---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Eric Reeves" <[email protected]>
Date: 25 Jan 2017 23:02
Subject: What the Cholera Epidemic in Sudan Tells Us About the Absurdity of
Lifting U.S. Sanctions on Khartoum
To: "Eric Reeves" <[email protected]>
Cc:

*What the Cholera Epidemic in Sudan Tells Us About the Absurdity of Lifting
U.S. Sanctions on Khartoum*

Eric Reeves  |  January 25, 2017  |  http://wp.me/p45rOG-20U

Former Obama administration UN Ambassador Samantha Power’s claim that there
has been a “sea change” of improvement in humanitarian access
<http://webtv.un.org/watch/samantha-power-united-states-final-press-conference-to-un-correspondents-13-january-2017/5281173841001>
in
Sudan was not only false, but destructively so. As a justification for *Obama’s
Executive Order* *lifting U.S sanctions *on the National Islamic
Front/National Congress Party regime, her failure to tell the truth was a
moral disgrace and gives the regime reason to believe that even token moves
to improve humanitarian access will be credited as sufficient, especially
under the new *Trump administration*. Such an attitude on the part of the
regime could easily translate into the loss of tens of thousands of
Sudanese lives.

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Screen-Shot-2017-01-14-at-12.35.29-PM.png>

*Samantha Power, former Obama administration ambassador to the UN, claiming
that there has been a "sea change" in improved humanitarian access in
Sudan---a falsehood worthy of the new Trump administration*

One example looms large at present.

There can be little doubt now that the steady stream reports concerning
cases of acute watery diarrhea signal a widespread outbreak of *cholera*—an
extremely dangerous but easily treated disease that is the product of
contaminated water sources. Today’s report from *Sudan Tribune* confirms
not only that there have been two waves of cholera in various northern
states, including *Blue Nile*, extending back to at least September 2016
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/sudan-four-dead-25-infected-with-acute-watery-diarrhoea>),
but that regime officials have tried to deny that the disease causing so
many deaths and hospitalizations is cholera. The *Sudan Tribune *dispatch
is based on a report by the *independent Central Committee of Sudanese
Doctors* (CCSD), which found that “twelve people have died and 500 infected
with watery diarrhea in the states of Khartoum, Red Sea and Gedaref *during
last week*”; the CCSD “accuses health authorities in the states of
concealing and covering-up the lab results of samples taken from the
patients, describing this behavior as ‘irresponsible and reckless.’”

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/child_suffering_from_diarrhea-708d0.jpg>

*Child suffering from cholera (photograph by Sudan Tribune)*

[The entire *Sudan Tribune *dispatch, along with numerous other recent
reports of acute watery diarrhea/cholera extending back to September 2016
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/medics-cholera-spreading-in-sudan>,
as well as reports of acute water shortages, are included in *Appendix A*.
The number who have fallen ill and/or died is significantly higher than can
be accurately reported; but epidemiological research on the spread of
cholera suggests the number is much higher, especially in a country such as
Sudan, ruled by a regime eager to suppress data and even the reality of a
cholera epidemic.]

Why is this important? What does it have to do with the lifting of U.S.
sanctions? The answers should give pause to those who have rushed to
celebrate the lifting of sanctions, particularly on the grounds that these
sanctions have hurt only the people of Sudan and not the brutal regime who
tyranny oppresses them.

Cholera is a water-borne disease that spreads with terrifying speed and
kills rapidly if untreated. Even so, treatment—primarily hydration—is
simple and can be done quickly and easily if diagnosed. It is just as
easily prevented by ensuring that water supplies are uncontaminated with
the cholera bacterium. In its description of cholera, the *UN’s World
Health Organization* notes (http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs107/
en/):

• Cholera is an acute diarrhoeal infection caused by ingestion of food or
water contaminated with the bacterium *Vibrio cholerae*.

• Cholera is an acute diarrhoeal disease that can kill within hours if left
untreated.

• Severe cases will need rapid treatment with intravenous fluids and
antibiotics.

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/is-1.jpg>

*Vibrio Cholera under a microscope*

The worst possible response to a cholera outbreak is denial, which is why
the CCSD “accuses health authorities in the states of concealing and
covering-up the lab results of samples taken from the patients, describing
this behavior as ‘irresponsible and reckless.’” But for the NIF/NCP regime
to admit that there have been multiple cholera outbreaks in multiple
locations over an extended period of time would be to admit that it has
simply not invested in the infrastructure necessary to provide clean water
to the people of Sudan, particularly those of the peripheral regions.

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/is-2.jpg>

*Another child suffering from cholera*

This refusal to invest in clean water, even during the flush years of oil
revenues, is emblematic of the priorities of the regime: military and
security expenditures, and self-enrichment, will always take priority over
spending on clean water, which is an ongoing and critical health issue in
Sudan, given its climate and geography. Moreover, the regime’s hostility to
international humanitarian organizations—even those with expertise in
sanitation and provision of clean water—is notorious. Not only has Khartoum
denied access to many locations in Darfur where water and sanitation issues
are critical, but also in eastern Sudan there has been a striking lack of
an international humanitarian presence. Here we should recall that in 2012
this regime decided for no credible reason to expel seven experienced
humanitarian organizations from this part of the country. *Sudan Tribune* again
reported authoritatively at the time:

(*Sudan *Tribune | May 31, 2012 (KHARTOUM) — Sudan’s Humanitarian Aid
Commission (HAC) has ordered seven foreign aid groups to suspend their
humanitarian activities in eastern Sudan following the findings of an
assessment study reporting infractions they allegedly committed.

Eastern Sudan, which suffers from underdevelopment of the region and the
marginalisation, is one of the poorest regions in the country where drought
contributed largely to abandon nomadic lifestyle. Also, illegal immigration
and refugees from Ethiopia and Eritrea have attracted humanitarian groups
to the region.

Sudan’s Humanitarian commissioner Suleiman Abdel Rahman on Thursday issued
a decision ending the humanitarian activities of the seven aid groups in
the three states of Eastern Sudan region: Kassala; Red Sea and Gadaref
states. The ban was based on a report prepared by a federal committee that
conducted a field assessment of the projects implemented by these groups.

In short, he various health crises in Sudan are self-inflicted by the
regime, and have been consistently so for more than 27 years of rule by
“kleptocracy” (see | http://sudanreeves.org/2015/12/09/7041/).

Especially notable is the fact that the shortage of medicines in the
country is not a product of U.S. sanctions but the crippling lack of
foreign exchange currency (Forex). There are many countries around the
world more than willing to sell Khartoum the medicines the people of Sudan
need, but the regime simply doesn’t have the Forex to pay them. Instead, it
either steals what Forex is available—directly or indirectly—or spends that
money to weapons acquisitions (see the extraordinary budgetary analysis
provided by *Sudan Tribune* at the end of *Appendix A*).

The lack of Forex has produced a precipitous drop in the value of the
Sudanese Pound (which is now utterly worthless as a currency with which to
make purchases abroad); and directly correlating with the drop in the value
of the Sudanese Pound is skyrocketing inflation—well over 50 percent for
the average Sudanese, year over year.

The increased costs of goods is reflected in bread prices (wheat for flour
is imported at a cost of well over $1 billion per year), cooking fuel
(refined petroleum products must be imported because of the regime’s
failure to invest in domestic refining capacity), and medicines, which are
now too costly for a great many Sudanese
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/pharmacists-strike-in-sudan-capital-two-detained>,
with many more facing an acute lack of availability. Some medicines, even
critical ones, can be afforded only by the rich can afford. This is what
lies behind the grim dispatch from Radio Dabanga earlier this year:

*El Sayha* newspaper reported on Sunday that *three brothers committed
suicide* in Omdurman. The well-known psychiatrist Ali Baldo was treating
them. He said that the three, ‘suffering from a serious depression,” *killed
themselves as their family could not afford to purchase their medicines.
“They were recovering well with medicines. Their mental state, however,
rapidly deteriorated after they were deprived of their cure,” he told the
newspaper.*

Baldo explained that the three patients came from western Sudan. “Their
family fled the insecure situation in their home area, and was bit by bit
constructing a house in the western part of Omdurman.” The psychiatrist
called on the Sudanese government to take into account the economic
situation of the people, and keep to its commitment to provide gratis
psychotropic medicines. (November 21, 2016 | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/protest-in-sudan-capital-
against-price-rises-brothers-commit-suicide)

Let’s be very clear as various celebrations of the lifting of sanctions
continue to appear—some by Khartoum’s Washington lobbyists. Cholera is not
and has never been the consequence of U.S. sanctions; the lack of clean
water and the infrastructure for providing it is wholly the product of
corrupt, self-enriching rule by the NIF/NCP regime; sanitation resources by
international humanitarian organizations have been denied access throughout
the country at various times, including eastern Sudan, Blue Nile, and—most
consequentially—Darfur, where most camps are badly overcrowded and suffer
from often critical water and sanitation deficits. From the rest of Sudan,
such reports as the following have become commonplace:

‘*Children in Sudan dying from lack of clean drinking water’*
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/children-in-sudan-dying-from-lack-of-clean-drinking-water>
|
Radio Dabanga | November 13, 2016 | KHARTOUM

*Sudanese MPs: People dying of thirst in Red Sea and Blue Nile
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/sudanese-mps-people-dying-of-thirst-in-red-sea-and-blue-nile>
*|
Radio Dabanga | November 9, 2016 | RED SEA / BLUE NILE

The brutal campaign against the people of Jebel Marra (Central Darfur) in
2016 only exacerbated the problems of water shortages and sanitation
shortcomings, as do the continuing predations of the Rapid Support Forces
(RSF) in Jebel Marra and East Jebel Marra.

The regime this now formally incorporated the RSF into the regular army,
the Sudan Armed Forces, which should mean that their war crimes should
<http://sudantribune.com/spip.php?article56463> figure in any assessment of
regime behavior over the past six months, as well as the next six months
(the time-frame specified in the Obama Executive Order lifting sanctions).
This is highly unlikely to occur, even as continuing violence against
Darfuri civilians did not figure in Obama’s disingenuous claim that there
have been “positive” developments in Sudan since July 2016 (see, for
example, Radio Dabanga | “Central Darfur displaced demo against chemical
weapons, bombs,” October 30, 2016 | Hashisi | https://www.dabangasudan.
org/en/all-news/article/central-darfur-displaced-demo-
against-chemical-weapons-bombs/ ).

Honesty—whether about the real impact and nature of now effectively lifted
U.S. sanctions or the real causes of cholera—has long been in short supply.
There is no reason to believe that this will change in a Trump
administration already populated by those grossly ignorant about Sudan,
habitually expedient, or mindlessly consumed with the securing of
counter-terrorism intelligence from Khartoum.

*APPENDIX A: Reports of cholera, water shortages, and economic collapse
accelerating these trends*

<http://sudanreeves.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/is.jpg>

*Cholera---the face of human suffering*

*• “Acute watery diarrhea kills 12 in Sudan last week: report,” **Sudan
Tribune *| January 24, 2017 (KHARTOUM) | http://www.sudantribune.com/
spip.php?article61481

Twelve people have died and 500 infected with watery diarrhea in the states
of Khartoum, Red Sea and Gedaref during last week, said a report by the
independent Central Committee of Sudanese Doctors (CCSD). The field report,
which was seen by *Sudan Tribune *on Tuesday, accuses health authorities in
the states of concealing and covering-up the lab results of samples taken
from the patients, describing this behavior as “irresponsible and reckless”.

It is noteworthy that the CCSD issued a report on 16 January disclosing
that 8 people have died and 342 infected at several Sudanese states in a
second wave of a suspected cholera outbreak within five months. The new
report said that the field monitoring revealed 12 new deaths and more than
500 infections within last week, saying the infections took place mainly in
the states of Khartoum, Red Sea and Gedaref.

According to the report, 5 people have died and 100 were infected in the
locality of Galabat in the Gedaref state, stressing the health authorities
have shut down the markets and the schools due to lack of medical services.
It pointed out the average child infections have reached 20 cases daily in
Port Sudan Children’s Hospital, saying there are currently more than 100
inpatients in the hospital. The report added that the average daily
admissions at Port Sudan Teaching Hospitals reached 15 cases, saying that 3
people have died during the past few days.

According to the report, health authorities in Khartoum state have shut
down restaurants and cafeterias at the Central Market for ten days
following the increasing numbers of acute watery diarrhea infections among
the residents.

The report pointed that the average admissions at Ibrahim Malik Hospital in
Khartoum reached 20 cases, saying they are mostly from the Central Market
area south of Khartoum. It added that the average admissions at Khartoum
North Teaching Hospital reached 10 cases, saying that 2 people have died
during the past few days and 21 inpatients are currently at the hospital.

The report further added that the average admissions at Al-ban Gadid
Hospital in East Nile locality have reached 70 cases during the last week,
pointing to the significant shortage of medicines and intravenous fluids
besides the lack of safety and prevention measures.

The CCSD stressed that the health authorities didn’t take any real measures
to curb the spread of the disease, saying the closure of market, shops and
schools is not enough to counter the epidemic.

*Last September, Sudan’s Federal Ministry of Health acknowledged that 55
people have died and 2619 were infected in Blue Nile State by watery
diarrhea caused by (E. coli) bacteria stressing that the epidemic was not
cholera.*
*The following headlines come from Radio Dabanga unless otherwise
indicated:*

*• Medics: ‘Cholera spreading in Sudan’
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/medics-cholera-spreading-in-sudan>
*|
January 22, 2017 | KHARTOUM | According to laboratory results, the
diarrhoea cases spreading over various parts of Sudan since September last
year are caused by cholera.

• *Six ‘diarrhoea’ patients die, 97 treated in eastern Sudanese hospitals
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/eastern-sudan-six-diarrhoea-patients-die-97-treated-in-hospitals>*
|
January 23, 2017 | EL GEDAREF / PORT SUDAN

*• Medics: ‘Cholera spreading in Sudan’
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/medics-cholera-spreading-in-sudan>*
|
January 22, 2017 | KHARTOUM

• *El Gedaref: 52 patients killed, infected by diarrhoea
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/el-gedaref-52-patients-killed-infected-by-diarrhoea>
*|
January 20, 2017 | EL GEDAREF

*• Diarrhoea death toll rising in eastern Sudan
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/diarrhoea-death-toll-rising-in-eastern-sudan>
*|
January 19, 2017 | RED SEA STATE

•* Sudan: Diarrhoea leaves six dead in three days
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/sudan-diarrhoea-leaves-six-dead-in-three-days>
*|
January 18, 2017 | PORT SUDAN

• *Doctors: Diarrhoea cases in Sudan number in the hundreds
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/doctors-diarrhoea-cases-in-sudan-number-in-the-hundreds>
*|
January 17, 2017 | KHARTOUM

• *Eight dead in suspected Sudan cholera outbreak: report
<http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article61409> | **Sudan Tribune
| *January
16, 2017 (KHARTOUM) - Eight people have died and 342 infected at several
Sudanese states in a second wave of a suspected cholera outbreak within
five months, said a report by the independent Central Committee of
Sudanese Doctors.

*• Watery diarrhoea kills eight in eastern Sudan
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/watery-diarrhoea-kills-eight-in-eastern-sudan>
*|
January 16, 2017 | JEBEIT

• *Doctor: ‘Diarrhoea cases mounting in central Sudan’
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/doctor-diarrhoea-cases-mounting-in-central-sudan>*
|
January 15, 2017 | WAD MADANI

• *More die of diarrhoea in eastern Sudan
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/more-die-of-diarrhoea-in-eastern-sudan>*
|
December 30, 2016 | PORT SUDAN / WAD MADANI

• *Death toll from diarrhoea in Sudan’s El Gezira ‘16 and rising’
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/death-toll-from-diarrhoea-in-sudan-s-el-gezira-16-and-rising>*
|
December 29, 2016 | WAD MADANI

• *Ten people die of acute diarrhoea in Sudan's El Gezira
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/ten-people-die-of-acute-diarrhoea-in-sudan-s-el-gezira>*
|
December 27, 2016 | WAD MADANI

•* Medical source: 16 diarrhoea deaths this week in El Gedaref
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/medical-source-16-diarrhoea-deaths-this-week-in-el-gedaref>
*|
December 16, 2016 | EL GEDAREF

• *More students stricken with diarrhoea in Sudan
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/more-students-stricken-with-diarrhoea-in-sudan>
*|
December 25, 2016 | WAD MADANI

• *Diarrhoea kills two Sudanese students
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/diarrhoea-kills-two-sudanese-students>*
|
December 15, 2016 | WAD MEDANI

• *Watery diarrhoea claims two lives in Sudan’s El Gedaref
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/watery-diarrhoea-claims-two-lives-in-sudan-s-el-gedaref>
*|
December 12, 2016 | EL GEDAREF

• *Baby dies of diarrhoea infection in Port Sudan
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/baby-dies-of-diarrhoea-infection-in-port-sudan>*
|
November 30, 2016 | PORT SUDAN

•* Port Sudan: Spread of 'deadly diarrhoea', journalist summoned
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/port-sudan-spread-of-deadly-diarrhoea-journalist-summoned>*
|
November 21, 2016 | PORT SUDAN

• *One dead, infections by diarrhoea in Sudan's White Nile
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/one-death-infections-by-diarrhoea-in-sudan-s-white-nile>
*|
November 15, 2016 | ED DUEIM

• *32 diarrhoea deaths in Sudan's El Gezira
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/32-diarrhoea-deaths-in-sudan-s-el-gezira>
*|
November 4, 2016 | WAD MADANI

• *Watery diarrhoea claims more lives in Sudan’s El Gezira state
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/watery-diarrhoea-claims-more-lives-in-sudan-s-el-gezira-state>
*|
November 3, 2016 | EL GEZIRA

• *Sudan: Four dead, 25 infected with acute watery diarrhoea
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/sudan-four-dead-25-infected-with-acute-watery-diarrhoea>*
|
October 27, 2016 | EL HAJ YOUSIF
Examples of water Shortages

*• Thirst in North Darfur’s Shaddad camp
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/thirst-in-north-darfur-s-shaddad-camp>
*|
January 9, 2017 | SHADDAD CAMP

• *Drinking water crisis as militiamen bar access to North Darfur wells
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/drinking-water-crisis-as-militiamen-bar-access-to-north-darfur-wells>
*|
November 23, 2016 | KABKABIYA

• *Water depletion in Sudan's agricultural schem
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/water-depletion-in-sudan-s-agricultural-scheme>e
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/water-depletion-in-sudan-s-agricultural-scheme>
*|
December 13, 2016 | EL GEZIRA / EL GEDAREF

*• Winter crops threatened in Sudan’s El Gezira
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/winter-crops-threatened-in-sudan-s-el-gezira>
*|
December 4, 2016 | EL GEZIRA
Further indications of regime priorities and the consequence of
kleptocratic rule in Khartoum:

• *No water, bread, fuel, electricity in South Kordofan capital
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/no-water-bread-fuel-electricity-in-south-kordofan-capital>*
| January
23, 2017 | KADUGLI

• *Acute shortage of bread in Sudan
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/acute-shortage-of-bread-in-sudan>*
|
January 9, 2017 | KHARTOUM / EL OBEID / EL GEZIRA

• *Flour shortage affects bakeries in Sudan capital
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/flour-shortage-affects-bakeries-in-sudan-capital>*
|
December 9, 2016 | KHARTOUM

• *Sudan: Pharmacies swept up in high drug prices
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/sudan-pharmacies-swept-up-in-high-drug-prices>*
|
November 22, 2016 | KHARTOUM

• *Medicine prices expected to double in Sudan
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/medicine-prices-expected-to-double-in-sudan>*
|
November 8, 2016 | KHARTOUM / EL FASHER / ED DAEIN / BABANUSA

• *Protest in Sudan capital against price rises, brothers commit suicide
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/protest-in-sudan-capital-against-price-rises-brothers-commit-suicide>*
|
November 21, 2016 | KHARTOUM

• *Sudan Govt.: 15% deficit in flour production
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/sudan-govt-15-deficit-in-flour-production>*
|
December 8, 2016 | KHARTOUM

• *‘Sudan’s 2017 budget will lead to continued crisis’: Economist
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/sudan-s-2017-budget-will-lead-to-continued-crisis-economist>
*|
December 25, 2016 | KHARTOUM

• *Sudan's deficit grows to SDG19.5 billion: Finance Minister*
<https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/sudan-s-deficit-grows-to-sdg19-5-billion-finance-minister>
|
December 9, 2016 | KHARTOUM

• *Sudan’s inflation continues to rise for eighth straight month
<http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article61427> *| *Sudan Tribune *|
January 18, 2017 (KHARTOUM) - Sudan’s Central Bureau of Statistics (CBoS)
on Wednesday reported that inflation jumped to 30.47% in December 2016 from
29.49 in November pointing to continued rise in food and energy price.

*[The Central Bureau of Statistics is notorious for misrepresenting
unfavorable economic news; but even a 30% inflation rate—especially one
that continues to rise—is simply unsustainable. The economy is in fact
imploding---ER]*
 Where the money goes:

• *Sudan allocates $1.8 billion for defense in 2017
<http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article61201>* | *Sudan Tribune *|
December 23, 2016 (KHARTOUM) - Sudan has appropriated more than 29 billion
pounds (SDG) (about $1.8 billion) to defense and security which represents
the largest single spending item in the 2017 budget. According to Sudan’s
2017 budgetary estimates seen by Sudan Tribune, 5 billion pounds have been
allocated to the sovereign sector while 2.3 billion was appropriated for
agriculture and forests spending.

Other budget spending items include 1.9 billion (SDG) for the economic
sector, 5.5 million for culture and information, 5.3 million for health, *828
million for education*, 1.7 billion for minerals and *1.7 billions for
transport, roads and bridges.*

*In other words:*

*Infrastructure spending* (including for improved delivery of clean water)
= approximately *6%* of the military/security budget;

*Education spending *= about *3%* of the military/security budget;
What the Gulf States and Saudi Arabia are funding:

• *Sudan to receive $500 million deposit from UAE: Bashir
<http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article61040> *| *Sudan Tribune *|
December 6, 2016 (KHARTOUM) - Sudanese President Omer al-Bashir on Tuesday
has said that his country will receive a $500 million central bank deposit
from the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

• *Sudanese army conducts largest-ever military drills
<http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article61043>*
*Sudan Tribune *December 6, 2016 (KHARTOUM) - Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) on
Tuesday said it has conducted the largest military exercises in its history
in the presence of President Omer al-Bashir and senior army commanders.
-- 

Eric Reeves, Senior Fellow at Harvard University’s François-Xavier Bagnoud
Center for Health and Human Rights



[email protected]

www.sudanreeves.org

Twitter@SudanReeves

About Eric Reeves: http://sudanreeves.org/about-eric-reeves

Philanthropy: 
*http://ericreeves-woodturner.com/woodturnings-available-for-purchase-dire
<http://ericreeves-woodturner.com/woodturnings-available-for-purchase-dire>*

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