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Category: Reports

Field Dispatch: Behind the Ban- An Update from Congo

Field Dispatch: Behind the Ban- An Update from Congo
Congolese President Joseph Kabila’s sudden ban on mineral exports from three eastern provinces has left many observers in the region questioning the effectiveness of the directive. It has also reportedly made life difficult for experts at Congo’s mining ministry in Kinshasa, who have been struggling with how to implement and enforce the ban ...

Congo’s Enough Moment

Congo's Enough Moment
At rare moments during the course of a war, a confluence of factors come together to provide a window of opportunity for real conflict transformation. Now Congo has a unique opportunity to bring an end to more than 125 years of having its people and resources pillaged by colonial powers, international traders, neighbors, and foreign and domestic armed groups ...

Sudan Peace Watch – Oct 13, 2010

Sudan Peace Watch – Oct 13, 2010
As South Sudan approaches its referendum, key developments covered in this issue include: preparations for the South Sudan referendum remain behind schedule, Abyei negotiations flounder in Addis, post-referendum talks have made little progress, and insecurity is pervasive in Darfur as Doha talks stall ...

Neglecting Darfur

Neglecting Darfur
Although Darfur only rarely makes the headlines lately, the reality on the ground continues to be defined by profound insecurity, limited humanitarian access, impunity for perpetrators of violence, and the absence of credible human rights reporting ...

Avoiding the Train Wreck in Sudan: U.S. Leverage for Peace

Avoiding the Train Wreck in Sudan: U.S. Leverage for Peace
As part of its Sudan Working Group Series, the Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars released today a paper entitled, “Avoiding the Train Wreck in Sudan: U.S. Leverage for Peace,” as part of a two-piece publication examining international engagement in Sudan ...

Referendum Countdown: ‘Sky High’ Expectations in Sudan’s Unity State

Referendum Countdown: 'Sky High' Expectations in Sudan’s Unity State
Expectations for what the January referendum will bring are tremendously high among residents of Unity state in South Sudan. While anticipation for the vote has placated a population that has grown increasingly discontent with its government, these grievances have not gone away. If South Sudan receives its independence, the southern ruling party will have to address its people’s expectations or risk popular violence ...

‘This is our land now’: Lord’s Resistance Army Attacks in Bas Uele, Northeastern Congo

'This is our land now': Lord’s Resistance Army Attacks in Bas Uele, Northeastern Congo
Groups from the Lord’s Resistance Army continue to attack civilians throughout central Africa. Attacks against civilians in a remote corner of Bas Uele district in northeastern Democratic Republic of the Congo go largely unnoticed. Unlike most areas where the LRA operates, attacks in northern Bas Uele are intended to empty the area—of strategic importance to the LRA’s cross-border movement to the Central African Republic, or CAR—of civilians. The lack of a meaningful military force to challenge the LRA has turned the northern region of Bas Uele into a veritable haven for the brutal rebel group ...

Field Dispatch: Conflict Minerals Windfall for Armed Forces in Eastern Congo

Field Dispatch: Conflict Minerals Windfall for Armed Forces in Eastern Congo
Senior commanders continue to benefit from Congo’s lucrative mineral trade. Striking examples of this trend are the staggering lifestyle and investments of some Congolese army officers here in the Kivus. Although official army salaries top out at 90,000 Congolese francs per month, less than $100, many Congolese generals and colonels own gas stations, run minerals exporters or ‘comptoirs’, and new buildings are sprouting up like mushrooms throughout cities of Goma, Bukavu, Butembo, Bunia and Kinshasa ...

Field Dispatch: To the Referendum and Beyond- South Sudan’s Lesser Known Flashpoints

South Sudan
Field Dispatch: To the Referendum and Beyond- South Sudan’s Lesser Known Flashpoints
In less than six months, the people of southern Sudan will vote in a self-determination referendum that is expected to result in the secession of the South roughly a year from now. The dynamics shaping the historic and dramatic changes in Sudan are fluid, yet some of the core issues facing southern Sudan will endure regardless of the outcome of the referendum. In this field dispatch for Enough, southern Sudan field researcher Maggie Fick identifies some of these key, lesser recognized, flashpoints ...

What’s Wrong with U.S. Policy toward Sudan, and How to Fix It

What's Wrong with U.S. Policy toward Sudan, and How to Fix It
The time has come for an urgent rethink of how the United States can contribute to peace in Sudan now, building on the lessons of the recent past ...