Month: August 2025

  • Breaking News

    Colombian Mercenaries “The Desert Wolves Battalion” in Darfur: Foreign Firepower in a Proxy War

    By: Sabah Al-Makki Sabah Al-Makki- Writing from within the storm Outsiders have long portrayed Sudan’s war as a purely domestic feud. Yet mounting evidence — from classified operational orders to recovered battlefield footage — points to a far more dangerous reality: Sudan’s frontlines are increasingly manned by foreign mercenaries, flown in from thousands of miles away to fight in a conflict that is not their own. They serve under the banner of the Rapid Support…

  • Columns

    Will the new Islamists end Islamophobia?

    Part one By : Mohamed Saad Kamil  Editor-in-Chief of Brown Land Newspaper Colonial-era historians trace the first use of the term “Islamophobia”—meaning an irrational fear or hostility toward Islam—to the early 20th century. French sociologists employed the concept to describe the aversion of some colonial administrators toward Muslim communities under their rule. Despite their administrative duties requiring coexistence, these officials rejected integration due to deep-seated racial and cultural prejudices rooted in colonial ignorance of Islam and…

  • Breaking News

    A Gift of Solidarity from Senegal: An Expressive Portrait of President Al-Burhan

    The renowned Senegalese artist of 2024, Pierre Sonar, held an exhibition titled “Valuing the Role of African Leaders and Heroes”  at the Noum Hotel on Saturday, 26 July 2025. The event brought together several prominent Senegalese creatives to honor Africa’s historic leaders. The exhibition featured portraits of iconic African figures, including Nelson Mandela, Kwame Nkrumah, Thomas Sankara, Leopold Sédar Senghor, and Modibo Keita. It also showcased paintings of Senegalese President Bassirou Diomaye Faye and Prime…

  • Breaking News

    Darfur: A Renewed Tragedy — Two Decades After “Never Again”

    By: Mohamed Saad Kamil, Editor-in-Chief & Sabah Al-Makki, Assistant Editor I. Introduction: The Return of an Old War Twenty years ago, Darfur’s name became synonymous with genocide. Images of scorched villages, mass graves, and endless streams of displaced families shocked the conscience of the world. Global leaders swore that such horrors would “never again” be allowed to happen. Today, those vows lie in tatters. Darfur burns once more. The same communities are hunted, the same…

  • Columns

    Media’s War on Truth: How Disinformation Undermines Sudan’s Sovereignty

    By Berhane Taklu-NaggaIn times of national crisis and civil war, words carry the weight of life or death. Misinformation is not merely a journalistic misstep—it becomes a weapon, a form of soft warfare that manipulates perception, legitimizes illegality, and fuels impunity. That is exactly what Sky News Arabia, a Dubai-based outlet, has done by propagating the dangerous and delusional narrative that Sudan currently has “two governments and two armies.” This is not journalism; it is…

  • Columns

    Who Killed Patrice Lumumba? An Answer the Free World Still Doesn’t Know

    A New SceneBy Abdul-Samie Al-Omrani Before delving into the tragic fate of the former Congolese leader Patrice Lumumba—who was killed, his body dismembered into dozens of pieces, leaving a deep wound of sorrow in the hearts of Africans and all who stand with free nations—we must first understand the broader forces at play. Lumumba’s flesh and bones were dissolved in a corrosive substance brought by Belgian forces, who colonized the Congo, with the operation carried…

  • Columns

    The Scandalous Video: Colombian Mercenaries’ Voices and Emirati Weapons—The Latest Evidence

    By : Magdi Abdelazeez ▪️Following professional translation and analysis of what the Colombians say in the widely circulated video, it has become undeniably clear that the footage documents a live military training on the use of RPGs (rocket-propelled grenades), conducted on Sudanese soil. The trainees are new mercenaries being prepared in areas controlled by the Janjaweed militia. ▪️This footage offers new and alarming evidence that the Janjaweed militia continues to rely on foreign mercenaries—Colombians, in…

  • Columns

    📘 Purifying the Decision Begins with Purifying the Frame of Reference

    BY : Captain Mohamed Hassan Al-Taher 🧭 In a world full of both small and major decisions, we are faced each day with intellectual and moral challenges: Did I choose rightly? Was my decision just? These questions reveal that decisions are not merely actions, but deep reflections of entrenched frames of reference. And when stereotyping seeps into the mind, it can lead a person astray from the path of truth. — 🔍 First: How Do…

  • Breaking News

    Shengsi’s All-Round Tourism Activates the Island’s “Star Effect”

    On the coast of the East China Sea, the blue waves are surging. When the morning light gilds the century-old lighthouse, when dusk turns the “Blue Tears” beach into a starry river, when the fishermen’s songs and laughter dance in the offshore mussel farming area–This long scroll of island customs is a vivid footnote to the booming development of tourism in the Shengsi Archipelago.From January to May this year, Shengsi’s tourism market delivered impressive results:…

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