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Category: Blog

Sudan Oil Talks Stall Out Once More

Sudan Oil Talks Stall Out Once More
The new round of talks following South Sudan’s decision to cut off its oil flow through Sudan failed to produce a deal on the key unresolved issues between the two states. The oil shutdown, a move that drastically changed the negotiating dynamics, was only the latest unilateral action that has caused the gap between the two sides to widen even further. The parties will reconvene in a week, on February 23, according to the South’s lead negotiator ...

In a Corner of Congo, the Ideas of a Man Named ‘Peace’ Take Hold

In a Corner of Congo, the Ideas of a Man Named 'Peace' Take Hold
Amani Matabaro sits surrounded by 16 women from Mumosho, the village in eastern Congo where he was born and raised. He translates from Mashi and Swahili into English, so the women can share their lives, their experiences of trauma, and their hopes with us. As volunteers who run Action Kivu in support of Amani’s Congolese non-profit, Cate Haight and I recently traveled to Congo, ringing in 2012 in Bukavu and Mumosho, surrounded by the women and children whom Amani serves through education assistance, sewing workshops, micro-finance loans, and much more. Rebecca Snavely wrote this guest post ...

Congo Army Takes Over Key Mines, Now Must Hand Over to Police

Congo Army Takes Over Key Mines, Now Must Hand Over to Police
The Congolese army captured two of the largest minerals mines in eastern Congo last week—the enormous Bisie tin mine and the Omate gold mine. If the objective is to enable conflict-free minerals from Congo to be sold in international markets, the Congolese government should ensure that the army hands these mines over to the mining police as soon as possible ...

Armed Civilians Challenge South Sudan Government

South Sudan
Armed Civilians Challenge South Sudan Government
While the government of South Sudan is pondering the best way to tackle growing insecurity and prospects of persistent inter-communal hostility, the restive state of Jonglei, the scene of the recent deadly clashes, is enveloped in fear, anxiety, and anticipation of likely reprisal attacks—a situation which, if not handled sensibly, may escalate ...

Controversial Sudanese General Resigns as Head of Arab League Mission in Syria

Controversial Sudanese General Resigns as Head of Arab League Mission in Syria
Sudanese General Mustafa al-Dabi, the highly criticized leader of the Arab League’s observer mission in Syria, resigned his post over the weekend. General al-Dabi’s resignation comes in the midst of the Arab League’s withdrawal of what has been described as a “troubled mission” and subsequent request for a more robust Arab League-United Nations joint peacekeeping mission ...

Somalia: Civil War Years, 1990s to Present

Somalia: Civil War Years, 1990s to Present
This week's post in the series Enough 101 looks at the history of Somalia from the end of direct Western military engagement in the early 1990s through the present, building off of two previous posts that covered challenges to dictatorship through Black Hawk Down, 1976-1990s, and colonialism to independence to dictatorship from 1840 to 1976 ...

You Made This Possible: Darfur Dream Team Progress Report

You Made This Possible: Darfur Dream Team Progress Report
Thanks to the support of hundreds of U.S. students, schools, youth groups, individual donors, and partners like Jewish World Watch, the Darfur Dream Team Sister Schools Program was able to raise and disburse $300,000 for primary education in Djabal refugee camp in eastern Chad. The funds are making a tangible, positive impact on the quality of education for the more than 4,000 Darfuri refugee students enrolled in schools in Djabal ...

Detainee Recounts Ordeal in Sudan’s Notorious Kober Prison

Detainee Recounts Ordeal in Sudan’s Notorious Kober Prison
As some report possible glimpses of an Arab Spring in Sudan, the Khartoum regime is increasingly desperate to crack down on any possible—or even imaginary—dissent, as the case of a British citizen falsely arrested and tortured makes clear ...

South Sudan and Sudan at Brink Again Over Oil

South Sudan
South Sudan and Sudan at Brink Again Over Oil
For the last year and a half, Sudan and South Sudan have been negotiating the arrangements of their separation, including the amount of money the South should pay to pump its oil through pipelines in the North. The talks have rested on the key assumption that both sides would work toward the viability of the other state, but that conventional wisdom is now being tested. This piece originally appeared on Global Post ...

Why the Most Dangerous Places to Women Threaten Global Peace and Security

Why the Most Dangerous Places to Women Threaten Global Peace and Security
Sexual and gender-based violence, or SGBV, does not just affect an individual but also has the power to permeate an entire community. Often these acts are carried out during periods of conflict or post-conflict transitions when rule of law is weak and a culture of impunity reigns. In the Congo alone an estimated 48 women are raped every hour, according to a study published last year by the American Journal of Public Health. The prevalence of SGBV in Congo indicates a systematic breakdown of societal norms, paving the way for further violence and destruction ...