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South Sudan: The Newest Nation in the World

PostPosted: Tue Jul 12, 2011 12:51 pm
by Q.
Last Saturday, the Republic of South Sudan declared its independence, creating the newest nation in the world -- the 193rd nation to join the United Nations. The new country has been in the making since a referendum last January, when nearly 4 million southern Sudanese voted to secede from Sudan by a margin of more than 98 percent. The region has been involved in civil wars for at least the past 50 years, and the days-old nation is already battling several armed groups within its new borders. Many issues still remain unresolved -- the oil-rich region continues to rely on pipelines that run through Sudan, and a revenue-sharing agreement has not been reached. The new nation, which is comprised of more than 200 ethnic groups, has a largely rural economy, and poverty, civil warfare, and political instability will be the biggest of many challenges for the new administration. Gathered here are scenes from South Sudan as it made its debut on the world stage this weekend.

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Re: South Sudan: The Newest Nation in the World

PostPosted: Tue Jul 12, 2011 3:45 pm
by cripple
The best quote i have heard about the new country is that the people of South Sudan have virtually transferred themselves from living in a islamic arabic country to living in a far more comfortable sub saharan africa controlling their own destiny (as long as they can gain control of their own oil supply).

Re: South Sudan: The Newest Nation in the World

PostPosted: Wed Jul 13, 2011 10:23 am
by Ronnie
The south is a lot more fertile than the north, and holds most of the oil, so it's in front on two counts.
It is also an African, Christian/traditional religion country, whereas the north is arabic muslim.
The split makes sense.

Re: South Sudan: The Newest Nation in the World

PostPosted: Thu Jul 14, 2011 11:23 am
by Sojourner
Its awesome to see that despite the UN turning their back to the atrocities happening there for so many years that they have finally found a way to the solution that the residents want. The UN must take action to prevent violence over the control of the oilfields in territory that is considered in dispute though, or the killings will simply continue as before.