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Geopolitics

Sudan And The Specter Of A Proxy War

Hundreds are dead, thousands are injured and the health system is collapsing in Sudan. It's a war being fought by two factions of the armed forces in Sudan that risks escalating when outside forces, from Egypt to the UAE to Russia's Wagner Group, step in.

Image of a closed shop with smoke behind it in Khartoum, Sudan.

April 21, 2023, closed shop in Khartoum, Sudan.

Mohamed Khidir/ZUMA
Pierre Haski

-Analysis-

The two men fighting in this power struggle embody two versions of the same oppression for the Sudanese people. The 2019 revolution in Sudan tried to peacefully overthrow that system, but as often happens in history, the movement has been hijacked by those who believe that power is at the end of a gun.

In 2019, Sudanese people rose up against Omar al-Bashir, a man indicted by the International Criminal Court for genocide, after 30 years of Islamist dictatorship. However, this democratic revolution was hijacked by the military, specifically by the two main players in the current war: General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, chief of staff, and General Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, better known as Hemetti, a militia leader.


Sudanese civil society is still alive, and recently it was still fighting to enforce a transition agreement towards a civilian regime. However, the military never intended to play by the rules of a return to the barracks, as their appetite for power is too strong.

Image of smoke and destruction the city of Al Fasher in North Darfur.

April 17, 2023, smoke and destruction the city of Al Fasher in North Darfur, following clashes between the Sudanese Army and the RSF militia.

Stringer/IMAGESLIVE/ZUMA

Wagner Group in the mix

As explained by the authors of a recent book on this revolution, The Unfinished Democracy, the protesters hoped for a total transformation of the political game in Sudan, but instead found themselves facing the intrigues of a group of generals with foreign support and significant interests in the country's economy.

Generals Burhan and Hemetti are now building competing narratives that portray themselves in a positive light. However, the former was a pillar of Omar al-Bashir's dictatorship until he sensed a shift in power, and the latter is responsible for the massacres in Darfur and the worst abuses against protesters in Khartoum. Neither of the two men can claim to be defenders of democracy.

The democratic revolution is not dead in Sudan.

Several countries in the region, such as Djibouti, and even the African Union itself, are attempting mediation and calling for a ceasefire. However, so far, these efforts have been unsuccessful.

But above all, there are other actors eager to add fuel to the fire. Each general has his own international support and network, and this war is at risk of becoming yet another proxy conflict, a war fought on behalf of larger interests. Egypt on one side, the United Arab Emirates or Libyan General Haftar on the other, and even the Russian Wagner Group militia, which is never far away when a strategic vacuum arises somewhere on the African continent.

In the current disorder of the world, with the United Nations hampered and unable to fulfill their mission, troublemakers have a free hand. The democratic revolution is not dead in Sudan; but today, it is a clash of arms between two greedy generals.

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Society

Italy's Right-Wing Government Turns Up The Heat On 'Gastronationalism'

Rome has been strongly opposed to synthetic foods, insect-based flours and health warnings on alcohol, and aggressive lobbying by Giorgia Meloni's right-wing government against nutritional labeling has prompted accusations in Brussels of "gastronationalism."

Dough is run through a press to make pasta

Creation of home made pasta

Karl De Meyer et Olivier Tosseri

ROME — On March 23, the Italian Minister of Agriculture and Food Sovereignty, Francesco Lollobrigida, announced that Rome would ask UNESCO to recognize Italian cuisine as a piece of intangible cultural heritage.

On March 28, Lollobrigida, who is also Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's brother-in-law, promised that Italy would ban the production, import and marketing of food made in labs, especially artificial meat — despite the fact that there is still no official request to market it in Europe.

Days later, Italian Eurodeputy Alessandra Mussolini, granddaughter of fascist leader Benito Mussolini and member of the Forza Italia party, which is part of the governing coalition in Rome, caused a sensation in the European Parliament. On the sidelines of the plenary session, Sophia Loren's niece organized a wine tasting, under the slogan "In Vino Veritas," to show her strong opposition (and that of her government) to an Irish proposal to put health warnings on alcohol bottles. At the end of the press conference, around 11am, she showed her determination by drinking from the neck of a bottle of wine, to great applause.

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