Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

Ocampo’s Gauntlet to the UN Security Council

Tragedy is the conflict of rights and there is no greater and more painful tragedy than the clash of fundamental rights. This drama is about to be played out between the members of the UN Security Council and the International Criminal Court.
The ICC was established under the Rome Statute of 2002. The case of Darfur [...]

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Monday, June 9th, 2008

Shame and Violence: Insight from Complex Emergencies

In Complex Emergencies David Keen draws upon James Gilligan’s work on the psychological motivations of the most violent killers in American gaols as a source of insight into why atrocities are so commonly part of civil wars in countries such as Sierra Leone. Let me explore this with regard to Darfur.
Gilligan’s core insight, based [...]

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Saturday, June 7th, 2008

Designing Limbo: IDP Camps and Urban Planning

Jim Lewis has a fascinating article in today’s New York Times–in the Architecture section. It’s called “The Exigent City” and poses the question, why are refugee camps and IDP camps designed how they are? According to the most recent estimates, refugees stay in camps for an average of seventeen years–so that camps are far from [...]

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Monday, June 2nd, 2008

Complex Emergencies

On page 115 of his recent book Complex Emergencies, David Keen writes, “For those familiar with this famine [1988 in southwest Kordofan and Bahr el Ghazal] the current crisis in Darfur is a horrific case of déja vu.”
Indeed there is little about the internal dynamics of the Darfur conflict that is substantially different from other [...]

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Sunday, June 1st, 2008

Is Sudan a “Post Islamist” State? III

This last few days, this blog has launched a discussion on political Islam in Sudan, focusing on the recent book The First Islamist Republic: Development and Disintegration of Islamism in the Sudan, by Abdullahi Gallab. It began with an essay by Abdullahi. Mine is the first commentary—others will follow over the next month.
The Sudanese Islamists [...]

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Thursday, May 29th, 2008

Can Sudan Survive?

The modern history of Sudan is riddled with bloodshed, destruction and squandered chances for peace and democracy. Consistently, the worst case scenario comes to pass and, just when it seems as though things could get no worse, they do precisely that. But occasionally, the Sudanese succeed in snatching an improbable victory for peace and civility [...]

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Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

The “Responsibility to Protect” is Just a Slogan

The text of my presentation to the BBC’s World Tonight last week is now available online. (With a sentence added to reflect JEM’s attack on Khartoum, which occurred between my recording the piece and the time it was broadcast.) The more substantive article on which this was based was published last year in International Affairs [...]

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Monday, May 19th, 2008

Darfur: A New History of a Long War

A completely revised and updated (to January 2008) version of the book written by Julie Flint and myself is official launched this week. It’s available in both the UK (Zed Books) and the US (Palgrave-Macmillan).
Our earlier “short history” concluded in the early months of 2005, just as the phase of intense hostilities was coming to [...]

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Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

In Memoriam: Jamali Hassan Jalal al Din

An obituary by Julie Flint and Alex de Waal.
One of the most disturbing images to have come out of Sudan in the wake of JEM’s attempt to overthrow the government has been that of the tortured body of a lawyer in his forties, Jamali Hassan Jalal al Din, apparently beaten to death by government forces [...]

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