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         Sudan Government:     more books (100)
  1. Report to the government of the Sudan on agricultural planning and programming (ETAP report) by R. N Poduval, 1963
  2. Report to the Government of the Sudan on the organization of the Drilling Division (Report) by Robert P Borncamp, 1959
  3. Report to the government of the Sudan on strengthening of agricultural planning in the Ministry of Agriculture (FAO report) by Adnan S Shuman, 1974
  4. National emergency with respect to Sudan : message from the President of the United States transmitting his declaration that the policies of the government ... to 50 U.S.C. 1703(b) (SuDoc Y 1.1/7:105-166) by U.S. Congressional Budget Office, 1997
  5. Report to the government of the Sudan on range and pasture management by Weldon O Shepherd, 1968
  6. Report to the government of Sudan on an agricultural commodity study (FAO report) by A Saleh, 1975
  7. Report to the Government of the Sudan on a program of household dietary surveys (CEP report) by Grace M Mann, 1961
  8. Tu Beḍawie;: An elementary handbook for the use of Sudan government officials by E. M Roper, 1930
  9. Report to the Government of the Sudan on a program of groundwater investigations (Report) by L Mazurczak, 1958
  10. The Crisis in Darfur: A New Front in Sudan's Bloody War; And Condemning the Government of the Republic of the Sudan for Its Attacks Against by United States, 2004-01
  11. Memoirs of Research Division / Ministry of Agriculture, Sudan Government by Robert L Knight, 1950
  12. Causes and consequences in the changing relations between the North, the National Government and the South in Sudan by Nelson Kasfir, 1983
  13. A commentary on the Pink Book, presented by the Government of the Democratic Republic of Sudan the Relief and Resettlement Conference on Southern Region, Khartoum, 21-23 February 1972 by Tristram Frederick Betts, 1972
  14. A vocabulary of modern government for the Sudan by M. F. A Keen, 1950

101. Sudan Opposition Coalition Optimistic On Talks With Government
sudan opposition coalition optimistic on talks with government, sudan, Politics. ArabicNews.com Your source for Daily News about the Arabic world.
http://www.arabicnews.com/ansub/Daily/Day/050729/2005072914.html

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Sudan opposition coalition optimistic on talks with government
Sudan, Politics, 7/29/2005 Representatives for the opposition democratic national coalition and the Sudanese government started meetings in the capital Khartoum in order to implement The Cairo Agreement which was signed between the two sides in June, and to resolve outstanding issues.
The coalition delegation arrived in Khartoum on Thursday at dawn under the chairmanship of Lt. Gen. Abdul Rahman Saeed, the deputy chairman of the coalition, following a 15 year absence.
The meeting's agenda includes the status of the national coalition army in east Sudan, and the rate of the coalition participation in the negotiations which are concerned with the implementation of the peace agreement between the government and the SPLM, and the formation of joint committees to discuss laws restricting freedoms and the issue of democratic transformation in the country.
Member of the coalition delegation Farouk Abu Issa said that "they will work with the national conference to complete pending issues in line with the requirements of the phase Sudan is passing." He explained that their presence in Khartoum will continue for one week, expressing his optimism that the meetings will settle all outstanding issues.

102. Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM)
Rather than surrender to Sudanese government authorities, many mutineers disappeared into hiding with their weapons, marking the beginning of the first war
http://www.fas.org/irp/world/para/spla.htm
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Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA)
Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM)
With the exception of a fragile peace established by negotiations between southern Sudanese insurgents (the Anya Nya) and the Sudan government at Addis Ababa in 1972, and lasting until the resumption of the conflict in 1983, southern Sudan has been a battlefield. The north-south distinction and the hostility between the two regions of Sudan is grounded in religious conflict as well as a conflict between peoples of differing culture and language. The language and culture of the north are based on Arabic and the Islamic faith, whereas the south has its own diverse, mostly non-Arabic languages and cultures with few exceptions non-Muslim, and its religious character was indigenous (traditional or Christian). The origins of the civil war in the south date back to the 1950s. On August 18, 1955, the Equatoria Corps, a military unit composed of southerners, mutinied at Torit. Rather than surrender to Sudanese government authorities, many mutineers disappeared into hiding with their weapons, marking the beginning of the first war in southern Sudan. By the late 1960s, the war had resulted in the deaths of about 500,000 people. Several hundred thousand more southerners hid in the forests or escaped to refugee camps in neighboring countries. By 1969 the rebels had developed foreign contacts to obtain weapons and supplies. Israel, for example, trained Anya Nya recruits and shipped weapons via Ethiopia and Uganda to the rebels. Anya Nya also purchased arms from Congolese rebels. Government operations against the rebels declined after the 1969 coup, and ended with the Addis Ababa accords of 1972 which guaranteed autonomy for the southern region.

103. US Envoy Summoned Over US Nuclear Tests In Sudan; Government Receives Assurances
Al Jazirah Television, March 9, 2005, and subsequent reports.
http://www.fas.org/irp/news/2005/03/sudan.html
US Envoy Summoned Over House Remarks on US Nuclear Tests in Sudan
Al Jazirah
Wednesday, March 9, 2005
The Sudanese Foreign Ministry has summoned the US charge d'affaires in Khartoum and requested clarification regarding statements that the United States had carried out nuclear tests in Sudan. Sudanese Foreign Minister Mustafa Uthman Isma'il said his country has embarked on an investigation into the issue: "In a hearing session by the Strategic Forces Subcommittee of the Armed Services Committee of the House of Representatives, a US Defense Department official displayed pictures of nuclear tests by the United States in Sudan in 1962 and 1970. The hearing session was held by the said subcommittee on 2 March 2005. I stress to you that we are eager to have this issue clarified. We are working on that with seriousness proportionate to the potential risks. The Sudanese Government takes this issue seriously and with extreme importance."
Hearing of the Strategic Forces Subcommittee
of the House Armed Services Committee on the Fiscal Year 2006 Budget Request for
Department of Energy Atomic Energy Defense Activities March 2, 2005

104. Al-Ahram Weekly | Front Page | Post-Garang Sudan
The death of sudan s vice president could plunge the country deeper into crisis, Peace Agreement (CPA), signed by the sudanese government and the SPLA,
http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2005/754/fr2.htm
4 - 10 August 2005
Issue No. 754
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Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875 Recommend Comment Printer-friendly
Post-Garang Sudan
The death of Sudan's vice president could plunge the country deeper into crisis, writes Gamal Nkrumah Click to view caption Garang's last journey Business as usual seemed to be the message projected by the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) following the death in a helicopter crash on 30 July of its leader John Garang. "My husband has died but his vision still lives," his widow, Rebecca, told dispirited followers. Salva Kiir, Garang's long-time associate and the chief of the general staff of the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA), the armed wing of the SPLM, is Garang's political heir, and clearly means business. But for the political discontent among the southern Sudanese to find a peaceful outlet it is essential the transition of power from Garang to Kiir be smooth. Garang enjoyed a virtually free hand in advancing the interests of the southern Sudanese, though he was careful to champion the rights of all underprivileged Sudanese, be they from the south or north, east or west. Garang had established a reputation as the defender of the underdog and following news of his death several hundred protestors took to the streets of Khartoum, pillaging shops and destroying cars and property. Government forces deployed armoured vehicles to keep the peace, and the city of five million inhabitants remains under a dawn to dusk curfew.

105. Al-Ahram Weekly | Front Page | Sudan In The Crucible
As sudanese government and opposition forces were preparing for peace talks in Cairo Peace talks between the sudanese government and the sudan People s
http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2004/710/fr1.htm
30 September - 6 October 2004
Issue No. 710
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Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875 Recommend Comment Printer-friendly
Sudan in the crucible
Garang is in Cairo, Al-Bashir threatens to execute his mentor Al-Turabi and the Darfur catastrophe worsens: Gamal Nkrumah examines crisis-ridden Sudan As Sudanese government and opposition forces were preparing for peace talks in Cairo this week the meeting was abruptly postponed. Sudanese Vice President Ali Othman Mohamed Taha, who was to lead the government delegation, was apparently in Khartoum airport ready to board his plane when news of the postponement broke. The Sudanese political crisis is fast unravelling. The humanitarian situation in Darfur is worsening because of a renewal of fighting. Stalled peace talks in the Nigerian capital Abuja between the Sudanese government and the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) and the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), the two main armed opposition groups in Darfur, were followed by a resumption of fighting and the influx of another wave of refugees into restive camps in neighbouring Chad. Peace talks between the Sudanese government and the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) are scheduled to commence next week in Kenya. And in Cairo, talks between the Sudanese government and the National Democratic Alliance (NDA), Sudan's chief umbrella opposition grouping that includes the SPLA and northern opposition parties, originally scheduled for this week, have been postponed indefinitely "for logistical reasons", Abdul-Rahman Said, the NDA vice chairman, told

106. Sudan's Government To Seek Peace In Darfur - East Africa | General
sudan s government to Seek Peace in Darfur East Africa general.
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107. Foreign Affairs - Sudan's Perfect War - Randolph Martin
This policy was justified by reference to the Sudanese government s habit of violating In the last few years, however, the Sudanese government has made
http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20020301faessay7976/randolph-martin/sudan-s-perfec
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Sudan's Perfect War
Randolph Martin

From Foreign Affairs March/April 2002
Summary: After years as a pariah, Khartoum has now deftly managed to end its political isolation. The success of its new alliances and the completion of an oil pipeline, however, mean that northern Sudan could indefinitely continue its bloody civil war against the south. Only the United States has the power and prestige to help end the violence and push for a peace that would be in everyone's interests. Randolph Martin is Senior Director of Operations at the International Rescue Committee. He has travelled extensively throughout Sudan over the last 20 years and lived there from 1985 to 1989.
Topics:
Africa

National Security and Defense

Peace by Piece

By Randolph Martin
foreignaffairs.org, January 19, 2005 On the Brink: Weak States and U.S. National Security: A Report of the Commission for Weak States and U.S. National Security Jeremy M. Weinstein, John Edward Porter, and Stuart E. Eizenstat. Washington: Center for Global Development, 2004. Ambiguous Order: Military Forces in African States Herbert M. Howe. Boulder: Lynne Rienner, 2001.

108. Freedom In The World 2004
sudan s civil war has pitted government forces and governmentbacked, Human Rights Watch has documented how the sudanese government has used roads,
http://www.freedomhouse.org/research/freeworld/2004/countryratings/sudan.htm
Sudan
Political Rights: Civil Liberties: Status: Not Free GNI per capita: Population: Life Expectancy: Religious Groups: Sunni Muslim (70 percent),Indigenous beliefs (25 percent), Christian (5 percent) Ethnic Groups: Black (52 percent), Arab (39 percent),Beja (6 percent), other (3 percent) Capital: Khartoum Ten Year Ratings Timeline (Political Rights, Civil Liberties, Status): 7,7,NF 7,7,NF 7,7,NF 7,7,NF 7,7,NF 7,7,NF 7,7,NF 7,7,NF 7,7,NF 7,7,NF Overview
Al-Turabi and some 20 of his supporters were arrested in February 2001 after he called for a national uprising against the government and signed a memorandum of understanding in Geneva with the southern-based, rebel Sudanese People's Liberation Army (SPLA). In May 2001, al-Turabi and four aides were charged with conspiracy to overthrow the government, and al-Turabi was placed under house arrest. In September 2002, he was moved to a high-security prison. Throughout the war, the government has regularly bombed civilian as well as rebel targets. International humanitarian relief efforts have been hampered by ceasefire violations and have sometimes been deliberately targeted by parties to the conflict. The government has denied humanitarian relief workers access to rebel-held areas or areas containing large concentrations of internal refugees.

109. Ambassador Danforth: Explanation Of Vote On Sudan
We act today, because the government of sudan has failed to fully comply with Today’s Resolution demands that the government of sudan meet in practice
http://www.un.int/usa/04_161.htm
USUN PRESS RELEASE # 161 (04)
September 18, 2004 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Explanation of Vote by Ambassador John C. Danforth, US Representative to the United Nations, on Resolution 1564 Addressing the Situation in Darfur, in the Security Council, September 18, 2004
Mr. President, Since he appointed me his Special Envoy more than three years ago, I have had numerous discussions with President Bush on the subject of Sudan. Yesterday afternoon he phoned me to ask that I convey his strongly held views on the resolution now before the Security Council. He said that Darfur is a catastrophe the Council should address on an urgent basis. He underscored the importance of the expanded mission of the African Union, which he asked us to support by this resolution and logistically. He asked that the international community fulfill its commitments to humanitarian assistance for the people of Darfur. He said that, in the long run, security in Darfur depends on successful peace talks in Abuja and on expeditious completion of the Naivasha negotiations.

110. Paul Marshall On Sudan On National Review Online
Over the last 15 years, the sudanese government has brought together extremist Under the terms of the US s sudan Peace Act, the American government is
http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/marshall200404221020.asp
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Saving Sudan
The State Department should stand up to Khartoum.
By Paul Marshall P resident Bush may be on his way to alienating a large portion of his base: evangelical Christians. The issue is not gay rights or abortion or the other items usually thought to be of concern to religious conservatives; it is U.S. policy on Sudan. The reason is that the State Department seems once more convinced that the proper way to deal with murderers and their victims is to somehow to be an honest broker between them.
New York Times referred to it as their "pet" project (would another group combating genocide be sneeringly be labeled as having some pet peeve?). Domestic U.S. political pressure, combined with Sudan's post-9/11 fear that America might now get serious, has led to a cease-fire and American-brokered peace talks. Under the terms of the U.S.'s Sudan Peace Act During this period of negotiations, the Sudanese regime has engaged in multiple violations of its ceasefire agreements. In the south, its allied militias have accelerated scorched-earth military campaigns, particularly in the oil-rich Upper Nile Province. an organized campaign to rid an area of a group of people ." Government-backed militias are engaged in systematic rape and murder. In recent months, more than 10,000 people have been killed, 110,000 have fled to neighboring Chad, and 670,000 are internally displaced, having been forced to flee their villages. Even

111. Sudan: Amnesty International's Human Rights Concerns
Jun 12, 2005; sudan sudanese government must support ICC investigation of war crimes in Darfur Jun 5, 2005; More News ». Latest Reports
http://www.amnestyusa.org/countries/sudan/index.do
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Sudan
Human Rights Concerns
Darfur
Over 300,000 people are believed to have lost their lives since the conflict in Darfur, Sudan erupted in February 2003. Systematic human rights abuses have occurred by all parties involved in the conflict, but primarily by the Sudanese government and government-backed Janjawid militia. Over 2 million civilians have been displaced by the conflict. The conflict in Darfur has witnessed some of the worst human rights abuses imaginable, including systematic and wide-scale ethnic-cleansing, murder, rape, torture, and enslavement. Eastern Sudan
Since January 2005, human rights violations by the Sudanese authorities in Eastern Sudan are fuelling tensions and discontent, which could lead to further human rights abuses. These abuses include the unlawful killing of demonstrators and prolonged detentions of political opponents.
Hotel Rwanda
Amnesty International is proud to support Hotel Rwanda. Paul Rusesabagina, played by Don Cheadle, proved that one man can truly make a difference.

112. Amnesty International: Sudan NullnullHuman Rights Concerns
The Sudanese government continues to conduct indiscriminate bombings and other The Sudanese government appears unwilling to address the human rights
http://www.amnestyusa.org/countries/sudan/summary.do
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Sudan
Human Rights Concerns
  • Civilians at Risk
    Over 70,000 people are believed to have lost their lives since the Darfur conflict erupted in February 2003. Systematic human rights abuses have occurred, including killing, torture, rape, looting and destroying of property by all parties involved in the conflict, but primarily by the Sudanese government and government-backed Janjawid militia. The Sudanese government continues to conduct indiscriminate bombings and other aerial attacks against clearly civilian targets and has failed to make its forces and pro-government militias accountable. Alarmingly, the Janjawid attacks are reportedly taking on an ethnic dimension, as the civilians who are attacked are mostly black Africans, while the Janawid attackers are mostly Arab.
    Refugees and Internally Displaced Peoples
    Over 1.5 million civilians have been internally displaced by the conflict and 200,000 have sought refuge in neighboring Chad. Food is reportedly scarce and sanitary conditions poor. Refugees are continued targets of Janjawid attacks and reportedly the conflict is spilling over into Chad as the Janjawid make cross border raids.
    Humanitarian Catastrophe
    The Sudanese government has placed impediments and restrictions on access for humanitarian aid agencies. Numerous civilians have been injured, displaced and their property and livelihood destroyed due to the conflict. Because of the limited access of humanitarian aid, they are in danger of starvation and illness. Only a portion of the available aid has reached the populations in need; tens of thousands of displaced people are sheltering in rural towns or in the bush with hardly any food, shelter and no medical supplies. Amnesty fears that the onset of the rainy season in late May (and the resulting impediments to delivering food and medical supplies to civilians) may well precipitate a humanitarian catastrophe that could potentially devastate hundreds of thousands of people.

113. Harvard Gazette: Genocide In Sudan
Leaning says, ‘What has been delivered to the government of sudan, We are still not putting enough pressure on the sudanese government to bring about an
http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2004/07.22/01-sudan.html
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HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES Jennifer Leaning (holding notebook) talks to the leader of the Goz Amer refugee camp. The man in the blue shirt at left and the woman behind Leaning to the right are both translators working with the Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) team. Because of the sensitive nature of testimony given by female refugees, many of whom were raped, PHR interviewed men and women separately. Leaning, working with a female translator, interviewed women who had been raped or suffered other forms of sexual violence. (Photo courtesy of Physicians for Human Rights)
Genocide in Sudan
SPH's Leaning investigates and urges action
By Ken Gewertz
Harvard News Office
The international community has not succeeded very well at stopping incidents of genocide. From Armenia to Rwanda, efforts at intervention have generally been either nonexistent or too little and too late.

114. Sudan: UN Security Council Must Challenge Sudanese Government On Continuing Huma
Amnesty International UK is the UK section of the international human rights membership organisation, Amnesty International.
http://www.amnesty.org.uk/news/press/15576.shtml
This is an Amnesty International news release published on 3rd September, 2004 See also:
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Sudan

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Sudan: UN Security Council must challenge sudanese government on continuing human rights abuses in Darfur
As the UN Security Council meets to discuss the situation in Darfur, Sudan, Amnesty International has said that human rights violations are continuing in the region, and has called on the Security Council to demonstrate real political will to challenge the Sudanese government and end the abuses. Amnesty International said: “Strengthening the numbers, capacity and resources of international human rights monitoring in Darfur is vital but not enough. It is clear that monitors cannot work adequately in the present climate of intimidation created by the Sudanese government. The Security Council must give the monitors strong political backing and compel the Sudanese government to account for the gross human rights violations committed by its security forces and its militia, the 'Janjawid'.”

115. Attacks On The Press 2004: Mideast
But some still have long waits and believe that the Sudanese government has singled them out due to their negative coverage.
http://www.cpj.org/attacks04/mideast04/sudan.html
Overview Algeria Bahrain Egypt ... Yemen Sudan
Sudan garnered international headlines in 2004 due to widespread atrocities and ethnic cleansing in Darfur, an impoverished region in the west of the country. Since February 2003, government-backed militias, known as janjaweed , have killed tens of thousands of people and displaced close to 2 million in a counterinsurgency campaign against rebel groups.
Sudanese authorities went to great lengths to suppress reports of atrocities in Darfur, including imprisoning journalists. Security forces admonished or threatened other journalists over reporting about the situation.
The Information Ministry requires foreign journalists to obtain travel permits to go to Darfur, and government security officials must accompany them. Many journalists have avoided these restrictions by making the dangerous trip into the country through Chad. However, foreign correspondents told CPJ that international media exposure and diplomatic pressure on the Sudanese government late in the summer led to an easing of restrictions, and that by the fall, they were able to obtain visas more quickly. But some still have long waits and believe that the Sudanese government has singled them out due to their negative coverage.
Many journalists have also managed to avoid traveling with government security officials. However, they say that the presence of intelligence officials in Darfur's refugee camps makes people leery of speaking freely to journalists. At year's end, talks between the government and rebels were ongoing.

116. Attacks On The Press - 2002
of the daily Al Rai alAam, who had lambasted the Sudanese government’s action suspension of peace talks between the Sudanese government and rebels.
http://www.cpj.org/attacks02/mideast02/sudan.html

Overview
Algeria Bahrain Egypt ... Yemen
SUDAN
The Sudanese public has access to several high-profile independent newspapers that criticize government authorities and policies. But that criticism comes at a price, especially when it relates to the Muslim government’s nearly 20-year-old civil war with Christian and animist rebels in the south of the country. In early September, the government suspended negotiations that were being held in Machakos, Kenya, with the rebels, and many independent journalists and newspaper editorials criticized the move. Authorities took swift action, detaining columnist Osman Merghani, of the daily Al Rai al-Aam , who had lambasted the Sudanese government’s action on a program broadcast by the Qatar-based satellite channel Al-Jazeera. The government also confiscated three independent dailies for their coverage of the controversy: Al-Horiyah Al-Sahafa , and the English-language Khartoum Monitor . Officials later questioned the papers’ editors. Sudanese journalists say they have some freedom in their daily reporting and that restrictions, including prior censorship, occur less often today than in previous years. Nonetheless, members of the press maintain that the government’s eagerness to crack down on its critics engenders self-censorship and fear.

117. Announcing Planned Trip To Sudan, Annan Urges Government To
In addition, the UN is pressing the Sudanese government “to allow humanitarian “We have also asked the Sudanese government to take steps to contain the
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=11072&Cr=Sudan&Cr1=

118. Annan Vows To Press Sudan To Protect Darfur S Civilians From
The SecretaryGeneral said he had pleaded with the Sudanese government to stop the If the Sudanese government doesn t have the capacity to protect its
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=11153&Cr=sudan&Cr1=

119. Village Voice > News > Liberty Beat By Nat Hentoff
CIA s close relationship with sudan s government enables genocide there to continue The sudanese government . . . has been providing access to terrorism
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0521,hentoff,64218,2.html
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120. Village Voice > News > Liberty Beat By Nat Hentoff
The government of sudan is engaging in genocide against three large African sudan s government is supporting the Arab Janjaweed militia s ferocious
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Film Screenings click links to win! Liberty Beat The Sudan Genocide Arab Muslims Are Viciously Killing and Raping Black Muslims. So Where Is the World?

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