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Sudan: The Sudanese Armed Leader Gaining Power

Another spillover of a failed revolution, uneven development, marginalisation …and genuine democratic restructuring of society. The absence of prevalent and radical forces that are able to unite the nation and establish a fair distribution of wealth.. The complex character of such a situation in different parts of the world is the focus of Michael Mann’s The Dark Side of Democracy.

“Class conflict has always been important in the development of modern society.” A weak class conflict invites all sorts of other conflicts. It even lays the ground for ethnic conflicts and genocide. 


Counter-revolutionary and reactionary forces and regional powers always have interests in playing a role in exploiting and redirecting conflicts. 

Dirar has vowed to use weapons to liberate the Beja people, who are native to eastern Sudan, from “historical marginalisation” by governments in Khartoum. 

Related

Lessons from European history

“I will argue that class struggle and its institutionalization—far more than an essentialist respect for individual human rights—have restrained most liberal democracies from cleansing atrocities ‘within’ their core citizen body. Nonetheless, liberal democracies have committed massive cleansing, sometimes amounting to genocide—in colonial contexts where large social groups were defined as lying outside of ‘the people’.”

Michael Mann, 1999

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