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List Of Major Armed Conflicts In Africa |
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| Data released by Stockholm International Peace Research Institute - June.02.2010 - Next data release June.2011 |
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| According to SIPRI, there were no major territorial armed conflicts in Africa during 2009 [1] |
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| Country [1] |
Change in Battle-Related
Deaths Since 2008 [1] |
Added Notes [1] |
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| Rwanda |
Conflict Inactive/Minor |
Fighting also took place in other locations |
| Somalia |
Increase |
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| Sudan |
Decrease |
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| Uganda |
Conflict Inactive/Minor |
Fighting also took place in other locations |
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The SIPRI says that... "no major interstate conflict was active in 2009", which is an impressive soundbite for the western mainstream media to carry, but we challenge this assertion. Here are the two most obvious examples of this inaccuracy. |
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(1) Afghanistan/United States: Both wars in Afghanistan and Iraq began as the United States & friends V's the entire governing regimes, and people's, of Afghanistan and Iraq respectively, and both appear to remain this way to very different extents. Focussing only on Afghanistan, when we delve beneath the mainstream media's portrayal of the ongoing war, we now know that the conflict is still mainly being fought between US-led forces, and local fighters. Those US-led forces are only allied with a local government (and it's newly-formed army), which does not appear to have substantial local support, and remains forcefully in power, after fraudulently holding onto power subsequent to loosing the 2009 presidential election. If we use a commomsense approach, which recognises that the Taliban appear to have overwhelming unending local support in massive areas of the country, then they are the armed forces which represent atleast a major area of Afghanistan and a sizeable portion of it's people - not Hamid Karzai's army, as is portrayed in the mainstream media. To some political commentators, the Afghanistan conflict will only ever end when a US-controlled puppet government wields ultimate power, or when US forces are driven out of the area. |
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(2) Israel/Palestine: We also believe that the 2009 conflict within the Palestinian Territories should be considered as interstate. If Israel and Palestine are both states, and conflict has taken place between Israeli forces and a governing Palestinian faction - the 2008/9 Gaza Invasion by Israel - should that not be considered an interstate conflict? Obviously both the SIPRI and UCDP do not consider Palestine as a state, or alternatively, they do not consider the Gaza Strip as a state, but in reality, many people around the World would not deny the Palestinian people their right to call their tiny piece of land, a nation, a country, or a state. And many would also consider Israel's December 2008 incursion into Gaza as being an act of war by one state, against another, and to further this point, Israel's expressed aim was to remove that states government. Surely this was an interstate conflict in it's purest form? |
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Conclusion: No doubt the SIPRI and UCDP will say that the United States is not a party at war in Afghanistan, rather a peacekeeping force (or technically something similar), and they will also point to the fact that Palestine is not a fully-recognised nation by the United Nations, therefore it is not technically a state... but shame on you United Nations, and shame on anybody else who does not recognise Palestine as a state, just because the UN wrongly says it is not. Contrary to the soundbite being pushed - no major interstate conflicts in 2009 - there were countries at war with each other in 2009, and just because those wars involved, and were started by, the United States and Israel, doesn't mean that we should re-brand them with more polite terms. |
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[1] "SIPRI Yearbook 2010: Summary" Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (PDF File / 28 pages) See Section 2: Armed Conflict, Crime and Criminal Violence - 'Major Armed Conflicts, 2009'. The SIPRI bases this list on data from the Uppsala Conflict Data Program (UCDP), which stipulates that: 'A conflict is active if there are at least 25 battle-related deaths per calendar year'. last retrieved by BlatantWorld.com on June.25.2010 |
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This page contains copyrighted material, the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Such material is made available for educational purposes, to advance understanding of human rights, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. |
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| (1) |
Purpose & Character of Use: |
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To educate our visitors about the major armed conflicts which took place, in Africa, during 2009. This information is provided for non-profit educational purposes only. |
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| (2) |
Nature of Copyrighted Work: |
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The 2010 SIPRI Yearbook, by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI). |
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| (3) |
Portion Used: |
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We have used a very small portion of the overall 2010 Yearbook. |
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Commercial Effect: |
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There does not appear to be any commercial effect, as the copyright holder is a non-profit organisation, which mainly receives financial support from the Swedish government and people. If one of their main purposes is to publicise this information, we should be aiding their cause. |
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In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. |
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Get more 'Fair Use' information @ Cornell University Law School |
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