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#gujarat#india#ahmedabad#manufacturer#exporter#drytechengineeringsystems#supplier#Sudan#Khartoum#Kassala#North Darfur#Sennar#Blue Nile#Northern#Red Sea#Al Qadarif#Gezira#North Kordofan#Gedaref#Lakes#Northern Bahr el Ghazal#Omdurman#River Nile#Juba#Exporter of Flash Dryer in Sudan
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The Acholi are an ethnolinguistic group in northern Uganda and southern Sudan. They speak Luo, a Western Nilotic language. In about 1675, when Luo-speaking chiefs first migrated into northern Uganda from the south, the overwhelming majority of people living in the area spoke Central Sudanic or Eastern Nilotic languages— Luo was very much a minority language. But the Luo chiefs imported symbols and regalia of royalty (drums, stools) that they had adopted from Bantu kingdoms to the south. They also imported a new ideology of chiefly religious power, accompanied by demands for tribute service. Between about 1675 and 1725 thirteen new chiefdoms were formed, none larger than five villages. In these islands of chiefly authority the Luo-speaking chiefs recruited clients from among the lineage elders of the egalitarian local populations, offering them positions of prestige in the new hierarchy. Their numbers grew through marriage alliances with the locals, displays of wealth and generosity, assistance for local families in difficulty, threats of violence, and, most important, control over the inter-regional trade in iron prestige objects used to pay bride-prices. The Luo language spread slowly through recruitment. 28 Then an external stress, a severe drought beginning in 1790– 1800, affected the region. One ecologically favored Lou chiefdom— an old one, founded by one of the first Luo charter groups— rose to paramount status as its wealth was maintained through the crisis. The Luo language then spread rapidly. When European traders arrived from Egypt in the 1850s they designated the local people by the name of this widely spoken language, which they called Shooli, which became Achooli. The paramount chiefs acquired so much wealth through trade with the Europeans that they quickly became an aristocracy. By 1872 the British recorded a single Luo-speaking tribe called the Acholi, an inter-regional ethnic identity that had not existed two hundred years earlier.
-David W. Anthony. The Horse, the Wheel, and Language:
i thought this was interestng but im mostly posting it because i cant figure out what it means when it says "chiefs migrated" like. how do you migrate somewhere and become chief among the preexisting population. do you kill the old chief? do you just bring a lot of cattle? very unclear to me
from wikipedia for acholi
The presumed nominal forebears of the present-day Acholi group migrated South to Northern Uganda from the area now known as Bahr el Ghazal in South Sudan by about 1,000 AD. Starting in the late seventeenth century, a new sociopolitical order developed among the Luo of Northern Uganda, mainly characterized by the formation of chiefdoms headed by Rwodi (sg. Rwot, 'ruler'). The chiefs traditionally came from one clan, and each chiefdom had several villages made up of different patrilineal clans.
so maybe its like, village-sized groups of people settled, then the chiefs of those village recruited native elites into their culture, and then through those people the culture spread outward to the non-luo non-elites? so its spread via the elites, but not directly. its like. luo elite->non-luo elite-> non-luo non-elite instead of just luo elite->non-luo
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President Lieutenant Colonel Salva Kiir Mayardit (September 13, 1951) the first and current President of South Sudan. He was born in Akon, Bahr El Ghazal province, Sudan. His father, Kuethpiny Thiik Atem was a cattle herder. His mother, Awei Rou Wol Tong was a farmer. He was born in the Awan clan of the largest southern Sudanese ethnic group the Dinka.
He joined the Anyanya, a southern separatist movement, fighting the northern government. Many of the southern fighters were absorbed into the Sudanese national army. He joined the national army and rose to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel.
He and several other high-ranking officers with southern origins defected and formed the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement and its military to win the Sudan People’s Liberation Army. John Garang headed both organizations and he was one of his closest deputies. He became deputy and commander of the Sudan People’s Liberation Army and held portfolios for domestic and foreign intelligence and affairs.
He was important in peace negotiations with the government of Sudan that resulted in the Comprehensive Peace Agreement. The southern region of Sudan became semi-autonomous with Sylva Mayardit holding the position of vice-president. The President, John Garang, was killed in a helicopter crash and he became President.
South Sudan was allowed to hold a referendum on independence. An overwhelming 98% of South Sudanese voted for secession from Sudan. On July 9, 2011, the new nation of South Sudan became independent.
He is married to Mary Ayen Mayardit. They have two children.
He met President George Bush who presented him with a ten-gallon black Stetson cowboy hat. He is always seen in public with a cowboy hat that has become his trademark. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence
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New models could help African countries stop locust swarms before they start
https://sciencespies.com/nature/new-models-could-help-african-countries-stop-locust-swarms-before-they-start/
New models could help African countries stop locust swarms before they start
Several countries in East Africa – namely Kenya, Ethiopia, Uganda, and South Sudan – are still trying to contain the worst desert locust invasion the region has experienced in over 70 years.
The locusts have destroyed vegetation – especially staple cereal crops, legumes, and pastures – resulting in huge economic losses. The World Bank estimates that these losses could reach US$8.5 billion by the end of the year.
Unlike many other grasshoppers, the desert locust (Schistocerca gregaria) can change from a harmless solitary phase to a destructive gregarious phase whereby hoppers (juveniles in their early, wingless stages) march together in bands.
The adults can fly and form giant swarms that can invade large areas away from their original breeding sites.
Currently, the countries are battling the second generation (or wave) of locusts, as they’ve already reproduced and hatched once within the region. And re-infestation could continue if the environment is conducive to it.
The desert locust breeds well in semi-arid zones. An ideal breeding site is characterised by warmth, vegetation close by and sandy soil with moisture and salt in it. The females usually lay their eggs at between 4 and 6 cm deep in the soil.
Governments have tried to control these insects through a range of efforts: from mobilising military units to using young people as locust cadets.
But trying to control and eliminate populations of flying locusts is expensive and not very effective. The best option, proved by scientists, is to manage them at their breeding sites.
Eggs survive and hatch when the environmental conditions are right – they can hatch within weeks or remain undeveloped for years. They’re laid inside soil so can be hard to find; it’s best that control measures – preferably biopesticides – are used when the locusts are at the surface in the form of a nymph or hopper.
For this to happen, targeted ground and aerial surveillance efforts to identify potential breeding sites are critical.
The most destructive locust swarm in East Africa happened over 70 years ago. Documentation of information was very poor, and so there was no prior knowledge of the region’s potential breeding sites.
Along with my colleagues from the International Centre for Insect Physiology and Ecology, I’m trying to fill this gap. We’ve developed maps that predict where desert locusts could breed in Kenya, Uganda, and South Sudan.
Our model, supported by a machine learning algorithm, establishes a relationship between historical data from around the world on desert locust breeding sites.
It also factors in climate and soil characteristics that are necessary for locusts to lay their eggs, and for the eggs to hatch.
Breeding sites can consist of anywhere between 40 to 80 million locusts within a square kilometre.
There is a need to target these high-risk areas and strengthen ground surveillance to manage the locusts in a timely, cost-effective, and environmentally friendly manner.
At-risk areas
Using the model, we’ve identified and mapped potential breeding regions of the desert locust in Kenya, Uganda and South Sudan.
Vast areas in Kenya are at high risk because they have the right conditions to support locust breeding. These areas include Mandera, Wajir, Garissa, Marsabit, Turkana (all counties in North Eastern Kenya), and a few sites in Samburu county.
In Uganda, there are fewer possible breeding sites than in Kenya. These are restricted to the north-eastern regions, specifically Kotido, Kaabong, Moroto, Napak, Abim, Kitgum, Moyo, and Lamwo districts.
South Sudan is at risk of breeding in the northern regions and the south-east corner bordering Kenya. These sites exist in northern Bahr el Ghazal, Unity, Upper Nile, Eastern Equatoria, Warrap, Lakes, and some parts of Jonglei state.
Actions
In line with these predictions, ground and aerial surveillance efforts and monitoring of weather and vegetation variables in the predicted breeding regions needs to be strengthened significantly.
Financial, material and human resources will also need to be mobilised for timely management of the hopper bands when they emerge.
We, at the International Centre for Insect Physiology and Ecology, have several suggestions on what must happen next:
Due to a large area for potential breeding of locusts, a permanent locust monitoring unit in Kenya must be established. It should consist of ground and aerial surveillance teams, locust biologists, socio-economists, remote-sensing experts and weather and vegetation forecasters.
A task force must be set up in Uganda to collaborate with Kenya’s monitoring unit. Based on the overall cover area of desert locust breeding suitability in Uganda, it may not be necessary to invest in constant monitoring in the country.
But the task force must collaborate closely with the Kenyan Locust monitoring unit and enhance preparedness for possible outbreaks and swarms.
Sustainable locust management interventions and associated mobilisation of financial, logistical and human resources need to be closely linked with strengthened locust monitoring efforts.
There must be a greater focus on sustainable and biological control options against locusts to mitigate adverse impacts of chemical pesticide-based locust control strategy.
We believe that biopesticide applications should become a cornerstone in managing locust outbreaks. Biopesticides need to be rapidly field tested in Kenya, commercialised and scaled up.
Finally, the current desert locust outbreak is triggered by a change in rainfall pattern which expands areas of potential invasion as a consequence of climate variability or change.
It is possible that, in future, other marginally suitable areas and conditions may become conducive for locust breeding.
Therefore, it is important to ramp up modelling efforts to understand the potential impacts of climate change on the current model predictions.
Henri Tonnang, Research Scientist, International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
#Nature
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History According to Okot (1971, 2), the term Luo is the name of the mythical founder or leader of the Luo peoples. He further observes that although the name is widespread it does not appear in the founding myths of those who call themselves Luo. For example, the Shilluck say that their original home was Luo and the other people merely mentions Luo as the first man.
These myths being about the foundation of the existing political institution and groups are dominated by who the founder was; for example, in Sudan, among the Northern Luo, Nyikang‘o, Gilo, Dak and Dimo; among the Acholi, Alur and Chope Labong‘o, Nyipir and their mother Nyikal; the Padhola and Kenyan and Tanzania Luo by Labong‘o, and Gipir but speak more so of Owiny, Podho and Ramogi.
Luo warriors from Nyakach in full war gear . Charles W. Hobley, about 1900 The name Jo-pa-Luo then means people, followers or descendants of Luo. Although it is possible to reconstruct histories of the Luo groups separately, it is not possible to trace the history of the Luo people to the first Luo man. However, a comparative study of different Luo myths reveals striking similarities; many of them about quarrels over beads or spears. The people call themselves Luo, their language dho or lep Luo (Luo tongue) and their customs kit Luo. They are conscious of their Luo-ness. When shrines are built for ancestors, two are built; one called tipu Luo and the other tipu Jomiru/kimirwa. The first one refers to those of sociologically pure ethnic stock, who are all agnatically descendants of chiefs and Jumiru /kimirwa refers to all other clans who are regarded as subjects of the Luo. The Kenyan Luo refers to the Kalenjin: Nandi, Suk, Maasai, etc., as the Jo-Lang’o. The Central Luo also calls their eastern neighbours Lang’o.
Luo Origins in Sudan The Luo are part of the Nilotic group of people. The Nilotes themselves had separated from the other members of the East Sudanic family by about the 3rd millennium BC. Within Nilotic, Luo forms part of the Western group. The Luo languages forms one branch of this Western Nilotic group, the other being Dinka-Nuer (named for the Dinka people and the Nuer people).
The separation of the Luo group from Dinka-Nuer presumably took place in South Sudan at some point in the first millennium AD. Within Luo, a Northern and a Southern group is distinguished. "Luo proper" or Dholuo is part of the Southern Luo group. Northern Luo is mostly spoken in South Sudan, while Southern Luo groups migrated south from the Bahr el Ghazal area in the early centuries of the second millennium AD (about eight hundred years ago). This migration was presumably triggered by the medieval Muslim conquest of Sudan. A further division within the Northern Luo is recorded in a "widespread tradition" in Luo oral history:[3] the foundational figure of the Shilluk (or Chollo) nation was a chief named Nyikango, dated to about the mid-15th century, who after a quarrel with his brother moved northward along the Nile and established a feudal society, while the Pari people descend from the group which rejected Nyikango.
Luo origins in Ethiopia The Anuak are a Luo people whose villages are scattered along the banks and rivers of the southwestern area of Ethiopia, with others living directly across the border in southern Sudan. The name of this people is also spelled Anyuak, Agnwak, and Anywaa.
The Anuak who live in the lowlands of Gambela are distinguished by the color of their skin and considered to be black Africans. The Ethiopian peoples of the highlands are of different ethnicities, and distinguish themselves most simply by lighter skin color. The Anuak have alleged that the current Ethiopian government and dominant highlands people have discriminated against them. This has affected the Anuak access to education, health care and other basic services, as well as limiting opportunities for development of the area. The Anuak of Sudan live in a grassy region that is flat and virtually treeless. During the rainy season, this area floods, so that much of it becomes swampland with various channels of deep water running through it. The Acholi, another Luo people in South Sudan, occupy what is now called Magwi County in Eastern Equatorial State. They border the Uganda Acholi of Northern Uganda. The South Sudan Acholi numbered about ten thousand on the 2008 population Census.
Dr. Terence Okello Paito - Abstract After the Second World War, Henri Frunkfort, an eminent Egyptologist, suggested that there are distinct groups of Africans surviving today, whose ancestors can be traced back to the ancient Egyptians. A couple of decades later, at a symposium on the peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of the Meroitic script, C.A. Diop, resolved to carry out a comparison of the languages of ancient Egypt and those of contemporary Africa. Both Diop and Frunkfort believed that there are people alive today in Africa who speak the very same language or one very close to the language spoken in ancient Egypt. The identification of such a people would add a linguistic dimension to the conventional study and better understanding of ancient Egyptian history. This paper presents an argument in support of the contention that the survivors of the ancient Egyptian culture are the Nilotic people now commonly known as the Luo (or Lwoo). It is suggested that the Luo were the founders of the ancient Koch or Cushitic kingdom at Napata, which had expanded into Egypt. It will be further argued that the Luo pledged collective loyalty to the god Anu and were the very Itiyo-pi-anu peoples.
Introduction The identities of the earliest settlers and builders of the great ancient Itiyo-pi-an and Egyptian civilisations have been a subject of protracted debate that has largely remained in abeyance for sometime. At the height of the early 19th century Euro-imperialism and colonialism in Africa, the‘civilisation/barbarism’ dichotomy was a construct and an ideological tool to explain the justification for colonialism. Throughout the colonial and early post-independence period, the imposition of a euro-centric curriculum plus western anthropologists’ sustained denigration of the African personality and culture, deterred Africans from considering, ‘The African Origin’ of civilisation. Nevertheless, Henri Frunkfort (1948), one of the Western scholars whose attention was drawn to the achievements of the early Egyptians wrote, “…. There are alive today in Africa groups of people who are the true survivors of that great East African substratum out of which the Egyptian culture arose ….” (Henri Frunkfort, 1948, p.6). Resistance to the contradictions inherent in colonial policies, curricula and the distortion of African history, later produced a generation of African scholars who were prepared to examine facts on ancient Egyptian history. It was in that light that C.A. Diop (1974), stood out and published ‘The African Origin of Civilisation: Myth or Reality’.
In the preface of that work, Diop advocated a linguistic approach to link the history of black Africa to that of ancient Egypt. Following the symposium on ‘The peopling of Ancient Egypt and Deciphering of the Meroitic script’, he repeated the call for the application of the linguistic approach to analyse ancient Egyptian history. So far, from the literature on ancient Egypt, three main observations can be made. First and foremost, the literature suggests that much ground has been covered towards the reclamation and linking of ancient Egypt to African history thanks to the efforts of African-American and other diasporan scholars. Secondly, despite the great strides made, most of the diasporan scholars continue to confuse ancient Itiyopianu with modernEthiopia. Thirdly, and most importantly for this paper, Diop’s lead in which he identified Osiris race with the Nilotic Luo has not been followed, despite Simon Simonse’s (1992) assertion that Luo antecedents have relevance for the reconstruction of the past. Similarly, J.B. Webster’s (1979), call for a linguistic approach to reconstruct and expand Crazzolara’s work on the Luo has been largely ignored.In this paper, we argue that the people referred to as the Luo were the very builders of the ancient Itiyo-pi-anu civilisation known as Koch (Cush, Kush). The Koch (Cush) kingdom expanded into Egypt, Arabia, Mesopotamia and Phoenicia. The paper is divided into five sections. In the second section, we review the attempts by some scholars to de-link the Luo from ancient Egyptian civilisation; section three presents a discussion on how the identification of Luo Cradle-land became such a contentious issue in the historiography of the Great Lakes region. In section four, the Luo will be identified as the ancient Itiyopianu peoples. Luo presence in ancient Egypt is discussed in section five, followed by conclusions.
#kemetic dreams#luo#lwo#egypt#cush#crazzolara#african american#barack obama#c.a. drop#lupita nyong'o#ityiopia#ethiopia#ta netjer#nilotic
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Several feared dead as plane crashes in South Sudan
Several feared dead as plane crashes in South Sudan
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JUBA:
Several people have been feared dead after a cargo plane crashed in South Sudan shortly after taking off from the airport in the country’s capital, authorities said.
Kur kuol, the director of Juba International Airport, told Anadolu Agency that eight people were on board the plane that belongs to South West Aviation and was heading to the Northern Bahr el Ghazal state.
“Eight…
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Exporter of Spin Flash Dryer in Sudan
Drytech Engineering Systems is a leading Manufacturer, Supplier, and Exporter of Spin Flash Dryer in Sudan. Our manufacturing unit is located in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India. Drytech Engineering Systems Spin Flash Dryers are engineered with state-of-the-art technology, ensuring faster drying times and minimal heat degradation. We understand that every industry has unique requirements. That's why we offer customized solutions tailored to your specific needs. Our machines are built to last, offering long-term reliability and minimal maintenance. We provide comprehensive after-sales support, including installation, training, and maintenance services. Features of Spin Flash Dryers: High-Performance Drying: Spin Flash Dryers are perfect for drying wet cakes, slurries, and pastes. They ensure a consistent final product with minimal energy consumption. Compact Design: The dryer’s compact structure makes it suitable for both small and large-scale production environments, saving valuable floor space. Efficient Heat Transfer: With its rotating mechanism, the Spin Flash Dryer ensures excellent heat transfer, which significantly reduces drying time. Low Temperature Drying: The process can be carefully controlled to avoid damage to heat-sensitive materials, ensuring the highest quality end product. Seamless Integration: Easy to integrate with other systems in your production line for smooth operation and process efficiency. Industries Served: Food Processing Pharmaceuticals Chemical Manufacturing Minerals Biotechnology Do you offer installation and training for the Spin Flash Dryer? Yes, Drytech Engineering Systems provides full installation services along with operator training to ensure your team can efficiently run the dryer with minimal issues. Our support team is available to guide you through the process and ensure smooth operation. How can I get a quote for a Spin Flash Dryer? You can contact us through our website or call our local office in Sudan. Our team will assess your needs and provide a detailed quote based on your requirements. What warranty do you offer on Spin Flash Dryers? Drytech Engineering Systems offers a standard warranty on all our Spin Flash Dryers. We also provide extended service plans for ongoing support and maintenance. Drytech Engineering Systems is an Exporter of Spin Flash Dryer in Sudan, including locations Khartoum, Kassala, North Darfur, Sennar, Blue Nile, Northern, Red Sea, Al Qadarif, Gezira, North Kordofan, Gedaref, Lakes, Northern Bahr el Ghazal, Omdurman, River Nile, Juba. Contact Us today for your spin flash dryer solutions! View Product: Click Here Read the full article
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COVID-19 preventive measures in South Sudan affect farmers in Aweil As the Coronavirus spreads globally, farmers in the Aweil area of Northern Bahr-el-Ghazal are not exempted from the impact: preventive measures taken by the government make cultivating land difficult.
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UN says heavy flooding affects 908,000 South Sudanese
At least 908,000 people including Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs), refugees and host communities have been either displaced or affected by flooding due to seasonal heavy rains in the northern parts of South Sudan. Alain Noudehou, The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in South Sudan, said this in a statement issued in Juba on Friday. Noudehou said the flooding across the 32 counties in Jonglei, Upper Nile, Eastern Equatoria, Northern Bahr el Ghazal, Unity and Lakes regions have exacerbated the already worsening food insecurity situation in the country. Noudehou said more than 60 per cent of the flood-affected counties are currently classified as facing extreme levels of acute malnutrition caused by floods since July. “I am extremely concerned about the humanitarian consequences of the floods. The UN is responding in coordination with the government. “Our first priority is to save lives and uphold people’s dignity,” Noudehou said. OCHA disclosed that across the 32 flooded counties more than three million people were in need of assistance even before the rains, out of the over seven million people in need countrywide. The coordinator said that the rains were likely to continue for another four to six weeks and put more people at risk. Noudehou said the floods have left entire communities submerged; health facilities and nutrition centres were filled with water or used to shelter people, who have fled the flooding. “Reduced access to basic services and markets have increased people’s vulnerability. Diseases are spreading with contaminated water. Access to hygiene and sanitation is limited, especially for women and girls,” Noudehou said. OCHA said these affected areas were already facing high humanitarian needs. “We are now scaling up and will be able to help people quickly, especially once the water levels reduce and access improves,” said Noudehou. Aid groups urgently require some 224 million pounds (35 million dollars) to respond, said the UN agency. “More needs to be done in the longer term to rebuild people’s livelihoods and strengthen their resilience to future disasters. “This requires collective and sustained action by the Government, donors, and development and humanitarian partners,” said Noudehou. The UN humanitarian agency also warned that the crisis will not be over when the water levels recede, as it is anticipated to cause considerable damages to crops, arable land and livestock, hence affecting for months families’ ability to support themselves. OCHA said that the number of climate-related disasters had doubled over the past 20 years globally, causing lives lost, growing displacement, ruined livelihoods, deteriorated food insecurity and malnutrition. It added that annually 20 to 25 million people were displaced within their country due to extreme weather events often linked to climate change. Read the full article
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felepult az elso alelnok es a felesege, aki a hadugyminiszter! az elnok megsem koronas, hiaba volt az a pletyka, hogy egyiptomba menekitettek. viszont a negyedik szamu masodik alelnok apja - akinek sajat miliciaja volt south sudan patriotic army neven - belehalt, meg a 44 miniszterbol a sorban 37., a kelet afrikai ugyekert felelos miniszter is. az unokaoccs (aki igazabol az elnok ver szerinti fia, de mivel azt a feleseget az elnok a ghost marriage-en keresztul az elhunyt batyjatol orokolte, ezert hivatalosan/szocialisan az elhunyt nagybacsi az apa, hiaba a csavo a ver szerinti apa) belehalt a seruleseibe, amit allitolag a lovoldozes soran szerzett, amiben az a furcsa, hogy az elso hirek meg arrol szoltak, hogy sertetlen, amikor letartoztattak. de meg haldoklott, amikorra az elnokseg mar kiadott egy kozlemenyt, hogy igazabol csak tavoli rokon. az biztos, hogy negy embert agyonlott, mert osszevesztek egy nyilvanos vece telekkonyvi tulajdonjogan. az unokaoccs az amerikai tengereszgyalogosok iranti tiszteletbol felvette a MARINE becenevet. meg a halala elott nyilvan. az unokaoccs felesege a korabbi northern bahr el ghazal megyei kormanyzo, aki egyben anyai agon is a rokona - nagybacsikaja - az elnoknek, illetve egyben a hadsereg kozbeszerzeseiert felelos fonokember. most ugy nez ki, hogy MARINE fiutestverenek kell majd orokolnie az asszonyt, de nem biztos, hogy itt be lesz tartva a tradicio. az elnok jo del-szudani szokas szerint felallitott egy bizottsagot - imadjak a bizottsagokat -, amelyik kivizsgalja, hogy mi is tortent. a tagjai a hadsereg vezerkari fonoke, aki 150 kilo es cukorbeteg, a katonai titkosszolgalat fonoke (o az igazi gore az orszagban), a rendorseg vezetoje, meg par biro. oriasi show lesz!
koronás a dél-szudáni ex-lázadóvezér, aki eddig a koronavírus task force-ot vezette és a felesége, aki hadügyminiszter
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Call Upon Your Money Angel
It's time to get introspective! I've realized alot. I married in 2011 however attributable to lack of the above qualities, our life teared aside inside the period of 6months. She is now living alone and likewise to me. We developed hatred greater than the love we had be4. I'm trying now to get another one utilizing this guideline. I am 24yrs previous male from south sudan, northern bahr el ghazal state, aweil. If anybody wish to know extra about me on facebook, search: Deng Alek and you'll get linked to my public updates. 2. Take accountability to your contentment. An enduring relationship is based on the choices we make at this time. You've gotten the power to choose your response to circumstances and other people round you. If one of you takes accountability for his own behavior you start to change the cycle of blame, anger and resentment. Choose for right this moment, for yourself. Solely you can also make you content. At 13th degree, you study to harness your psychic power against all forms of haunts and undead creatures. Your mind-affecting spells that deal harm can now be used in opposition to haunts and undead normally proof against mind-affecting results (together with senseless undead ). These spells are treated as if they dealt positive energy injury. This affects only spells that deal purely psychic-primarily based injury (resembling psychic crush, mind thrust, or synapse overload); results based mostly on bodily results (equivalent to telekinetic projectile or telekinetic storm) don't benefit from this capacity.
For over twenty-seven years now I've been consciously saying my prayers for protection for my husband, my children, my grandchildren, our prolonged household, pals, all of humanity and myself. Prayers are like affirmations or optimistic statements of truth. Once I affirm or say these easy prayers to God I am putting my loved ones in Spirit's sacred care. Then I am free to go about my day, living in the second, trusting that the Universe is in charge and taking care of all my concerns. My husband tells me that I'm the abusive companion however all arguments are initiated by him. I've instructed him every little thing that is improper with me (molested childhood, bodily abused childhood, belief issues, et.), open and honest. But sometimes, it does not matter, he desires what he wants and also you higher give it up, or shut upa dn do what you might be informed, no back speak (this one I have already broken and argue again to face my floor), which ultimately leaves me silent for the subsequent few days just to avoid anything louder or bigger than it started out. Certain I'm scared however not due to what persons are going to assume. I actually could not give a flying rats what different people take into consideration our life. The only people who at present know are myself and him and now anybody studying my trials and tribulations knows too. What I'm scared of is how am I going to feel when his body changes?? How am I going to feel when he starts to lose his very muscly physique and begins rising breasts?? How is it really going to impression on me when he has the sex change operation?? I do not know the answers to any of those questions however what I do know is that I really can't breathe without him and the perfect I can do is to take every minute because it comes and just put my greatest foot ahead and help him with all my coronary heart to find himself. Phone Psychic Recommendations and Reviews. To Find Answers Connect with a Honest Fortune Tellers. Go Now!Everyone deserves to feel fabulous in their very own physique. Some folks measure how spiritual they are by how much they undergo. Their life, in this dimension, may not be very fulfilling but with humble vanity they'll say to themselves with pride, look how spiritual I'm, look how much I have suffered. To place it plainly, as precious son's and daughter's of God, we weren't placed on this earth to undergo. We have been put on this earth to rejoice and celebrate our humanness with one another and to discover ways to harmonize our variations so we will be there for one another without being a victim or martyr.
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Who is to blame for famine in South Sudan ?
On 20 February 2017, South Sudan and the United Nations declared famine in parts of former Unity State, warning that it could spread rapidly without further action. More than 100,000 people are currently affected following civil war and economic collapse. The World Food Programme reported that 40% of the South Sudanese population (4.9 million people) needed food urgently. U.N. officials said President Salva Kiir Mayardit was blocking food deliveries to some areas.
In addition, parts of South Sudan have not had rain in two years. According to United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization Representative Serge Tissot, "Our worst fears have been realised. Many families have exhausted every means they have to survive. The people are predominantly farmers and war has disrupted agriculture. They’ve lost their livestock, even their farming tools. For months there has been a total reliance on whatever plants they can find and fish they can catch."
South Sudan suffered the 1998 Sudan famine before its independence, but no famine had been formally declared anywhere in the world during the six years prior to 2017. There have been warnings of imminent famine in Yemen, Somalia, and the northeastern part of Nigeria, but the formal declaration requires that the following criteria be met:
20% of households suffer extreme food shortages.
30% of the population suffers extreme malnutrition.
At least 1 per each 5,000 inhabitants dies per day.
A February 20 update of the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) found that 4.9 million South Sudan residents, 40% of the population, were in need of "urgent food, agriculture, and nutrition assistance". The report had surveyed 23 countries, of which 14 exceeded the emergency action threshold of 15% acute malnutrition. The World Food Programme carried out relief operations throughout the war, mitigating the risk of famine in other areas including the Northern Bahr el Ghazal state. Bahr el Ghazal had been the region most severely affected in the 1998 famine, when it was struck by a two-year drought, a ban on humanitarian airdrops, restrictions on movement of displaced persons, confiscation of cattle and destruction of food stores.
A 2016 UN report described the former Unity State as the site of continuous fighting throughout the civil war because it has "great economic and symbolic importance because of its vast oil resources and also as a predominantly Nuer state, in a conflict that has pitted the two dominant tribes, Dinkas and Nuers, against each other". Looting and burning in Unity State and displacement of its inhabitants in fighting over oil reserves also occurred in the Second Sudanese Civil War in the years leading up to the 1998 Sudan famine.[9] It is estimated that in 1998, 12,000 people starved in the Block 5A area out of 240,000 total, with another 160,000 forcibly displaced. Instability is a major reason for the low oil production in South Sudan since 2012.
#World Food Programme#World#United Nations#Sudan#South Sudan#Famine in South Sudan#American Civil War
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Hunger and child abandonment in north South Sudan
Three-hundred children in South Sudan's Northern Bahr El Ghazal region have been abandoned by parents fleeing the country to escape two years of drought, a collapsing economy, and mass hunger. The UN World Food Program (WFP) and UNICEF brought Al Jazeera to a mosque run by the Northern Bahr El Ghazal Islamic Council in the town of Majook, close to South Sudan's border with Sudan, where the children are forced to reside after their parents abandoned them to make the journey north alone. WFP said 5.3 million people in South Sudan are at risk of acute hunger, nearly half the population, which is already causing deaths among the country's most vulnerable, and increasing the number of people fleeing across the border to neighbouring Sudan. Recent fighting between the country's President Salva Kiir and Vice President Riek Machar's opposing armies has exacerbated problems in providing aid.
Henry Wilkins
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490,000 children affected by devastating floods in South Sudan
490,000 children affected by devastating floods in #SouthSudan @UNICEF
An estimated 490,000 children are affected by heavy flooding in South Sudan, UNICEF warned today. Exceptional heavy rain since July, have affected some 908,000 people in 32 counties. While heavy rain and flooding is normal this time of year, the current scope and scale of the flooding is severe especially in the former states of Jonglei, Upper Nile, Warrap and Northern Bahr El Ghazal. The rain is…
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Exporter of Multi Effect Evaporator in Sudan
Drytech Engineering Systems is an Exporter of Multi Effect Evaporator in Sudan. Drytech Engineering Systems is Based in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India. We specialize in manufacturing, supplying, stocking, and exporting a range of drying equipment including Flash Dryers, Spray Dryers, Spin Flash Dryers, Fluid Bed Dryers, and Evaporator Dryers. Drytech Engineering Systems consistently offers an extensive array of Multi-Effect Evaporators (MEE), tailored to meet diverse quality standards across various applications. With our advanced technological expertise, we specialize in designing Multi-Effect Evaporators (MEEs) that concentrate solutions, typically liquids, by evaporating a portion of their water or solvent content. The process commences with utilizing the heat energy from steam to evaporate water from a solution in the first stage. The vapor generated in this initial effect subsequently heats the next stage, where it evaporates additional water from another solution. This sequential process optimizes the use of heat energy, as vapor from one stage efficiently heats the next. Our system utilizes the latent heat released during evaporation to drive subsequent stages. Thereby optimizing energy consumption and reducing both fuel costs and operational expenses. Our Multi-Effect Evaporators feature customizable configurations and advanced controls, seamlessly integrating into industrial processes to achieve efficient operation. By harnessing latent heat across multiple stages, our Multi-Effect Evaporator maximizes energy efficiency. It excels in concentrating liquids, recovering solvents, and treating industrial effluents, offering versatile and sustainable solutions. Drytech Engineering Systems is an Exporter of Multi Effect Evaporator in Sudan and locations like Khartoum, Kassala, North Darfur, Sennar, Blue Nile, Northern, Red Sea, Al Qadarif, Gezira, North Kordofan, Gedaref, Lakes, Northern Bahr el Ghazal, Omdurman, River Nile, Juba. For detailed information and inquiries, please feel free to contact us. Read the full article
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UNMISS educates South Sudan government army on how not to violate the rights of children The 3rd Division of the South Sudan People’s Defence Forces in the Northern Bahr-el-Ghazal region has reiterated its commitment to protect and respect the rights of children.
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