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Sounding the Alarm on Abyei

There are many reasons for the breakdown of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, the principal one being the Khartoum government's failure to implement the CPA's Abyei Protocol.

Creating a Peace to Keep in Darfur

Ending the catastrophe in Darfur requires international protection for civilians, a peace agreement resolving underlying political issues, and accountability for human rights abuses.

Darfur Groups Urge World Leaders Not to Attend Olympic Opening Ceremonies

‘Beijing should not be allowed to bask in the warm glow of peace and brotherhood associated with the opening games if China is still underwriting atrocities in Darfur ...’


More on Darfur and Southern Sudan >>

End the Horrific Suffering in Eastern Congo

ENOUGH joins 62 international and Congolese human rights and aid groups to call for an independent special advisor on human rights for eastern Congo to ensure action on protecting civilians at risk.

New Congo Policy Standard

The United States has finally devoted some diplomatic muscle to resolving the crisis in eastern Congo. Recent gains must be buttressed with increased diplomatic and financial resources.

Getting Serious about Ending Conflict and Sexual Violence in Congo

U.S.-led efforts in recent weeks to end the crisis in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo—the epicenter of the deadliest war since World War II with 5.4 million dead and counting—have yielded a ceasefire, but the conflict is not over.

More on Congo >>

Q & A in The East African

Julia Spiegel, policy analyst for the ENOUGH Project, spent the past month in Uganda and South Sudan. She submitted this Q&A to the Nairobi, Kenya weekly paper, The East African. It was published in the April 20-27, 2008 edition.

ENOUGH Policy Standard for Northern Uganda

The Bush administration and Congress have an essential role to play in ending Africa's longest war - the 22-year long conflict in northern Uganda. The U.S. government can help to close this nightmarish chapter of Uganda's history.

Bloggingheads.tv: The Uganda Crisis

Bloggingheads.tv features ENOUGH's Julia Spiegel in UN Plaza: The Uganda Crisis. This 34 minute video features nformation on Joseph Kony, diplomacy, and Sudan's involvement.

More on Northern Uganda >>

Nasty Neighbors: Resolving the Chad-Sudan Proxy War

A recent agreement between Chad and Sudan might appear to be good news for a part of the world that has been sliding toward chaos. However, these quarrelsome neighbors have signed four peace accords in the past two years, and in each instance fighting broke out shortly thereafter.

Is Anyone Serious about Ending the Political Crisis in Chad?

Chadian rebels’ lightning strike on the capital N’Djamena in late January and early February is the latest and most dramatic consequence of two combustible situations that remain on collision course: Sudan’s destabilizing policies and Chad’s internal political crisis.


More on Chad >>

15 Years After Black Hawk Down: Somalia's Chance?

If the international community quickly fills the peacemaking vacuum by supporting a process for real dialogue, then Somalia may have a chance to end its long and costly war.

R2P, the ICC, and Stopping Atrocities in the Real World

In the fight to eliminate genocide and crimes against humanity, the world has recently seen the birth of two essential pillars in that foundation: the International Criminal Court and the doctrine of the "Responsibility to Protect," however, the doctrine is currently failing in Darfur, Congo, and Uganda. What does R2P mean in real life, rather than in some fancy UN document?

Kenya: Containing a Rebounding Crisis

The crisis in Kenya poses an enormous challenge to the United States, not least because it has already triggered the killing of over 1000 Kenyans and displaced hundreds of thousands.


Recent Publications

A New Peace Strategy for Northern Uganda and the LRA
Date: 05/08/2008
by Julia Spiegel and John Prendergast

Lord’s Resistance Army leader Joseph Kony’s failure to sign a peace deal in April drove a nail into the coffin of the Juba peace process—a process that is grinding to an unsuccessful end.[1] The talks have certainly contributed to northern Uganda’s current state of relative peace and created a mechanism to address tensions between the people in the North and the southern-dominated government in Kampala.

15 Years After Black Hawk Down: Somalia's Chance?
Date: 04/24/2008
by John Prendergast

It has been almost 15 years since Somali militias shot down two U.S. Black Hawk helicopters over the capital Mogadishu and killed 18 American servicemen in a battle that also killed more than 1,000 Somalis.

Nasty Neighbors: Resolving the Chad-Sudan Proxy War
Date: 04/22/2008
by Colin Thomas-Jensen

It's bad enough that the international community has failed, five years in, to end the genocide in Darfur, and worse still that it reacted with no urgency when the Darfur crisis bled into neighboring Chad. With the root causes of conflict in each country still untended, this regional crisis is poised to deepen.

Sounding the Alarm on Abyei
Date: 04/17/2008
by Roger Winter

In the 10 weeks since ENOUGH issued its report “Abyei: Sudan’s “Kashmir” the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, or CPA, Sudan’s unique, ground-breaking political deal that formally ended 21 years of war between the Khartoum government and the Sudan Peoples’ Liberation Movement, or SPLM, has lurched toward breakdown. There are many reasons for this, despite the fact that both sides show clear signs of wishing to avoid outright military confrontation.

Creating a Peace to Keep in Darfur - A Joint Report by the ENOUGH Project and the Save Darfur Coalition
Date: 03/27/2008
by John Prendergast and Jerry Fowler, with contributions from Omer Ismail, Colin Thomas-Jensen, Amjad Atallah, Amir Osman and Gayle Smith.

Ending the catastrophe in Darfur requires international protection for civilians, a peace agreement that resolves the underlying political issues, and accountability for human rights abuses. Complete humanitarian access must also be assured. To achieve any of these goals, there must be meaningful consequences for individuals who impede efforts at protection, peacemaking, and humanitarian access.



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Rebecca Feeley, field-based ENOUGH researcher discusses gender-based violence in Congo.







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