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Walk to End Genocide in Los Angeles

Walk to End Genocide in Los Angeles
Join Enough Project partner organization Jewish World Watch, or JWW, for the 7th Annual Walk to End Genocide on Sunday, April 14 ...

Policy Alert: New U.N. brigade in Congo is an opportunity

Policy Alert: New U.N. brigade in Congo is an opportunity
The new peace enforcement brigade approved by the UN Security Council on March 28, 2013 to operate under the United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission for the Democratic Republic of Congo, or MONUSCO, presents an opportunity to significantly reduce the strength of illegal armed groups if paired with special forces training, a robust defections program , and a comprehensive peace process led by new U.N. Envoy Mary Robinson ...

CNN Op-ed: Congo’s “Terminator” Surrenders, What Next for Peace?

CNN Op-ed: Congo's "Terminator" Surrenders, What Next for Peace?
On March 18, a Congolese warlord known as Bosco "the Terminator" Ntaganda surrendered to the U.S. Embassy in Rwanda ...

Fixing the Broken Approach to Peace Between the Sudans

Fixing the Broken Approach to Peace Between the Sudans
Earlier this week, U.N. Interim Security Force for Abyei, or UNISFA, completed the first verification mission to confirm troop withdrawal on both sides of the highly disputed 14-mile area. While this success is reason for cautious optimism in the peace process between Sudan and South Sudan, a new Enough Project policy paper presents critical contextual perspective on the ongoing cycle of progress and setback that has become typical of peace negotiations between Sudan and South Sudan ...

The Enough Project Announces the Launch of its Non-Resident Senior Fellows Program

The Enough Project Announces the Launch of its Non-Resident Senior Fellows Program
Today, the Enough Project launched its Non-Resident Senior Fellows Program. The roster features a unique and diverse group of 26 distinguished policy experts, scholars, frontline activists, and celebrity upstanders ...

Hepatitis E Outbreak Wreaking Havoc in Upper Nile

Hepatitis E Outbreak Wreaking Havoc in Upper Nile
In recent months, a hepatitis E epidemic has spread to four refugee camps situated in Maban County along the border of Sudan and South Sudan. Nearly 113,000 Sudanese refugees live in these four crowded camps in Upper Nile State. Currently, South Sudan hosts over 190,000 refugees who have fled from the Sudanese government’s campaign of violence against civilians. Thus far, the hepatitis E outbreak has affected more than 7,287 refugees and resulted in 128 deaths ...

Fix the Broken Approach to Peace Between the Sudans: Enough Project

South Sudan
The international community should not be lulled into a false sense of security because of the incremental steps Khartoum has recently taken in its bilateral relationship with South Sudan, argues a new Enough Project paper ...

The Broken Approach to Peace Between the Sudans: A Proposal to End the Cycle of Incremental Progress and Dangerous Delay

The Broken Approach to Peace Between the Sudans: A Proposal to End the Cycle of Incremental Progress and Dangerous Delay
The international community’s current approach to brokering peace between the two Sudans is caught in a counterproductive cycle. This paper argues that the issues troubling the most recent negotiations are symptomatic of broader problems with the international community’s efforts to broker peace in the Sudans, identifies the underlying reasons why the process has failed to move forward, and proposes three recommendations for a more viable strategy ...

M23 Rebel Leader Bosco Ntaganda Pleads ‘Not Guilty’ at the International Criminal Court

M23 Rebel Leader Bosco Ntaganda Pleads 'Not Guilty' at the International Criminal Court
In a bizarre turn of events, M23 rebel leader Bosco Ntaganda surrendered to the U.S. Embassy in Kigali on March 18th amidst swirling rumors of his presence in Rwanda, reports of internal fighting among M23 factions, and an impending peace deal between rebels and the Congolese government ...

Politico Op-Ed: U.S. must act on Congo now

Politico Op-Ed: U.S. must act on Congo now
This op-ed originally appeared on Politico. On March 18, one of the world’s worst warlords, Bosco Ntaganda, turned himself in to the U.S. Embassy in Rwanda. Ntaganda, also known as “The Terminator,” is the leader of several brutal armed groups and army units, including the M23, that have terrorized eastern Congo for over a decade. He is wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes and crimes against humanity ...