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Umm Ruwaba


FieldValue
nameUmm Ruwaba
native_nameأم روابة
settlement_typeCity
image_skylineASC Leiden - NSAG - van Dis 4 - 019 - The head master of a school and his son are photographed in front of the school - Umm Ruwaba, North Kordofan, Sudan - 20 December 1961.tiff
pushpin_mapSudan
pushpin_label_positionleft
pushpin_map_captionLocation in Sudan
pushpin_reliefyes
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameSudan
subdivision_type1State
subdivision_name1North Kurdufan
subdivision_type2District
subdivision_name2Umm Ruwaba
timezoneEAT
utc_offset+03:00
coordinates
elevation_ft1,490

Umm Ruwaba, also Umm Ruwabah (; Ruaba and Umm Ruaba), is a city in the state of North Kurdufan in Sudan and is the capital of the Umm Ruwabah District. By road it is located 147 km southeast of El Obeid, and 184 km west of Rabak. Founded by the Ottoman Empire in late 1820s , it is at the junction of important roads and camel caravan routes.

History

On 27 April 2013, the town was attacked by the Sudanese Revolutionary Front, a rebel alliance. The government was able to 'contain' the attack, but sparked local protests over lack of security in the region.

Geography

Umm Ruwaba lies in southern central Sudan in the semi-arid region of the Sahel. It has an average annual precipitation of 300 to 450 millimeters. Local aquifers are considered to be productive and are the source of water for many wells in the region. Water is typically extracted from depths of 300 to 400 ft, although some boreholes have been dug as far as 1000 ft. Geologically it lies in the Tertiary-Quaternary Umm Ruwaba Basin, composed mainly of fine-grained lacustrine and fluviatile sediments.

Economy

Lying in this part of the Sahel, Umm Ruwaba is prone to recurring periods of drought, land degradation and famine. The famine of 1983–1985 had a severe impact on the area and caused food riots in the city. Its principal crops are millet and sorghum for home consumption, and sesame for sale in the local markets, and the city is an important storage area for many farmers in the district. The Sudan Roads and Bridges Department has been looking to improve road communications between the city and El Obeid.

Demographics and religion

The main tribes in the city are Jawamma and Shanabla peoples. Traditionally it is an Islamic area, but a 1980 report documented that an anti-Islamic organisation had converted some 40 families in Umm Ruwaba from Islam to Christianity.

Notable people

  • Mamoun Beheiry, economist, first commissioner of the Bank of Sudan and first president of the African Development Bank, (born October 1, 1925)

References

References

  1. {{Google maps. link
  2. Lavergné, Marc. (1989). "Le Soudan contemporain: De l'invasion turco-égyptienne à la rébellion africaine (1821–1989)". Karthala Editions.
  3. "Sudan: Rebels ousted, but residents protest lack of security".
  4. Khogali, Mustafa M.. (August 1991). "Famine, Desertification and Vulnerable Populations: The Case of Umm Ruwaba District, Kordofan Region, Sudan". Springer.
  5. (1968). "Geological Survey Water-supply Paper". U.S. Government Printing Office.
  6. (1968). "Water-supply Paper". U.S. Government Printing Office.
  7. Imām, Fayṣal Bashīr. (1972). "Sudan path to self-sufficiency". Maʼhad al-Dirāsat al-Iḍafīyah, Jāmiʻat al-Khartūm.
  8. Shahin, Mamdouh. (2007). "Water resources and hydrometeorology of the Arab region". Springer.
  9. Jāmiʻat al-Kuwayt. Kullīyat al-ʻUlūm. (1988). "The Journal of the University of Kuwait, Science". Faculty of Science, University of Kuwait.
  10. (1979). "Aquatic weed management: integrated control techniques for the Gezira irrigation scheme : report of a workshop, 3–6 December 1978". National Academies.
  11. Waal, Alex De. (1997). "Famine Crimes: Politics & [and] the Disaster Relief Industry in Africa". African Rights & the International African Institute.
  12. (2009). "Darfur and the crisis of governance in Sudan: a critical reader". Cornell University Press.
  13. Shea, Gerald P. (2009). "Jerry, Catch Your Plane on Time: Travels to the Middle East and Beyond". iUniverse.
  14. (2003). "Encyclopedia of Women and Islamic Cultures". Brill.
  15. (1980). "Sudanow". Ministry of Culture and Information.
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