It is becoming increasingly difficult to imagine the continuity of the NCP leadership in the face of sustained economic deterioration.
Western agencies have focused on female genital mutilation in Sudan, but this isn't the only women’s rights battle that needs support in our country.
If history is a lesson, without a robust human rights framework, international missions are more likely to add to, rather than prevent, violence.
An effective response to violence and harmful ideologies is important. But projects are failing to adequately engage with root causes.
Not since World War II have more human beings been at risk from disease and starvation than at this very moment.
While the law is a political compromise cleverly designed to please stakeholders, girls at risk of undergoing FGM remain unprotected.
"They kept asking me if I have a boyfriend; when I was kissed last …they threatened to take naked pictures of me or create a porn film featuring me."
Seven Sudanese public universities have witnessed waves of protests during the past week: the crackdown on civil society has made them the only spaces left to exercise freedom of expression and peaceful assembly.
Refugees in South Sudan's Yida camp dispute UNHCR arguments for their relocation once again.
Arab Awakening's columnists offer their perspective on what is happening on the ground in the Middle East.
Sudan's 1964 revolution brought a military regime to an end. The reasons for the revolt were similar to those of the Arab Spring, and they persist—so why are there no protests?
What can explain the myopia of US policy towards Sudan, when it knows Sudan has been facilitating ISIS in Libya, Syria and Iraq, and other terror groups?