Posted on 15 September 2011. Tags: Apostasy, Islam, Khartoum, Sudan

129 People Charged with Apostasy in South Khartoum: Maximum Sentence is the Death Penalty
(14 September 2011) On 29 July 2011, 150 people were arrested by police in Hay Mayo, South Khartoum. All are members of the Hausa ethnic group and from Darfur. While 21 individuals (children and the elderly) were immediately released, 129 were subsequently ...
Posted in Africa, Community, Religion
Posted on 14 April 2009. Tags: Africa, Africa, Africans, Army, Congo, Crime, Death, Economics, Europe, Genocide, Holocaust, Politicians, Politics, Sudan, Troops, War, Women, ethnicity, president, violence

A Tale of a Forgotten People
By Vava Tampa
Outside public eyes in a remote corner of Africa and literally under the world's radar screen, a country is sinking in a river of blood! Mothers crying! Fathers and sons trading hot metals! Neighbours, in alliance with local armed groups, seething through the thick dense forest to ...
Posted in Africa, Community, Education, Environment, Events, Health, Media, Men, Military, Racism, Religion, War, Women
Posted on 10 March 2009. Tags: Africa, African Wars, Sudan, War, child soldiers, exploitation, warchild

GUA Africa was founded by Emmanuel Jal, an ex-child soldier turned rap artist. The word GUA (pronounced gwaah) means peace in Nuer, a tribal language of Southern Sudan.
Emmanuel Jal was just three years old when civil war broke out in Sudan, it was a war that would last 22 years killing an estimated 2 ...
Posted in Africa, Black Blog Posts, Media, War
Posted on 05 March 2009. Tags: Al-Bashir, Ayo Johnson, Crime, Darfour, Genocide, ICC, International Criminal Court, Sudan, War Crimes, ethnicity, president


The International criminal court (ICC) up until recently was labelled a white elephant costing millions of US Dollars annually and failing to yielding any tangible results.
The ICC gained respectability in 1999; when Slobodan Milosevic was indicted and convicting for atrocities against Serbian forces in Kosovo.
Posted in Africa, Politics, War