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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6 page paper examines the civil war in Sudan and some of the economic, political and social issues surrounding it. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVSudnWr.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
conflict and some of the political, social and economic issues that surround it. Discussion Recently Jan Egeland, the UN head of humanitarian aid, tried to get permission to fly from
Uganda to Darfur, in west Sudan, where he hoped to stay overnight ("No Help Needed, Thank You Very Much"). He hoped to stay in Darfur to call attention to the
region, where as many as 300,000 people have been killed and "more than 2m displaced in the last three years of fighting there" ("No Help Needed, Thank You Very Much").
But he never received permission to make the trip; the Sudanese government said that it would be too dangerous ("No Help Needed, Thank You Very Much"). Its more likely
that the government fears the reaction of the rest of the world to the images Mr. Egeland would undoubtedly bring back; he considers "Sudan, and particularly Darfur, to be the
worlds worst humanitarian crisis, along with Congo" ("No Help Needed, Thank You Very Much"). A peace treaty was signed last year between the government and rebels in South Sudan,
but the region is getting "only a fraction of what it needs to rebuild" ("No Help Needed, Thank You Very Much"). Meantime, "the obfuscating in Darfur shows how little the
Sudanese government can be trusted to look after its own citizens there" ("No Help Needed, Thank You Very Much"). The outlook for lasting peace is poor, the dimensions of the
crisis are enormous, and no one seems to know quite what to do about it. Sudan has a long history of trouble; the country is "a bubbling hotchpotch of sharply
different regions, tribes and religions that have been clashing violently virtually since the day the British colonial administration left in 1956" ("Stop the Killing, Again"). The main conflict appears to
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