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South Sudan

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  • One year of civil war in Sudan
    A year of war in Sudan

    "We haven't lived in dignity for a long time"

    In her debut novel "A Mouth Full of Salt", Sudanese author and physician Reem Gaafar tells the intertwined stories of three women who are confronted with injustice. A conversation about responsible writing, role models and the forgotten war in Sudan

  • Sudanese author Stella Gaitano
    Sudanese literature

    Children to fill the entire earth

    Stella Gaitano's debut novel "Edo's Souls", set between Sudan and South Sudan, stages an epic battle between the forces of Motherhood and Death

  • Sudanese are desperately trying to leave their country. But many are trapped because their passports are stuck in one of the closed European embassies. It's a hopeless situation.
    Humanitarian crisis in Sudan

    "I'm trapped in the war"

    Sudanese are desperately trying to leave their country. But many, like Mahir Elfiel, are trapped because their passports are stuck in one of the closed European embassies. Here he talks about his hopeless situation. Andrea Backhaus recorded his story

  • "The terrible mistakes made by the civil protest leaders who agreed to sit down and talk to the military, when the popular revolution was at its height, are too many to count," writes Ali Anouzla. Pictured here: army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan (centre) and RSF leader Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo (second from left) last December, before hostilities began
    Power struggle in Sudan

    Sudan's generals "should have been dealt with as war criminals"

    The representatives of Sudan's civil society made a terrible mistake in agreeing to share power with the military, writes political analyst Ali Anouzla, who feels that by believing the military's promises, the leaders of the country's civil society bear part of the responsibility for what is happening today in Sudan

  • Sudanese writers and artists denounce the fighting in Sudan, saying "It's not our war!"
    Sudanese artists speak out

    "It's not our war"

    Sudan has become a battleground. But it is not the war of the people who live there, say exiled Sudanese writers Stella Gitano and Abdelaziz Baraka Sakin. By Stefan Dege

  • Concern is mounting in South Sudan, Chad and Egypt, who all depend on stability in their neighbour Sudan, whether for economic, humanitarian or security reasons
    Power struggle in Sudan

    Concern mounts among Sudan's neighbours

    South Sudan, Chad and Egypt all depend on stability in their neighbour Sudan, whether for economic, humanitarian or security reasons. All the more reason to hope that the current ceasefire holds. Martina Schwikowski reports

  • Qantara logo
    Dammed thirsty

    The cross-border fight for water

  • The South Sudan U20 men's team is helping to forge unity in their country.
    South Sudan

    Through football, South Sudanese youth forge ahead

    With the return of peace after a decade of war, South Sudan's youth national teams qualified for the country's first continental football championships. They are helping forge a stronger national identity and pride. By Lolade Adewuyi

  • A "perfect storm" of drought, rising global inflation and armed hostilities is threatening the lives of Somalis and others, driving them from their homes.
    Climate change impacts Somalia

    What future without rain – or aid?

    Somalia is still facing unprecedented drought and high inflation, ruining the livelihoods of many and causing widespread hunger. Dadaab refugee camp in eastern Kenya, where Somalis have found refuge over decades, is again facing a new influx. Erik Siegl reports

  • Hydroelectric power station in Jinghong, China
    Middle East

    Water resources – another conflict trigger?

    From the Euphrates to the Mekong, dams that ensure one country's water supply risk leaving others parched. But shared water resources can be a source of peace as well as conflict. By Ruby Russell

  • How to stop Darfur’s descent into darkness

    Despite the recent media focus on developments in Sudan following the military coup in October, there has been much less reporting of the situation in Sudan’s peripheries, outside of the capital and its surroundings. A staggering rise in violence illustrates the fragility of the transition underway in the country.

  • Immigration in Morocco

    The long road to integration for immigrants from sub-Saharan Africa

    Morocco officially declared itself a country of immigration in 2013, responding to the growing number of immigrants arriving from sub-Saharan Africa. Since then, tens of thousands of illegal aliens have been given residence permits, making them legal residents of the country. Despite this progress, however, Morocco's immigration policies remain inconsistent, and society has yet to truly accept the newcomers. By Claudia Mende

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