Articles
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Sudanese Internal Displaced People Challenge for the future Administration By Raïs Neza Boneza (Archives 2007)
The civil war in Sudan has created nearly four million internally displaced persons (IDPs) within its borders. In January 2005 a peace agreement was signed between GOS (Government of Sudan) and its main opponent in the South, the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A) led by John Garang. After the signing of the agreement that sworn into the government former rebels, … Read the rest
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Plight of the Refugees and IDP’s in Uganda By Raïs Neza Boneza
The recent history recent history in the Great Lakes region of Africa has painfully illustrated the insufficient commitment for an international response to forced and mass migration. Efforts to ensure international protection for refugees have been repeatedly frustrated as states have expressed an increased reluctance to offer asylum, particularly concerning security and stability for recipient states. In the case of … Read the rest
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Global Torment
Written earlier in 2003 the begunning of Bush’s Irak war. Still relevant to day. We came from the chaos of the world’s creation. What about today? At the beginning of this new century, the world seems to have fallen into confusion and uncertainty and plunges towards international barbarism. After the collapse of communism and the cold war we are now … Read the rest
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Hullo my dear freinds
I have been quite silent around here. But now I have decided to publish both my old and new work / activities on this website. This erea will be then a repository of my earlier and new work/activities. I hope you support and share with me. Below is a picture of my writers freinds and colleagues during a conference in … Read the rest
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Leave or Die: Analysis and Memory of Refugees By Raïs Neza Boneza
Refugees from DR Congo board a UNHCR truck in Rwanda (Photo credit: noodlepie) Memory is a vast lake of remembrances sometimes disrupted by huge waves of thought. For every June 20th, International Day of the Refugee, the entire world will remember the humanitarian holocaust of this century in Afghanistan, in Iraq, Palestine, or in the Great-Lakes Region in East-Africa…… Read the rest
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Arundhati Roy, the Not-So-Reluctant Renegade By SIDDHARTHA DEB
“I’ve always been slightly short with people who say, ‘You haven’t written anything again,’ as if all the nonfiction I’ve written is not writing,” Arundhati Roy said. It was July, and we were sitting in Roy’s living room, the windows closed against the heat of the Delhi summer. Delhi might be roiled over a slowing economy, rising crimes against women … Read the rest