Young young people and dreams postponed … How long will Sudan energies sit? D. ALAA IMAD AL -DIN AL -BADRI

In the light of wars and political divisions that afflict Sudan, the energies of young people remain pending between a mysterious niche and a postponed dreams that you do not find someone who preserves or believes in them.

The current war has become an extension of a series of political failures which required the country for decades which are dependent on instability and facilitated the conclusion of suspicious alliances and the abandonment of all real democratic paths, and worse than that, it deliberates that the transfer of an “imported” democratic model can be applied to a reality that does not look like our environment and does not respect the cultural, religious and social differences social.

Talking about democracy in Sudan has remained trapped in slogans, while practice was distorted because it was not built on a solid ground of custom and tradition anchored in the consciousness of this people and ignored ethnic, religious and cultural pluralism which constitutes the essence of the balance between rights and rights until freedom “has become in a state of balance.

What hurts the most is that some of the political elites claiming to try to build a “new Sudan” were the same as the cause of the war destroyed, and it has not yet expired to align with the enemies of the country and to beg for external support, not for peace, but to destroy the rest of Sudan and to confiscate the future of her youth.

Today, most young people from Sudan suffer from a tragic reality, a large part of them have left the country in search of an opportunity for life and those who have arrived abroad have rarely worked in their fields or specialties, some of them standing on the banks of Europe after having fought a trip have tried by death and some of them have drowned in the sea and burst with him They made Prey to human tradiers who sold them an illusion. Unemployment, poverty, psychological pressure and constant fear of the unknown.

In the middle of this dark scene, a legitimate and salty question is highlighted: how long will the energies of young people continue to be disrupted? And when politicians in Sudan realize that the greatest wealth we have is the youth of this country, as well as huge natural resources that have not been exploited as it should? If these energies are activated and the resources invest fair and organized, Sudan can turn into a strong economic state.

We do not ask for the impossible. We only want a state that respects man and preserves his dignity and provides him with an environment through which he can build his future. We want a homeland that can all all of us, not a distorted democracy which is detailed in the size of one category without another.

We don’t want false democracy … We want a real homeland.







Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button