Why Citizens of the Nuba Mountains, Blue Nile, and Darfur Support the Founding Alliance Government

By: ✍🏾 Kocho Adam

For decades, since the formation of Sudan, the people of the country’s peripheral and marginalized regions—particularly the Nuba Mountains, Blue Nile, and Darfur—have borne the heaviest burdens of endless wars, displacement, and neglect. While Khartoum and other urban centers dominated national politics, these regions were left with destroyed villages, burnt huts, and generations of youth forced into displacement camps or dangerous migration. Many citizens have grown old without access to basic services such as identification documents, clean water, healthcare, education, and infrastructure.

Today, the emergence of the Founding Alliance Government (TASIS) represents a historic turning point. Unlike past regimes in Khartoum—often recycled through coups and failed peace deals—this government offers a chance to rebuild Sudan from the ground up, with the voices of the marginalized at its core.

Below are the key reasons why citizens in these three regions strongly support TASIS:

 Real Representation

Past governments excluded rural, conflict-affected communities from national decision-making. TASIS, by contrast, has pledged genuine inclusivity, ensuring cultural recognition, equal rights, and fair resource distribution. For a farmer in the Nuba Mountains, this means secure land tenure. For a young woman in Blue Nile, it means access to healthcare and education. For a trader in Darfur, it means safe trade routes and fair market access without harassment.

Restoring Dignity

For too long, Sudan’s marginalized communities were made to feel inferior—culturally, linguistically, and politically. Many citizens never experienced a true sense of belonging. TASIS recognises Sudan’s rich diversity of cultures, religions, and identities, seeking to celebrate rather than suppress them. Incorporating local histories into school curricula, amplifying regional voices in media, and enshrining equality in the constitution are steps that can restore long-denied dignity and inclusion.

 Development and Resource Sharing

The paradox of Sudan lies in the fact that its richest regions in natural resources—gold, oil, fertile land, and water—are also the poorest in living standards. Previous governments concentrated wealth in Khartoum, leaving the peripheries underdeveloped. TASIS has committed to equitable resource distribution and investment in vital sectors such as health, education, infrastructure, and vocational training. This promises jobs, modernized agriculture, and opportunities for youth, offering alternatives to exile or armed struggle.

 Justice and Accountability

Decades of war crimes and atrocities have gone unpunished, often perpetrated by state actors. TASIS pledges to break this cycle through transitional justice, including truth commissions, local justice mechanisms, and accountability for perpetrators. For survivors of burned villages in Darfur or displaced families from the Nuba Mountains, such recognition is crucial. Supporting TASIS strengthens the call for justice and ensures no community is ever again treated as expendable.

 Sustainable Peace

Peace is more than silencing guns; it requires healing wounds and dismantling inequalities. After decades of misrule, Sudan remains deeply fragmented. TASIS seeks to promote peaceful coexistence through community dialogues, gradual integration of armed groups into a national army, and safe returns for displaced persons. For families who have spent decades in camps or hidden in mountains during bombings, this peace feels tangible at last.

 A Call to Action

Skeptics may ask why this government should be trusted. The answer lies in its origins: TASIS was born from the struggles of the very people who suffered most. Supporting it means active participation—holding leaders accountable, joining local committees, and contributing to grassroots projects. Change no longer requires traveling to Khartoum; it begins in villages like Komaganza, with women-led initiatives in Tima, or youth organizing schools in Abu Suruj.

TASIS’s mission is clear: to rebuild Sudan on the foundations of justice, inclusivity, and development. Its vision is of a united country where Nuba, Blue Nile, Darfur, and all regions stand as equal partners in prosperity.

For the student in Kadugli, the fisherman in Damazin, the trader in El-Fasher, the herder in East Sudan, and the displaced family in Kalma camp, this is a historic opportunity. Supporting TASIS means safeguarding dignity, peace, and a future worth passing to the next generation.

The choice is stark: seize this chance for renewal or risk repeating the tragedies of the past. While challenges remain and no government can provide instant solutions, TASIS offers something unprecedented—a government in which ordinary citizens finally have a voice.

For decades, Sudan’s marginalized regions—Nuba Mountains, Blue Nile, and Darfur—have endured war, neglect, and exclusion. The Founding Alliance Government (TASIS) represents a historic opportunity to reverse this legacy by ensuring real representation, dignity, justice, and equitable development. Citizens support TASIS not out of blind trust, but because it offers the first genuine chance to rebuild Sudan with the people at the center.

التعليقات مغلقة، ولكن تركبكس وبينغبكس مفتوحة.