Internal Wars Threaten Sudan - Analysts

The presidents of Sudan and South Sudan met in Addis Ababa for peace talks, but Sudan’s internal ethnic wars threaten to undercut both negotiations and the state’s stability, analysts say.

  • Comment (1)

Troops patrol in Abyei area (file photo).

InFocus



Comments Post a comment

  • Aldo Ajou Deng Akuey
    Jan 25 2013, 10:15

    This a well researched piece of work. It really focused on political, economical and cultural rifts between the dominant Arabs in Khartoum and the indigenous Africans in Kordofan, Blue Nile, Northeastren and the Whole of Darfur (only annexed to Khartoum in 1916). Bashir is likely to lose the Arabs' grip of Sudan once and forever.

    The envisaged solutions, which are eminent, rage from total take over by the majority Africans to insure inclusiveness in the power sharing for all the Sudanese, Arabs and Africans. Or else, the Sudan divides into more than three countries, South Kordofan, Darfur and North/Eastren.