Introduction
Since its independence from Britain in 1956, The Western region of Sudan, called the Darfur, is deteriorating due to the conflict resulting from two long civil wars (World Without Genocide, 2012, par.4). Since 2003, massive slaughters, torturing, stealing and pollution of water sources of civilians have killed around 500,000 Darfuris and displaced close to 3 million (World Without Genocide, 2012, par. 2).
The coalition of President Omar al-Bashir’s government and the Janjaweed against the rebel groups and all civilians of the same ethnic group as them (Save Darfur, n.d., par. 1) has proven that political movement have an enormous impact on the present Darfur conflict. Aspects such as the numerous elections of President Bashir, a corrupted government and military, unstable relations with surrounding countries, oppositions to peace agreements and the discriminatory political actions characterize the Darfur conflict as "the world’s worst humanitarian crisis", according to the United Nations (Sikainga, 2009, par. 3).
The coalition of President Omar al-Bashir’s government and the Janjaweed against the rebel groups and all civilians of the same ethnic group as them (Save Darfur, n.d., par. 1) has proven that political movement have an enormous impact on the present Darfur conflict. Aspects such as the numerous elections of President Bashir, a corrupted government and military, unstable relations with surrounding countries, oppositions to peace agreements and the discriminatory political actions characterize the Darfur conflict as "the world’s worst humanitarian crisis", according to the United Nations (Sikainga, 2009, par. 3).