Sudan
By: Stenly • Essay • 747 Words • December 6, 2009 • 926 Views
Essay title: Sudan
Sudan
Sudan is a country with multitudes of problems. I will address just a portion of the many problems this country face but must first began with a very brief background.
Sudan is a very large country located on the continent of Africa. Sudan has a very diverse landscape ranging from deserts, to mountain ranges, rainforests, and swamps; to name a few. It is estimated that Sudan has a population of 34 million people. Out of the 34 million people, the indigenous Black Africans make-up the majority in the south, while the Arabs account for the majority in the north. Sudan’s population consists of 60% Muslim, 25% Animist, and 15% Christian. The country of Sudan has more than 300 tribes! The Official language is Arabic; although there are more than 100 tribal languages within its borders.
Beginning in the 6th century, Sudan was largely converted to Christianity, primarily in the Northeast Region, that is, until the dawning of the 15th century when the Muslims took over and converted it to Islam. In the early 1800’s, Sudan was largely under the control of Egypt who failed to maintain control of the country’s many tribes, especially in southern Sudan. In the early 1880’s a religious leader named Muhammad Abdalla started a religious crusade to unite the tribes in central and western Sudan and force the Egyptians to withdraw their occupation. In subsequent years, both Egypt and Britain had joint control of Sudan with Britain being the dominant of the two. Later-on in 1956, Sudan went on to become a free parliamentary republic, and thus was the beginning of many problems to come.
From the beginning of its autonomy, the country has had different civilian and military leadership. The ruling parties were always corrupt and as a result, the government of Sudan has always been unstable. The instability of the country’s government was conducive to unrest and war between the Muslims in the north, and Christian and Animist in the South. The instability was further exacerbated by underdevelopment in the southern part of the country during the colonial period leaving the southern Sudanese to fear that the country would be dominated by the Muslim north. In 1972, the Muslim President Muhammad Nimeiri ended the war for a short time by making some concessions to the south and granting various degrees of autonomy. However, in 1983, the short lived peace came to an end when he began imposing and forcing “extreme Islamic Laws” on the entire country that subsequently resulted in the formation of the SLA (Sudanese Liberation Army) and restarted war and unrest.
It is estimated that since 1983, an estimated 2.5 million