On Tyranny and Economic Greed: The NCP and the Disintegration of the Sudanese Nation
Human Rights and the Global Economy Journal, Vol. 5, No. 2, January 11, 2011
Posted: 31 Dec 2010 Last revised: 5 Jun 2011
Date Written: December 31, 2010
Abstract
The present paper is part of an unpublished book divided into three interrelated manuscripts that analyze the collapse of the Sudan. The current paper concludes that the decision of the International Criminal Court to arrest President Bashir triggered a process for the disintegration of an unprecedented tyrannical regime that embezzled the Sudanese nation under the pretext of imposing Islamic Sharia Laws. However, there is a pronounced prominent conflict manifested here which is the question whether it was a real Islamic law, or was it only a powerful tool to control the country. The dogma imposed a hegemonic regime that extracted all economic surplus, sequestered civil rights and committed genocide in all the country's regions. The result is that the country has undergone a de facto division and disintegration process. Moreover, a vacuum of institutional interregnum was generated because of the failed state.
Keywords: Tyranny, Genocide and Economic Greed, Sudan, institutional interregnum, Failed State
JEL Classification: H7, H70, H74, H77, H89, I2, I3, I20, I30, I31, J1, J20, N4, N40, N47
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