So what happens after you stop? – Budgets – ✍️ Al-Tayeb Al-Makabrabi

We all agree on the need to stop the war, and everyone has a point of view and demands…

Those who once called for the fall, but without guidance, evidence or program for the after-fall, today call for no to war, and they see that their goals have now been achieved with their laughter and joy every time the rebellion enters an area, nor do they have any program, direction or guide to follow once the war is over.

Those who seek to stop it on the condition of eliminating the Janjaweed and not restoring conditions before April 15 are waiting for these objectives to be achieved, and also because we believe that they have not paid attention to what should happen after the end of the war…

Some people started thinking about it and planned very early on that Sudan, which would be just one country, would be emptied of all its production machines and all its factories, and that everything would be destroyed, even the country. The markets from which many people live were looted and their structures destroyed, in addition to the destruction of hospitals, houses, cars and everything else.

Rebuilding the country is what the post-war stage requires, and some of the parties that decided to draw up plans for this stage did well, and they are civil society organizations, the most important of which, according to my information, is the Union of Arab Exporters and Importers, the Sudanese office, which began to move to the east and west to prepare, prepare and improve the reconstruction and reconstruction plans, and the Bit Makli voluntary organization that launched rehabilitation and training programs for young people in a field. There are a number of safe states where young people are present, and they are the ones who will inevitably return to their cities and villages, which need to rebuild, rebuild and restore everything, which requires trained, qualified and professional youth.

Yes, preventing rebellion is the current concern, but since our beginnings, we have grown as a nation with two hands: one hand that builds and one hand that bears arms…

Our armed forces and those who support them, including regular and semi-regular forces and volunteers, now carry weapons. Does the other hand stand joyfully and contentedly in its prayers, or does it have a role to play?

What we expect is that all our civil society organizations follow the example of the organizations that we have mentioned, and that they think in the sense of what will happen after the end of the war, and that the young people are the target, and that the young people engage in training and rehabilitation programs and practice professions that will eventually find a popular market at that stage.

Those who have been displaced within the country will find organizations that plan and design programs that are appropriate for this stage and that will make them active now and in the future. And those who have been displaced outside the country, there is no doubt that they have found during their displacement. ideas, professions and businesses that were new and unfamiliar to them as a means of earning a living and developing themselves and the country's economy, and they only need training and arrangements to access them. This is what we expect from Sudanese civil society organizations that have moved all or part of their structures abroad to do so in solidarity or in cooperation with local organizations in these countries or specialized international organizations interested in the training and reintegration of displaced persons and refugees.

May God help everyone





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