It was not to be this time around, but next time there could well be a different outcome.
Arab Awakening's columnists offer their perspective on what is happening on the ground in the Middle East.
ISIS is succesfully recruiting among disaffected Sudanese youth, and not enough is being done to stop it.
Major opposition parties in Sudan boycotted the elections that took place earlier this month, but are now supporting the government's decision to join Operation Decisive Storm disregarding the effect this will have on the people of Yemen.
There is insufficient awareness at the international level about the civilian crisis caused by the government in Sudan, and a failure to mobilise around what information there is.
Next week sees elections in Sudan. But there’s one thing wrong—we already know the outcome.
Arab Awakening's columnists offer their weekly perspective on what is happening on the ground in the Middle East. Leading the week: Who cheered Mubarak’s acquittal on?
Darfur has practically been closed off to journalists, politicians and independent civil society organizations, and sexual violence and rape have now become a reality in women's day-to-day lives.
Discrepancies in the Arab League expose the long-standing conservative, tribal, nepotistic and ineffective governance of the Arab world. Will exposure result in urgently needed government reform?
Despite all the problems that the Sudanese now face in their troubled country, people still gather over afternoon tea in the street to discuss politics
When the UN Human Rights Council meets this week to discuss the human rights situation in Sudan, will member states condemn the targeted attacks on civilians and mass forced displacement caused by Sudanese forces? Or will they keep sending a strong signal that Sudan can, and will, continue to get