How to use in-sentence of “Sudan”:
– Salva Kiir Mayardit is a South Sudanese politician who has been President of South Sudan since its independence in 2011.
– As Sudan was under British rule, they are organized by their original provinces under British rule.
– On January 20, 2006, the group merged with the Sudan Liberation Movement, along with other rebel groups, to form the Alliance of Revolutionary Forces of West Sudan.
– South Sudan includes the vast swamp region of the Sudd formed by the White Nile, locally called the “Bahr al Jabal”.
– It was only during the early 20th century that American and European missionaries spread Protestantism with Mennonite and Pentecostal churches through the Sudan Interior Mission.
– Muhammad Ali next turned his attention to military campaigns of his own design, beginning with the Sudan which he viewed as a valuable addition of territory, gold, and slaves.

Example sentences of “Sudan”:
– The South Sudan national football team is the national association footballfootball team of South Sudan.
– The COVID-19 pandemic was confirmed to have reached Sudan in March 2020.
– South Sudan has a population of 11 million people, but only four ventilators.
– The next day, 14 July 2011, South Sudan became a United Nations member state.
– Field Marshal Abdel Rahman Suwar al-Dahab was the President of Sudan from 6 April 1985, to 6 May 1986.
– Calico sheep are not related to the black and white sheep that are native to ancient Sudan Shaw, Thustan.
– In January 1959, Senegal and the French Sudan became one to form the Mali Federation, which became fully independent on June 20, 1960, as a result of the independence and transfer of power agreement signed with France on April 4, 1960.
– However, fava-bean falafel continue to predominate in Egypt and Sudan and their respective expatriate communities, and Egyptians are fond of deriding chickpea falafel as inferior.
- The South Sudan national football team is the national association footballfootball team of South Sudan.
- The COVID-19 pandemic was confirmed to have reached Sudan in March 2020.
- South Sudan has a population of 11 million people, but only four ventilators.
– He was Prime Minister of Sudan from 1966 to 1967 and again from 1986 to 1989.
– The current leader of Sudan is Acting President Ahmed Awad Ibn Auf.
– On 22 September, French Sudan changed its name to the MaliRepublic of Mali and left the French Community.
– South Sudan is a federation of 28 states.
– Slavery in Sudan is active again with the Muslim north waging war against Animists and Christians in the south.
– Later that year, the Autonomous Government of Southern Sudan was formed.
More in-sentence examples of “Sudan”:
– The legal status of Sudan was only resolved in 1954, when Egypt and Britain agreed that it should be granted independence in 1956.
– Anglo-Egyptian Sudan had eight “mudiriyat”, or provinces, which were ambiguous when created but became well defined by the beginning of the Second World War.
– The dynasty he established ruled Egypt and Sudan until the Egyptian Revolution of 1952.
– He was banished from Saudi Arabia in 1992, and shifted his base to Sudan, until US pressure forced him to leave Sudan in 1996.
– This part of the British Empire became the Republic of Sudan when independence was achieved in 1956.
– There is no basis in international law for Sudan or Egypt to claim both territories.
– Bir Tawil is not claimed by either Sudan or Egypt.
– In 1820 Muhammad Ali dispatched an army of 5,000 troops commanded by his third son, Ismail, south into Sudan with the intent of conquering the territory and subjugating it to his authority.
– The administrative boundary of Sudan and Egypt was made in 1902.
– This is because only Sudan or Egypt border the land.
– Wadi Halfa is a small city in the northern part of Sudan by Lake Nubia.
– The civil war has resulted in over 2.5 million people being displaced, and the relations between Sudan and Chad are at a crisis.
– He spent his time during the Second World War in Sudan and was able to study other East African peoples like the Sansui of Cyrenaica during his military service.
– These two IPs have been vandalizing pages related to Sudan and South Sudan with similar content.
– Starting in 2003, the government of Sudan has been accused of committing an ethnic cleansing against black ethnic groups in Darfur.
– Gaafar Muhammad an-Nimeiry was the President of Sudan from 1969 to 1985.
– South Sudan thus became the 51st African country to confirm a case.
– Egypt and Sudan were never formally incorporated into any European colonial empire.
– As part of the new government structure in South Sudan in 2005, Bahr al Jabal was renamed Central Equatoria.
– The COVID-19 pandemic was confirmed to have reached South Sudan on April 5, 2020.
– The Anglo-Egyptian Sudan was created in 1899 when the Egyptian Army under Herbert Kitchener, 1st Earl KitchenerHerbert Kitchener recaptured the Sudan, which was before an Egyptian colony, from the Madhists, a group of Islamic rebels against Egypt.
– People from Sudan are called Sudanese.
– The name changed to the “French Sudan Territory” on August 18, 1890, and its capital was Kayes.
– The currency of Sudan is called the Sudanese Pound.
– The rule of Sudan by the Mahdists turned out badly for its people.
– Red Army Football Club, is a South Sudanese footballing club cored in Aweil, South Sudan; it plays in South Sudan Premier League.
- The legal status of Sudan was only resolved in 1954, when Egypt and Britain agreed that it should be granted independence in 1956.
- Anglo-Egyptian Sudan had eight "mudiriyat", or provinces, which were ambiguous when created but became well defined by the beginning of the Second World War.
– This camp was on the border of eastern Sudan and Abyssinia.
– This was in northern Sudan of today.
– When Sudan became independent in 1956, both Egypt and Sudan claimed sovereignty over the area.
– Finally the courts of Sudan said she was free.
– He was the “de facto” List of heads of state of Sudanhead of state of Sudan as Chairman of the Transitional Military Council in 2019 after former Chairman Ahmed Awad Ibn Auf resigned and transferred control in April 2019.
– What is now South Sudan was once part of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan.
– After the First Sudanese Civil War, the Southern Sudan Autonomous Region was formed in 1972 and lasted until 1983.
– He defeated the Muhammed AhmedMahdist rebels against Egyptian rule in 1898 and conquered the Sudan for Britain and Egypt.
– At the 2012 Summer Olympics, one athlete from South Sudan competed under the flag of the International Olympic Committee.
– South Sudan is a country in Africa.
– He has been the second First Vice President of South Sudan since 23 July 2016.
– Anglo-Egyptian Sudan was the name of the Sudan when it was a colony of the United Kingdom and Egypt.
– On April 4, 1959, French Sudan was joined with Senegal to form the Mali Federation.
– On 13 March 2020, Sudan reported its first novel coronavirus case in Khartoum, a man who died on 12 March 2020 and had visited the United Arab Emirates in the first week of March.
– From the 1950s to the early 1990s Sudan did about 80% of gum arabic production.
– In 1933, Upper Volta stopped existing and French Sudan gained some of its provinces.
– Its range range extends throughout sub-Saharan Africa, from Senegal east to Sudan and south almost to the Congo River and Great Rift Valley.
– The Central African slender-snouted crocodile lives in Central Africa and extends into South Sudan in East Africa.
– Every Governor was British, and all decisions about the country were made by the British, although many of the administrators of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan were Egyptians.
– The other side of the conflict is made up of a number of rebel armyarmies, including the Sudan Liberation Movement and the Justice and Equality Movement.
– In 2003, a Swiss archaeological team working in northern Sudan uncovered one of the most remarkable Egyptological finds in recent years.
– The flag of South Sudan is a horizontal tricolour of black, red, and green, fimbriationfimbriated with hoist side bearing a gold star.
– The landlocked country is bordered by Ethiopia to the east; Kenya to the southeast; Uganda to the south; the Democratic Republic of the Congo to the southwest; the Central African Republic to the west; and the Republic of Sudan to the north.
– Al-Turabi died in Khartoum, Sudan on 5 March 2016.
