Difference between revisions of "South Sudan"

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* The South Sudan Police Serivce (SSPS) currently wear a [[leaf]] camouflage design with a blue colorway. The design consists of black, dark blue and blue-grey shapes on a pale blue background.
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Revision as of 18:49, 3 May 2013

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Republic of South Sudan

The Republic of South Sudan became an independent state in July 2011, following protracted periods of civil war with the govenrment of Sudan that began in the 1950s and ended only in 2005. The First Sudanese Civil War (also known as the Anyanya Rebellion) lasted from 1955 until 1972, pitting the armed forces of the Sudanese government against a coalition of southern Sudanese fighters known variously as the Southern Sudan Liberation Movement, Azania Liberation Front, and the Anyanya Equatorial Corps. Cessation of hostilities brought about the formation of the Southern Sudan Autonomous Region, which existed from 1972 until 1983, but fighting again broke out between the north and south leading to a Second Sudanese Civil War. This latter conflict, lasting from 1983 until 2005, claimed the lives of more than two million people resulting from war, famine and the rampant spread of disease. The Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) emerged as the military wing of the Sudan People's Liberation Movement, working towards complete autonomy and independence from the government of (north) Sudan. The SPLA were supported militarily by Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Uganda, all of whom sent military personnel to Sudan in 1995. Peace talks that began in 2003 ultimately led to the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, signed on 9 January 2005. The Sudanese government withdrew all of its troops from southern Sudan in 2008.

The SPLA has formed the basis of the newly constituted Armed Forces of Southern Sudan, consisting largely of ground forces supplemented by a small Air Force. As of 2012, the formation process is still ongoing. There has been little uniformity regarding the outfitting of military personnel, with uniforms coming from various sources including ex-Sudanese Army stocks, as well as contributions from supporters such as Uganda and Ethiopia.

Camouflage Patterns of South Sudan

  • A woodland-style pattern, probably of Chinese origin and also in use by the Army of Sudan, is commonly found in the forces of South Sudan also. This pattern uses a completely different set of drawings from the US woodland design.

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  • Copies of the Portuguese vertical lizard camouflage design were popular with some units of the SPLA and are undoubtedly still in the supply system of the current armed forces.

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  • Some South Sudanese forces have also been documented wearing a contemporary tiger stripe camouflage design, similar to the one seen below.

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  • South Sudanese Army personnel also wear the same six-color "chocolate chip" desert pattern of the regular Sudanese Army.

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  • The South Sudan Police Serivce (SSPS) currently wear a leaf camouflage design with a blue colorway. The design consists of black, dark blue and blue-grey shapes on a pale blue background.

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