Monday, 14 January 2013

Social Issues in African Countries

By Anthoney Jenn


Struggle in Africa, as everywhere, is due to human action, and can be ended by people motion. This can be a reality that shames us for each and every conflict that we allow to continue to persist, and emboldens us to imagine that many of us can address and handle every conflict that we decide to confront.

For the United Nations there is absolutely no greater goal, no deeper devotion with no greater purpose than avoiding armed conflict so that people almost everywhere can take advantage of peace and abundance. In Africa, as elsewhere, the U . N . more and more is being required to interact to intra-State uncertainty and conflict. In those issues, the main goal, to an alarming degree, is the break down not of armies but of civilians and entire cultural groups.

Preventing such wars is not really a question of guarding States or protecting allies. This can be a question of protecting the human race itself.

Africa is not quiet. A lot more than 30 wars are already fought in Africa since 1970, and most of these happen to be internal rather than inter-state wars. In 1996 alone, 14 of the 53 countries of Africa were involved with armed conflicting situations, and in addition they resulted in more than 8 million refugees and homeless men and women. And also this is ahead of recent eruption of war in the Democratic Republic of the Congo which includes now involved the majority of the states in the Great Lakes region and beyond. Many of these wars happen to be characterized by serious violence. In Rwanda alone, in a matter of 100 days, about a million citizens were massacred - a degree of murders that is almost unmatched in world historical past. So even though there are "good" reasons behind conflicts, there isn't any "good" reasons why these issues transform into violence and brutality that shame humanity.

The existence of armed groups, has become a prolonged element of political-military life on the African region since independence.

This two-part project blogs about the the process that armed organizations pose to group, national and regional harmony in Africa.

The beginning of the task profiles Africa's most active and proven groups. The group's into the spotlight and listed here are not the only one's running in Africa presently. However, such groups have either endured the test of time, presented a prolonged challenge to the government's in their area of procedures, or are not dictated by the regards to a tranquility deal with the government's impacted.




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