Sudan Article

Sudan summary

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Know about the military rule, cause of Mahdī revolt, and the Darfur genocide in Sudan

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Below is the article summary. For the full article, see Sudan.

Sudan , officially Republic of the Sudan, Country, northeastern Africa. Area: 710,693 sq mi (1,840,687 sq km). Population: (2024 est.) 47,653,000. Capitals: Khartoum (executive), Omdurman (legislative). People identifying themselves as Arab predominate, but other ethnic groups also live in the country. Languages: Arabic, English (official working languages), Nubian languages, others. Religions: Islam (predominantly Sunni); also Christianity, traditional beliefs. Currency: Sudanese pound. The country encompasses an immense plain with the Sahara Desert in the north-centre, sand dunes in the west, and semiarid shrublands in the south-central belt. The Nile River flows through the entire length of the country. Wildlife includes lions, leopards, elephants, and giraffes. Sudan has a developing mixed economy based largely on oil and agriculture. One of the largest irrigation projects in the world provides water to farms between the White Nile and the Blue Nile. Chief cash crops are cotton, peanuts, and sesame; livestock is also important. Major industries include food processing and cotton ginning, and petroleum is the main export. The country is ruled by a military-backed regime; the head of state and government is the president, assisted by vice presidents. Evidence of human habitation dates back tens of thousands of years. From the end of the 4th millennium bce, Nubia (now northern Sudan) periodically came under Egyptian rule, and it was part of the kingdom of Cush from the 11th century bce to the 4th century ce. Christian missionaries converted the area’s three principal kingdoms during the 6th century ce; those black Christian kingdoms coexisted with their Muslim Arab neighbours in Egypt for centuries, until the influx of Arab immigrants brought about their collapse in the 13th–15th centuries. Egypt had conquered all of the Sudan region by 1874 and encouraged British interference there; this aroused Muslim opposition and led to the revolt of the Mahdī, who captured Khartoum in 1885 and established a Muslim theocracy in the Sudan that lasted until 1898, when his forces were defeated by the British. The British ruled, generally in partnership with Egypt, until the region achieved independence in 1956. Since then the country has fluctuated between ineffective parliamentary government and unstable military rule, with the distraction of long-running civil wars (1955–72; 1983–2005) between the northern-based government and southern rebels. Meanwhile, fighting broke out in 2003 in the Darfur region of western Sudan; tens of thousands of people were killed and hundreds of thousands were displaced. In 2011 the southern Sudanese population voted overwhelmingly in favour of independence from the north and seceded on July 9.