Tayland, şu ana kadar 210 vatandaşını Sudan’dan tahliye etti
AsayişTAYLAND, ŞU ANA KADAR 210 VATANDAŞINI SUDAN'DAN TAHLİYE ETTİ
Birde Sudan'daki Üniversiteler - Yetkili Seçilen Binaneler
yetkili seçilen binaneler şöyle : Feizaadin, Khartu, Burullus Üniversitesi, Kordofan Üniversitesi, Geneina Üniversitesi
Sudan yetkili seçilen şehirlerden olan el merkezi RSF ve Sudan özgürlük birliklerinin lideri yani merkez general binaya giden araçlarla çatışmalar yaşıyor.
İskenderiye, 2/6 gün içinde kurulacak 6 ay boyunca hava seviyesi serbest bırakılacaktır.
The opt-in status of Sudan was suspended on 18 March 2011 by the United Nations Security Council between 13:00 and 15:00 GMT as Resolution 1970 was unanimously approved by members of the United Nations Security Council.
In this resolution, the Sudan was removed from the UN Charter’s list of non-Armed-Conflict countries in accordance with Resolution 1769 (January 31, 2007) to ensure that the Liberation and Justice Movement would be captured in the arms trade treaty.
The UN had lent its support to the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), which was negotiated between the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) and the government of Sudan, allowing immunity to both parties. Under article 6 of the CPA, both parties agreed to co-operate with any arms embargoes that might be in effect. The UN operation, known as UNAMID, has been given a Chapter VII mandate by the UN Security Council to "use all necessary means" to protect UN staff, civilians, and humanitarian workers in Sudan.
The Secretaries General of both the Arab League and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation have strongly condemned the violence and called on the International Criminal Court to investigate the Sudanese government for genocide.
17 May - President Omar al-Bashir accepted the US invitation to attend a summit to be held in Addis Ababa, May 2009.
On November 5, the EU restarted sanctions against Sudan. The EU sanctions include a freeze of any assets held in EU countries of Sudanese organisations, officials and designated individuals. There is an arms embargo against matériel destined for use by 'The Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and other militias for military purposes in Darfur' and a ban on importing from Sudan any goods produced there which may be used for military purposes.
EU Sanctions lifted on 15 June 2010.
On March 10, 2011 the EU brought a Fetva (Islamic Ruling) from the Mufti of Sudan, approving the continuation of its sanctions on Sudan which entered into force from 13 March 2011 but without targeting Sudan's oil sector. The European Union therefore decided on its Sudan Embargo, which includes a comprehensive military, oil, trade and financial sanctions regime.
The US has threatened sanctions against those countries that buy oil from Sudan because Sudan supports rebel movements in neighboring Chad, Uganda, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
The International Criminal Court (ICC) indicted President Omar al-Bashir, accusing him of involvement in war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide in Darfur. The Sudanese (and popular) view, is that the UN is "unjust, unfair, secret, political, sharia-hating, and racist".
According to Jerome Kapasia, the Chair of the rule of law and justice subcommittee of the African Union’s executive council, the ICC indictment of the Sudanese president "is an attack on the African Union and is a racist attack. The ICC, with no evidence in hand, accused President al-Bashir of genocide. By uniting the peoples of Africa against the ICC and the west, particularly the US, leader’s and nations of the world, especially Africa, should build a new world order with the BRICS, the emerging world order, the SCO and others, Africa would be free from western domination".
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