The ghost battalion
On the Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA) the organized force behind the revolutionary uprising in Sudan.
On the Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA) the organized force behind the revolutionary uprising in Sudan.
Sudanese living abroad are key to the uprising: raising awareness and support for political and social transformation back home.
On Mohamed Hamdan Dagolo, known as Hemitti, the man behind the massacres against Sudanese protesters.
The American website Black Agenda Report commented on the protests in Sudan and got it completely wrong.
What social media activism gets wrong about the #SudanUprising: Sometimes it may be appropriate to leave the hashtags alone and say nothing.
A guide on how to support the uprising in Sudan.
The power sharing agreement between Sudan's military rulers and the opposition aside, at present there are two main possibilities for Sudan.
In post al-Bashir Sudan, new paradigms animate political action, while old ones have returned. Towards what sort of future might the protesters march?
Lasting peace in Sudan's Darfur region - 300,000 people dead and millions displaced by regime violence - should be a priority for #SudanUprising.
At the heart of the protest movement in Sudan is a trade union. Proving again that democratic influence and change require collective participation and organization.
Omar al Bashir has fallen in Khartoum. Beyond regime change—managed by the military—there's a deeper economic crisis.
Drawing on a long history of political art and protest and to bypass old media censorship, Sudani artists go to the street and online to complement street protests.
As Sudanese continue to chant “Just fall, that is all” against the regime, doctors pay a hefty price for standing with them.
After years of divide and rule by President Omar al-Bashir, the youth of Sudan have united to push him out.
What Sudan's history of protest against authoritarianism can teach the current generation.
"Berlin isn't Germany. Just like that website you write for—it's really its own country."
We’re returning to the older format of Weekend Music Break (a series of embeds rather than a playlist) for this very special guest selection from proud Sudanese-American Ahmed “Sinkane” Gallab. We reached out to Ahmed to give us a selection of tunes from his parents’ homeland, one of the seven countries on US President Donald Trump’s […]
In his memoir, the sociologist Steve Howard writes about experiencing Ramadan in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum.
Their voices, sharp and angry, shook me from my slumber. I didn’t know the language, but I instantly knew the translation. So I groped for the opening in the mosquito net, shuffled from my downy white bed to the window, threw back the stained tan curtain, and squinted into the light of a new day […]
The media's focus on the European "refugee crisis" obscures the fact the bulk of refugees are in camps in the Middle East, Africa and Asia.