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Search Result for “khartoum”

Showing 1 - 7 of 7

OPINION

In an Irish memorial, I see echoes of Palestine

Oped, Andy Young, Published on 03/10/2025

» The figures by the River Liffey in Dublin are more clothes than flesh. The Famine Memorial, created by Rowan Gillespie, holds in bronze a moment of suffering, the settling in of the Great Hunger, which would cut Ireland's population by more than a quarter, the gone either dead or emigrated.

OPINION

The next war comes to a city near you

Oped, Joe Mathews, Published on 03/07/2025

» I was to visit Ukraine this week, but didn't make the trip. Because the same war I would have seen there had already come to Los Angeles.

OPINION

Sudan's hell of devastation and despair

Oped, John J. Metzler, Published on 24/04/2025

» The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse are stalking Sudan: brutal civil conflict, widespread devastation, humanitarian disasters, and the displacement of millions of refugees. Now add the Fifth Horseman, the darkness of global indifference.

OPINION

Sudan's war and the Africa we don't see

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 19/04/2025

» Last Tuesday, British Foreign Secretary David Lammy said: "Many have given up on Sudan, but that is wrong. It's morally wrong when we see so many civilians beheaded, infants as young as one subjected to sexual violence, more people facing famine than anywhere else in the world.... We simply cannot look away."

OPINION

Sudan: Death on the Nile and contagion risk

Oped, John J Metzler, Published on 05/05/2023

» There's blood in the Nile. The mighty river separating Sudan's capital city Khartoum has seen fighting erupt between two rival factions of the army. What could have been a quick internal flash-up between the main military factions, which have tenuously ruled this vast land since the 2021 military coup, has morphed into a bitter fight for power on the streets of the capital. More than 500 civilians have been killed in the crossfire, and foreign diplomatic, humanitarian workers and business people have been trying to flee the country.

OPINION

Sudan: Thieves fall out and the people suffer

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 18/04/2023

» It's a pity that both sides can't lose in the war that broke out between rival generals in Sudan on Saturday, but the best that the 48 million Sudanese can hope for now is that one side loses quickly. Beyond that, it's all bad: the rival generals both want to strangle the democratic revolution that began in Khartoum four years ago.

OPINION

The guardians of civil society and democracy

Oped, Michelle Bachelet, Darren Walker & Mark Malloch-Brown, Published on 16/12/2021

» When global leaders gathered virtually last week from Dec 9-10 for US President Joe Biden's Summit for Democracy, they ought to have asked themselves a simple question: What can we do to help democracy's bravest advocates, like the protesters who are risking their lives in Sudan?