South Sudan gains independence from Sudan

Category
Geography
Place
South Sudan
Date
2011
Reference
Excerpts from Books and Wikipedia
"This newest state to appear on the world political map became independent in 2011, the outcome of a near-unanimous referendum in the southern provinces of former Sudan (…). South Sudan’s birth came in the aftermath of six disastrous decades of postcolonial strife within former Sudan, a brutal conflict in which more than 1.5 million died, magnified by the bifurcation of the country along the religious divide between Islam and Christianity-animism that we know as the Islamic Front. The British effectively ruled former Sudan from the 1890s until independence in 1956. One of the roots of the country’s long-running internal conflict, which peaked in the resumption of its post-independence civil war between 1983 and 2005, lay in the decision of the British colonial administration to combine northern Sudan, which was heavily Arabized and Islamized, with a sizeable African/Christian-dominated area to the south. As soon as the British departed in the mid-1950s, the Khartoum-based regime in the north sought to impose its Islamic rule on southern Sudan, immediately triggering the first civil war that lasted until 1972." [Geography: Realms, Regions, and Concepts, 17th Edition, p. 316]

This event is linked to the following periods

PeriodMiner
Begin
End
Category
Geography
-3800
2020
Transcultural