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South Sudan fragile peace

Last reviewed: 17-03-2009

REFUGEES HEAD BACK TO OIL-RICH REGION


In early 2005, Sudan's government and rebels from the south officially ended Africa's longest-running war. The 21-year civil conflict killed 2 million people and forced more than 4 million from their homes, according to U.N. estimates.

  • Under peace deal, oil revenues to be shared
  • Refugees started returning in late 2005
  • Former foes clash over oil-rich Abyei region

Under international pressure, the country's ruling party agreed to split Sudan's massive oil revenues with a southern government led by the Sudanese People's Liberation Movement (SPLM), the main rebel group in the south.

But some analysts say the agreement is fraught with problems, and getting the south back on its feet is likely to take years, as well as billions of aid dollars.

Meanwhile, one of the world's most overlooked humanitarian emergencies continues to fester.

A separate conflict in Sudan's western Darfur region threatens to derail the whole peace process. Conversely, without a lasting peace between north and south Sudan, there is unlikely to be a resolution to the Darfur conflict.

KEY FACTS


No. southern Sudanese returned home since 2005 2.37 million (U.N., Oct. 2008)
Regional gross national income $90 per capita (less than 10 percent of national average) (WFP, 2006)
Percentage in south Sudan earning less than $1 a day 90 (WFP, 2006)
No. of children demobilised from rebel forces 2001-2006 20,000 (Child Soldiers Global Report 2008)
Maternal mortality rate in S. Sudan 2,037 per 100,000 births - the highest in the world (UNFPA, 2008)

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Ibrahim Jassam Mohammed, Reuters freelance TV cameraman and photographer kisses his mother after his release at his home in Mahmudiya, south of Baghdad February 10, 2010. The U.S. military freed Jassam ...



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Last updated:Wed Feb 10 15:36:55 2010