The Oppressed Sudan - Khaled bin Hamad Al-Malik
The fierce battles continue between the national army and the Rapid Support Forces militia in brotherly Sudan, with no place in the country spared from rocket and drone attacks, in a crazy and foolish act, with no regard for Sudan's interest, no concern for the number of dead, and no sense of responsibility.
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An aggression against Sudanese carried out by groups of Sudanese, fueled with weapons and money by external forces, and mercenaries participate in the destruction of Sudan, whose salaries are paid and who are enticed by foreign parties, even though they have no interest in tearing Sudan apart and eventually dividing it into warring mini-states.
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Narrow calculations, devoid of any rational thought, drive these parties to finance this terrorist act, keep the battles ongoing, and encourage the killers to reject any mediation by well-meaning people to end this insane war, despite its human and economic costs and its harm to Sudan's future.
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And if the internal motive for the war is driven by love of power, the quest for leadership, and steering Sudan toward what fulfills their ambitions, then the motive for those who fund it and push adventurers into the furnace of this war is nothing more than spite and taking the opposite direction of the interest of Sudan and the Sudanese.
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Money is wasted by the foreign funders of this war to buy weapons, attract mercenaries, and encourage them to continue fighting, to leave the Sudanese between dead and wounded, and that those who have survived so far are on the list of the inevitable fate awaiting them, in addition to the spread of disease and hunger among the people due to this war, and the country's inability to rebuild what the war has destroyed over these years.
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The cruelty of the war that Sudan has faced is not limited to thousands of dead, thousands of wounded, and thousands of displaced, and this comprehensive destruction is what made Sudan a failed state in development, socially failed, economically collapsed, in a pitiful state for a country that could have been a food basket for the region's countries, had it not been a prisoner in the hands of war merchants, both Sudanese and non-Sudanese.
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It is a bloody chapter in Sudan's history, carrying more tragedies than the previous military coups, and more than what the southern war left behind, which ended in secession. For this war, with its long, continuous period and its current and past destructive effects, has no parallel and is unsurpassed in the crimes and grave events that have occurred, in inhuman, unpatriotic acts, and in betrayals that deserve criminalization, accountability, and bringing these killers to justice.
Original source: Al-Jazirah
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