
Sudan combines the lands of several ancient kingdoms.
The 'history of Sudan' is marked by influences (military and cultural) on
Sudan from neighboring areas (e.g.
Egypt,
Arabian Peninsula,
Ethiopia,
Congo,
Chad) and world powers (e.g.
United Kingdom,
United States). The territory of Sudan combines the lands of several ancient kingdoms, including
Kush,
Darfur, and three
Nubian kingdoms.
Prehistory

Aerial view of the Nubian pyramids at Meroe (2001).
Excavation of
archaeological sites on the
Nile above
Aswan has confirmed human habitation in the
river valley during the
Paleolithic period that spanned more than sixty thousand years of Sudanese history. A
prehistoric burial discovered in northern
Sudan reveals what is believed to be the world's earliest indication of warfare, dating to the
twelfth millennium BC [1]. By the
eighth millennium BC, people of a
Neolithic culture had settled into a sedentary way of life there in fortified
mud-brick villages, where they supplemented
hunting and
fishing on the Nile with
grain gathering and
cattle herding. Anthropological and archaeological research indicate that during the predynastic period Nubia and Nagadan Upper Egypt were ethnically, and culturally nearly identical, and thus, simultaneously evolved systems of pharaonic kingship by 3300 BC.
[2] But during the close of the Nagada III period, Nagada, in its bid to conquer and unify the whole nile valley, seems to have conquered their southern neighbors and "Egyptianized" them.
[3]. The result appears to have been the depopulation of the entire Lower Nubian area, either by the genocidal efforts of the First Dynasty Egyptian kings, or by the migration (forced or voluntary) of the nubians to areas north and south.
Kush
Main articles: Kush
Northern Sudan's earliest historical record comes from Egyptian sources, which described the land upstream from the
First Cataract, called Kush, as "wretched." For more than two thousand years after the
Old Kingdom (
c.2700-2180 BC), Egyptian political and economic activities determined the course of the central Nile region's history. Even during intermediate periods when Egyptian political power in Kush waned, Egypt exerted a profound cultural and religious influence on the Kushite people.
Over the centuries, trade developed. Egyptian caravans carried grain to Kush and returned to Aswan with
ivory,
incense,
hides, and
carnelian (a stone prized both as
jewelry and for
arrowheads) for shipment downriver. Egyptian traders particularly valued
gold and
slaves, who served as domestic servants,
concubines, and soldiers in the
pharaoh's army. Egyptian military expeditions penetrated Kush periodically during the Old Kingdom. Yet there was no attempt to establish a permanent presence in the area until the
Middle Kingdom (c.2100-1720 BC), when Egypt constructed a network of forts along the Nile as far south as
Samnah, in southern Egypt, to guard the flow of gold from mines in
Wawat.
Around 1720 BC, Asian nomads called
Hyksos invaded Egypt, ended the Middle Kingdom, severed links with Kush, and destroyed the forts along the Nile River. To fill the vacuum left by the Egyptian withdrawal, a culturally distinct indigenous kingdom emerged at
Karmah, near present-day
Dunqulah. After Egyptian power revived during the
New Kingdom (c.1570-1100 BC), the pharaoh
Ahmose I incorporated Kush as an Egyptian province governed by a
viceroy. Although Egypt's administrative control of Kush extended only down to the fourth
cataract, Egyptian sources list tributary districts reaching to the
Red Sea and upstream to the confluence of the
Blue Nile and
White Nile rivers. Egyptian authorities ensured the loyalty of local chiefs by drafting their children to serve as pages at the pharaoh's court. Egypt also expected tribute in gold and slaves from local chiefs.
Once Egypt had established political control over Kush, officials and priests joined military personnel, merchants, and artisans and settled in the region. The
Egyptian language became widely used in everyday activities. The Kushite elite adopted Egyptian gods and built temples like that dedicated to the
sun god Amon at
Napata, near present-day
Karima. The temples remained centers of official religious worship until the coming of
Christianity to the region in the sixth century. When Egyptian influence declined or succumbed to foreign domination, the Kushite elite regarded themselves as champions of genuine Egyptian cultural and religious values.
By the
eleventh century BC, the authority of the New Kingdom dynasties had diminished, allowing divided rule in Egypt, and ending Egyptian control of Kush. There is no information about the region's activities over the next three hundred years. In the
eighth century BC, however, Kush reemerged as an independent kingdom ruled from
Napata by an aggressive line of monarchs who gradually extended their influence into Egypt. Around
750 BC, a Kushite king called
Kashta conquered
Upper Egypt and became ruler of
Thebes until approximately
740 BC His successor,
Piankhy, subdued the
delta, reunited Egypt under the
Twenty-fifth Dynasty, and founded a line of kings who ruled Kush and Thebes for about a hundred years. The dynasty's intervention in the area of modern
Syria caused a confrontation between Egypt and
Assyria. When the Assyrians in retaliation invaded Egypt,
Taharqa (688-663 BC), the last Kushite pharaoh, withdrew and returned the dynasty to Napata, where it continued to rule Kush and extended its dominions to the south and east.Kush was known as the mother of gold.
Meroe
Main articles: Meroë
Egypt's succeeding dynasty failed to reassert control over Kush. Around
590 BC, however, an Egyptian army sacked Napata, compelling the Kushite court to move to a more secure location at Meroe near the
Sixth Cataract. For several centuries thereafter, the Meroitic kingdom developed independently of Egypt, which passed successively under
Persian,
Greek, and, finally,
Roman domination. During the height of its power in the
second and
third centuries BC, Meroe extended over a region from the
third cataract in the north to
Soba, near present-day
Khartoum, in the south.
The pharaonic tradition persisted among a line of rulers at Meroe, who raised
stelae to record the achievements of their reigns and erected
pyramids to contain their tombs. These objects and the ruins of palaces, temples, and baths at Meroe attest to a centralized political system that employed
artisans' skills and commanded the labor of a large work force. A well-managed
irrigation system allowed the area to support a higher population density than was possible during later periods. By the
first century BC, the use of
hieroglyphs gave way to a Meroitic script that adapted the Egyptian writing system to an indigenous,
Nubian-related language spoken later by the region's people. Meroe's succession system was not necessarily hereditary; the
matriarchal royal family member deemed most worthy often became king. The queen mother's role in the selection process was crucial to a smooth succession. The crown appears to have passed from brother to brother (or sister) and only when no siblings remained from father to son.
Although Napata remained Meroe's religious center, northern Kush eventually fell into disorder as it came under pressure from the
Blemmyes, predatory nomads from east of the Nile. However, the Nile continued to give the region access to the Mediterranean world. Additionally, Meroe maintained contact with Arab and
Indian traders along the Red Sea coast and incorporated
Hellenistic and
Hindu cultural influences into its daily life. Inconclusive evidence suggests that metallurgical technology may have been transmitted westward across the
savanna belt to
West Africa from Meroe's iron smelteries.
Relations between Meroe and Egypt were not always peaceful. As a response to Meroe's incursions into Upper Egypt, a
Roman army moved south and razed Napata in
23 BC. The Roman commander quickly abandoned the area, however, as too poor to warrant colonization.
In the
second century AD, the
Nobatae occupied the Nile's west bank in northern Kush. They are believed to have been one of several well-armed bands of horse- and camel-borne warriors who sold protection to the Meroitic population; eventually they intermarried and established themselves among the Meroitic people as a military aristocracy. Until nearly the
fifth century, Rome subsidized the Nobatae and used Meroe as a buffer between Egypt and the Blemmyes. Meanwhile, the old Meroitic kingdom contracted because of the expansion of the powerful
Ethiopian
Kingdom of Aksum to the east. By
AD 350, King
Ezana of Axum had captured and destroyed Meroe city, ending the kingdom's independent existence, and conquering its territory into modern-day southern Egypt.Meroe was considered a wheel because all trade routes led to meroe.
Christian Nubia

Christian Nubia in the three states period. Makuria would later absorb
Nobatia. Note that the border between
Alodia and Makuria is unclear, but it was somewhere between the 5th and 6th Cataracts.
By the
sixth century, three states had emerged as the political and cultural heirs of the Meroitic kingdom.
Nobatia in the north, had its capital at
Faras, in what is now Egypt; the central kingdom,
Muqurra, was centered at Dunqulah, the old city on the Nile about 150 kilometers south of modern Dunqulah; and
Alwa, in the heartland of old Meroe in the south, had its capital at Sawba. In all three kingdoms, warrior aristocracies ruled Meroitic populations from royal courts where functionaries bore Greek titles in emulation of the
Byzantine court.
The earliest references to Nubia's successor kingdoms are contained in accounts by Greek and Coptic authors of the conversion of Nubian kings to Christianity in the sixth century. According to tradition, a missionary sent by Byzantine empress
Theodora arrived in Nobatia and started preaching the gospel about
540. It is possible that the conversion process began earlier, however, under the aegis of Coptic missionaries from Egypt. The Nubian kings accepted the
Monophysite Christianity practiced in Egypt and acknowledged the spiritual authority of the Coptic patriarch of Alexandria over the Nubian church. A hierarchy of bishops named by the Coptic patriarch and consecrated in Egypt directed the church's activities and wielded considerable secular power. The church sanctioned a sacerdotal kingship, confirming the royal line's legitimacy. In turn the monarch protected the church's interests. The queen mother's role in the succession process paralleled that of Meroe's matriarchal tradition. Because women transmitted the right to succession, a renowned warrior not of royal birth might be nominated to become king through marriage to a woman in line of succession.
The emergence of Christianity reopened channels to Mediterranean civilization and renewed Nubia's cultural and ideological ties to Egypt. The church encouraged literacy in Nubia through its Egyptian-trained clergy and in its monastic and cathedral schools. The use of
Greek in liturgy eventually gave way to the Nubian language, which was written using an indigenous alphabet that combined elements of the old Meroitic and Coptic scripts. Coptic, however, often appeared in ecclesiastical and secular circles. Additionally, early inscriptions have indicated a continuing knowledge of colloquial Greek in Nubia as late as the
twelfth century. After the
seventh century, Arabic gained importance in the Nubian kingdoms, especially as a medium for commerce.
The Christian Nubian kingdoms, which survived for many centuries, achieved their peak of prosperity and military power in the
ninth and
tenth centuries. However,
Muslim Arab invaders, who in
640 had conquered Egypt, posed a threat to the Christian Nubian kingdoms. Nobatia and Muqurra merged into the kingdom of Dunqulah sometime before
700. Although the Arabs soon abandoned attempts to reduce Nubia by force, Muslim domination of Egypt often made it difficult to communicate with the Coptic patriarch or to obtain Egyptian-trained clergy. As a result, the Nubian church became isolated from the rest of the Christian world.
The coming of Islam
Main articles: History of Sudan (Coming of Islam to the Turkiyah)
Islam came to Egypt in the
640s, and pressed southward; around 651 the governor of Egypt raided as far south as Dongola. The Muslims or the Arabs met with stiff resistance and found little wealth worth capturing. They thus ceased their offensive and a treaty known as the
baqt was signed between the Arabs and Makuria. This treaty held for some seven hundred years. The area between the Nile and the
Red Sea was a source of
gold and
emeralds, and
Arab miners gradually moved in. Around the
970s an Arabic envoy
Ibn Sulaym went to Dongola and wrote an account afterwards; it is now our most important source for this period. Despite the baqt northern Sudan became steadily Islamicized and
Arabized; Makuria collapsed in the fourteenth century with Alodia disappearing somewhat later.
Far less is known about the history of southern Sudan. It seems as though it was home to a variety of semi-nomadic tribes. In the
16th century one of these tribes, known as the
Funj, moved north and united Nubia forming the
Kingdom of Sennar. The Funj sultans quickly converted to Islam and that religion steadily became more entrenched. At the same time, the
Darfur Sultanate arose in the west. Between them, the
Taqali established a state in the
Nuba Hills.
The economy of Sudan was
feudally based, with a large number of
slaves supporting the ruling
Funj class.They traded across the region, and brought much wealth to their kingdom.
[4]
Nineteenth century
The Turkiyah
Main articles: History of Sudan (1821-1885)
In
1820–
21, an Egyptian-
Ottoman force conquered and unified the northern portion of the country. The new government was known as the ''
Turkiyah'' or Turkish regime. They were looking to open new markets and sources of natural resources. Historically, the pestilential swamps of the
Sudd discouraged expansion into the deeper south of the country. Although Egypt claimed all of the present Sudan during most of the
nineteenth century, and established a province
Equatoria in southern Sudan to further this aim, it was unable to establish effective control over the area, which remained an area of fragmented tribes subject to frequent attacks by
slave raiders. In the later years of the Turkiyah, the British missionarys traveled from what is now modernday Kenya in to the Sudd to convert the local tribes to Christianity.
During the 1870s, European initiatives against the slave trade caused an economic crisis in southern Sudan, precipitating the rise of Mahdist forces.
Mahdism and condominium
Main articles: History of Sudan (1884-1898)
In
1881, a religious leader named
Muhammad ibn Abdalla proclaimed himself the
Mahdi ("expected one") and began a war to unify the tribes in western and central Sudan. His followers took the name “
Ansars” ("followers") which they continue to use today, in association with the single largest political grouping, the
Umma Party (once led by a descendant of the Mahdi,
Sadiq al Mahdi). Taking advantage of conditions resulting from Ottoman-Egyptian exploitation and maladministration, the Mahdi led a nationalist revolt culminating in the fall of
Khartoum on 26 January
1885. The interim governor-general of the Sudan, the British Major-General
Charles George Gordon, and many of the fifty thousand inhabitants of Khartoum were massacred.
The Mahdi died in June 1885. He was followed by Khalifa Abdullah, who began an expansion of Sudan's area into Ethiopia.
An Anglo-Egyptian force under
Lord Kitchener in
1898 was sent to Sudan. Sudan was proclaimed a
condominium in
1899 under British-Egyptian administration. The
Governor-General of the Sudan, for example, was appointed by "Khedival Decree", rather than simply by the British Crown, but while maintaining the appearance of joint administration, the British Empire formulated policies, and supplied most of the top administrators.
European Colonialism
Main articles: History of the Anglo-Egyptian co-dominium
In
1892, a
Belgian expedition claimed portions of southern Sudan that became known as the
Lado Enclave. The Lado Enclave was officially part of the
Belgian Congo. An
1896 agreement between the
United Kingdom and Belgium saw the enclave turned over to the British after the death of
King Léopold II in
1910.
At the same time the
French claimed several areas:
Bahr el Ghazal, and the Western Upper Nile up to
Fashoda. By 1896 they had a firm administrative hold on these areas and they planned on annexing them to
French West Africa. An international conflict known as the
Fashoda incident developed between France and the United Kingdom over these areas. In 1899, France agreed to cede the area to the UK.
From 1898, the United Kingdom and Egypt administered all of present day Sudan, but northern and southern Sudan were administered as separate colonies. In the very early 1920s, the British passed the Closed Districts Ordinances which stipulated that passports were required for travel between the two zones, permits were required to conduct business in the other zone, and totally separate administrations.
In the south,
English,
Dinka,
Bari,
Nuer,
Latuko,
Shilluk,
Azande and Pari (Lafon) were official languages, while in the north
Arabic and English were used as official languages. Islam was discouraged in the south, where
Christian missionaries were permitted to work. Colonial governors of south Sudan attended colonial conferences in East Africa, not Khartoum, and the British hoped to add south Sudan to their East African colonies.
Most of the British focus was on developing the economy and infrastructure of the north. Southern political arrangements were left largely as they had been prior to the arrival of the British. Until the 1920s, the British had very little authority in the south.
In order to establish their authority in the north, the British promoted the power of
Sayyid Ali al-Mirghani, head of the
Khatmiyya sect and
Sayyid Abd al-Rahman al-Mahdi, head of the Ansar sect. The Ansar sect essentially became the Umma party, and Khatmiyya became the
Democratic Unionist Party (Sudan).
In 1943, the British began preparing the north for self-rule, establishing a North Sudan Advisory Council to advise on the governance of the six North Sudan provinces: comprising of Khartoum,
Kordofan,
Darfur, and Eastern, Northern and Blue Nile provinces.
Then, in
1946, the British colonial authority reversed its policy and decided to integrate north and south Sudan under one government. South Sudanese authorities were informed at the
Juba Conference of 1947 that they would now be governed by a common administrative authority with the north. From 1948, 13 delegates, picked by the British authorities represented the south on the Sudan Legislative Assembly.
Many southerners felt betrayed by the British because they were largely excluded from the new government. The language of the new government was Arabic, but the bureaucrats and politicians from southern Sudan had, for the most part, been trained in English. Of the eight hundred new governmental positions vacated by the British in 1953, only four were given to southerners.
Also, the political structure in the south was not as organized in the north, so political groupings and parties from the south were not represented at the various conferences and talks that established the modern state of Sudan. As a result, many southerners do not consider Sudan to be a legitimate state.
Independence and the First Civil War
Main articles: History of Sudan (Independent Sudan),
First Sudanese Civil War
In February
1953, the
United Kingdom and Egypt concluded an agreement providing for Sudanese self-government and self-determination. The transitional period toward independence began with the inauguration of the first parliament in
1954. With the consent of the British and Egyptian Governments, Sudan achieved independence on
1 January,
1956, under a provisional constitution. The
United States was among the first foreign powers to recognize the new state. However, the
Arab-led Khartoum government reneged on promises to southerners to create a
federal system, which led to a mutiny by southern army officers that sparked seventeen years of civil war (
1955-
1972). In the early period of the war, hundreds of northern bureaucrats, teachers, and other officials, serving in the south were massacred.
The
National Unionist Party (NUP), under Prime Minister
Ismail al-Azhari, dominated the first cabinet, which was soon replaced by a coalition of conservative political forces. In
1958, following a period of economic difficulties and political maneuvering that paralyzed public administration, Chief of Staff Lt. Gen.
Ibrahim Abboud overthrew the parliamentary regime in a bloodless
coup d'état.
Gen. Abboud did not carry out his promises to return Sudan to civilian government, however, and popular resentment against army rule led to a wave of riots and strikes in late October
1964 that forced the military to relinquish power.
The Abboud regime was followed by a provisional government until parliamentary elections in April
1965 led to a coalition government of the Umma and National Unionist Parties under Prime Minister
Muhammad Ahmad Mahjoub. Between
1966 and
1969, Sudan had a series of governments that proved unable either to agree on a permanent constitution or to cope with problems of
factionalism, economic stagnation, and ethnic dissidence. The succession of early post-independence governments were dominated by Arab Muslims who viewed Sudan as a Muslim Arab state. Indeed, the Umma/NUP proposed
1968 constitution was arguably Sudan’s first Islamic-oriented constitution.
The Nimeiry Era
Main articles: History of Sudan (Nimeiri Era, 1969-1985)
Dissatisfaction culminated in a second coup d'état on
May 25,
1969. The coup leader, Col.
Gaafar Nimeiry, became prime minister, and the new regime abolished parliament and outlawed all political parties.
Disputes between
Marxist and non-Marxist elements within the ruling military coalition resulted in a briefly successful coup in July
1971, led by the
Sudanese Communist Party. Several days later, anti-communist military elements restored Nimeiry to power.
In
1972, the
Addis Ababa Agreement led to a cessation of the north-south civil war and a degree of self-rule. This led to ten years hiatus in the civil war.
Until the early
1970s, Sudan's agricultural output was mostly dedicated to internal consumption. In 1972, the Sudanese government became more pro-Western, and made plans to export food and
cash crops. However, commodity prices declined throughout the 1970s causing economic problems for Sudan. At the same time, debt servicing costs, from the money spent mechanizing agriculture, rose. In
1978, the
IMF negotiated a
Structural Adjustment Program with the government. This further promoted the mechanized export agriculture sector. This caused great economic problems for the pastoralists of Sudan (See
Nuba Peoples).
In
1976, the Ansars mounted a bloody but unsuccessful coup attempt. In July
1977, President Nimeiry met with Ansar leader Sadiq al-Mahdi, opening the way for reconciliation. Hundreds of political prisoners were released, and in August a general amnesty was announced for all opponents of Nimeiry’s government.
Arms suppliers
Sudan relied on a variety of countries for its arms supplies. Since independence the army had been trained and supplied by the British, but relations were cut off after the Arab-Israel
Six-Day War in 1967. At this time relations with the USA and
West Germany were also cut off.
From 1968 to 1972, the
Soviet Union and eastern bloc nations sold large numbers of weapons and provided technical assistance and training to Sudan. At this time the army grew from a strength of 18,000 to roughly 50,000 men. Large numbers of
tanks, aircraft, and artillery were acquired at this time, and they dominated the army until the late 1980s.
Relations cooled between the two sides after the coup in 1972, and the Khartoum government sought to diversify its suppliers. The USSR continued to supply weapons until 1977, when their support of
Marxist elements in Ethiopia angered the Sudanese sufficiently to cancel their deals.
China was the main supplier in the late 1970s.
Egypt was the most important military partner in the 1970s, providing
missiles, personnel carriers, and other military hardware. At the same time military cooperation between the two countries was important.
Western countries began supplying Sudan again in the mid 1970s. The United States began selling Sudan a great deal of equipments around 1976, hoping to counteract Soviet support of Marxist Ethiopians and
Libyans. Military sales peaked in 1982 at US$101 million. After the start of the second civil war, American assistance dropped, and was eventually all but cancelled in 1987.
[5]
Second Civil War
Main articles: Second Sudanese Civil War,
History of Sudan (Transitional Military Council),
History of Sudan (Sadiq Al Mahdi and Coalition Governments)
In 1983 the civil war was reignited following the government's Islamicization policy which would have instituted
Islamic law, among other things. After several years of fighting, the government compromised with southern groups.
On April 6, 1985, a group of military officers, led by Lieutenant General Abd ar Rahman Siwar adh Dhahab, overthrew Nimeiri, who took refuge in Egypt. Three days later, Dhahab authorized the creation of a fifteen-man Transitional Military Council (TMC) to rule Sudan.
In June 1986, Sadiq al Mahdi formed a coalition government with the Umma, the DUP, the NIF, and four southern parties. Unfortunately, however, Sadiq proved to be a weak leader and incapable of governing Sudan. Party factionalism, corruption, personal rivalries, scandals, and political instability characterized the Sadiq regime. After less than a year in office, Sadiq al Mahdi dismissed the government because it had failed to draft a new penal code to replace the sharia, reach an agreement with the IMF, end the civil war in the south, or devise a scheme to attract remittances from Sudanese expatriates. To retain the support of the DUP and the southern political parties, Sadiq formed another ineffective coalition government.
In 1989, it appeared the war would end, but a
coup d'état brought a military junta into power which was not interested in compromise. Since that time the war raged across Sudan.
The civil war has displaced more than 4 million southerners. Some fled into southern cities, such as Juba; others trekked as far north as Khartoum and even into Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, Egypt, and other neighboring countries. These people were unable to grow food or earn money to feed themselves, and malnutrition and starvation became widespread. The lack of investment in the south resulted as well in what international humanitarian organizations call a “lost generation” who lack educational opportunities, access to basic health care services, and little prospects for productive employment in the small and weak economies of the south or the north.
Peace talks between the southern rebels and the government made substantial progress in
2003 and early
2004, although skirmishes in parts of the south have reportedly continued. The two sides have agreed that, following a final peace treaty, southern Sudan will enjoy autonomy for six years, and after the expiration of that period, the people of southern Sudan will be able to vote in a
referendum on independence. Furthermore, oil revenues will be divided equally between the government and rebels during the six-year interim period. The ability or willingness of the government to fulfill these promises has been questioned by some observers, however, and the status of three central and eastern provinces was a point of contention in the negotiations. Some observers wondered whether hard line elements in the north would allow the treaty to proceed.
A final peace treaty was signed on
9 January 2005 in Nairobi. The terms of the peace treaty are as follows:
★ The south will have autonomy for six years, followed by a referendum on secession.
★ Both sides of the conflict will merge their
armed forces into a 39,000-strong force after six years, if the secession referendum should turn out negative.
★ Income from oilfields is to be shared evenly between north and south.
★ Jobs are to be split according to varying ratios (central administration: 70 to 30, Abyei/Blue Nile State/Nuba mountains: 55 to 45, both in favour of the government).
★ Islamic law is to remain in the north, while continued use of the sharia in the south is to be decided by the elected assembly.
Darfur

Map of Darfur
Main articles: Darfur conflict,
History of Darfur
In early
2003, a new rebellion in the western region of
Darfur began. The rebels accuse the central government of neglecting the Darfur region, although there is uncertainty regarding the objectives of the rebels and whether they merely seek an improved position for Darfur within Sudan or outright secession. Both the government and the rebels have been accused of atrocities in this war, although most of the blame has fallen on Arab militias (
Janjaweed) allied with the government. The rebels have alleged that these militias have been engaging in
ethnic cleansing in Darfur, and the fighting has displaced hundreds of thousands of people, many of them seeking refuge in neighboring Chad. The government claimed victory over the rebels after capturing
Tine, a town on the border with Chad, in early
2004, but violence continues and as of
2005 the humanitarian situation remains very poor.
Chadian-Sudanese conflict
Main articles: Chadian-Sudanese conflict
The
Chadian-Sudanese conflict officially started on
December 23, 2005, when the
government of Chad declared a
state of war with
Sudan and called for the citizens of
Chad to mobilize themselves against the
"common enemy," which the Chadian government sees as the
Rally for Democracy and Liberty (RDL) militants, Chadian rebels, backed by the
Sudanese government, and Sudanese militiamen. Militants have attacked villages and towns in eastern Chad, stealing cattle, murdering citizens, and burning houses. Over 200,000 refugees from the
Darfur region of northwestern Sudan currently claim asylum in eastern Chad. Chadian president
Idriss Déby accuses Sudanese President
Omar Hasan Ahmad al-Bashir of trying to "destabilize our country, to drive our people into misery, to create disorder and export the war from Darfur to Chad."
An attack on the Chadian town of
Adré near the Sudanese border led to the deaths of between one hundred and three hundred rebels based upon conflicting news reports. The Sudanese government was blamed for the attack, which was the
second in the region in three days, but Sudanese foreign ministry spokesman
Jamal Mohammed Ibrahim denies any Sudanese involvement, "We are not for any escalation with Chad. We technically deny involvement in Chadian internal affairs." This attack was the final straw that led to the declaration of war by Chad and the alleged deployment of the
Chadian airforce into Sudanese airspace, which the Chadian government denies.
References
★
Photographs from the Sudan
★
P.M. Holt and
M.W. Daly, ''A History of the Sudan'' (1961, 5th ed.
Longman 2000)
★
South Sudan: A History of Political Domination - A Case of Self-Determination, (Riek Machar)
★
Civil War in Sudan: The Impact of Ecological Degradation
★
Multimedia Presentation on Darfur
★
Sudan Emancipation & Preservation Network (SEPNet)
★
Voyage au pays des pharaons noirs Travel in Sudan : pictures and notes on the nubian history
★ Short History of Sudan, Dr. Mohamed H. Fadlalla, iUniverse, 30 April 2004, [ISBN 100595314252]
★ The Problem of Dar Fur, Dr. Mohamed Hassan Fadlalla, iUniverse, Inc. (July 21, 2005), [ISBN-13: 978-0595365029]
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