Africa's Ex-Presidents & Leaders!


Nasikia Muheshimiwa huyu akaamua kuwasindikiza watoto wake kwenda shule Malawi siku ya Mapinduzi ya Zanzibar.
Kabla majogoo hayajawika akawakusanya wanawe na kupanda ngalawa kuelekeaa Bagamoyo, huku nyuma mapanga shaa shaa na mitutu ikirindima.
Mapinduzi daima!............
 
Kwame Nkrumah alifia hospitalini katika mji wa Bucharest, Romania, na si Conakry Guinea kama FMES alivyowasilisha hapa. Sahihisho tu.
 
<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%"><tbody><tr><td align="center">John Garang: (Born 1945 - Died 2005)
Rebel Leader Sudan




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Sudan's vice-president and former rebel leader, John Garang, died on 30th July, 2005 after the Ugandan presidential helicopter he was travelling in crashed in mountains in southern Sudan. After devoting his life to fighting for the rights of southern Sudanese, he was named deputy to the President of Sudan, Omar al-Bashir (r) just three weeks before he died. In 1983 Garang was sent to the South to quell a mutiny by southern soldiers and did not return to Khartoum for 22 years.

The mainly Christian and animist southerners objected to moves to impose Islamic Sharia law. He led the fight against the Islamist government for 21 years. In recent years, the US played a key role in pushing both sides to stop fighting and share the oil wealth which had been discovered. After years of talks in Kenya, a peace deal was signed in January, under which John Garang would become vice-president, alongside the man who led the government's negotiating team Ali Osman Taha.

Mr Garang made a triumphal return to southern Sudan - cattle were slaughtered in traditional celebration. Southerners rejoiced, hoping that the end of the war would bring infrastructure such as the roads, schools and health clinics they lacked. When John Garang arrived in Khartoum in July to take up his post of vice-president, more than one million people turned out to welcome him.

His former rebel group, the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM), has nominated deputy leader Salva Kiir as his successor and the next vice-president of Sudan. In choosing Mr Kiir, the SPLM has sent a clear message that there will be no radical departure from the Garang era. US President George W Bush, UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and others joined Mr Kiir in urging the Sudanese people to remain calm and continue to implement the peace agreement.

John Garang de Mabior (June 23, 1945 - July 30, 2005) was the vice president of Sudan and former leader of the rebel Sudan People's Liberation Army. A member of the Dinka ethnic group, he was born into a poor family in Wagkulei village, near Bor in the upper Nile region of Sudan.

Garang studied economics at Grinnell College where he received a B.A.. He was known there for his bookishness. Following graduation, Garang studied East African agricultural economics as a Thomas J. Watson Fellow. He later took the commander's course at Fort Benning, Georgia and received a master's degree in agricultural economics and a Ph.D. in economics at Iowa State University, after writing a thesis on the agricultural development of Southern Sudan.

During the 1970s, Garang joined the Sudanese military, rising to the rank of lieutenant colonel in the Sudan People's Armed Forces (SPAF). In 1983, he was sent to crush a mutiny in Bor by 500 southern government soldiers who were resisting being rotated to posts in the north. Instead, he started a rebel movement, the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA), which was opposed to military rule and Islamic dominance of the country, and encouraged other army garrisons to mutiny, due to the Islamic law imposed on the country by the government.

This mutiny marked the beginning of the Second Sudanese Civil War, which resulted in one and half million deaths over twenty years of conflict. Garang, though he was Christian and most of southern Sudan is non-Muslim (mostly animist), did not focus on the religious aspects of the war.

The SPLA gained the backing of Libya, Uganda and Ethiopia. He and his army controlled a large part of the southern regions of the country, named New Sudan. He claimed his troops' courage comes from "the conviction that we are fighting a just cause. That is something North Sudan and its people don't have." Some suggested materialistic motivations to his rebellion, noting that much of Sudan's oil wealth lies in the south of the country.


Garang refused to participate in the 1985 interim government or 1986 elections, remaining a rebel leader. However, the SPLA and government signed a peace agreement in January 2005. On 9 July 2005, he was sworn in as vice-president, the second most powerful person in the country, following a ceremony in which he and President Omar al-Bashir signed a power-sharing constitution. He also became the administrative head of a southern Sudan with limited autonomy for the six years before a scheduled referendum of possible secession. No Christian or southerner has ever held such a high government post. Commenting after the ceremony, Garang stated, "I congratulate the Sudanese people, this is not my peace or the peace of al-Bashir, it is the peace of the Sudanese people." The deal to end the war in the south is separate from the Darfur conflict in western Sudan.

Garang was reported dead by the United Nations on August 1, 2005, after his helicopter crashed whilst returning from neighbouring Uganda. Sudanese state television initially reported that Garang's craft had landed safely, but Abdel Basset Sabdarat, the country's Information Minister, went on TV hours later to deny the report.

Soon afterwards, a statement released by the office of Sudanese President Omar el-Bashir confirmed that a Ugandan presidential plane, instead of a helicopter, crashed into "a mountain range in southern Sudan because of poor visibility and this resulted in the death of Dr. John Garang DeMabior, six of his colleagues and seven other crew member
s."


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FMEs!

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Kwame Nkrumah alifia hospitalini katika mji wa Bucharest, Romania, na si Conakry Guinea kama FMES alivyowasilisha hapa. Sahihisho tu.

- Mkuu yale maneno yamo kwenye quotation, kwa sababu sio yangu jamani rudini tena shuleni maana hizi ni aibu kwa Great Thinkers, Bwa! ha! ha!

Es!
 



General Murtala Mohamed

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FMEs!
 
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FMEs!
 


- Wakuuu vipi huku? Longtime anyways we are baack sasa ngoja tuendelee tulipoachia, remember mambo ya Chakubanga!

Respect.


FMEs!
 
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