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The Intelligence from The Economist

A decade decayed: South Sudan

The Intelligence from The Economist

The Economist

Global News, Daily News, News

4.53.7K Ratings

🗓️ 9 July 2021

⏱️ ? minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The world’s youngest state was born amid boundless optimism. But poverty is still endemic and ethnic tensions still rule politics; what hope for its next decade? Mass graves found at Canada’s “residential schools” have sparked a reckoning about past abuses of indigenous peoples. And marking 50 years since the final album of Karen Dalton, the forgotten queen of folk.

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Runtime: 22min


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Transcript

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0:00.0

Saudi Arabia's economy is transforming. What's behind it? The Public Investment Fund, or PIF.

0:07.1

It's one of the largest sovereign wealth funds in the world, creating 13 new sectors,

0:12.2

66 companies, and more than 500,000 direct and indirect jobs so far. PIF is also the first

0:19.5

sovereign wealth fund to issue a green bond supporting Saudi Arabia's 2016 Net Zero emissions target.

0:26.6

Find out more at pif.gov.sa.

0:36.0

Hello and welcome to the Intelligence from the Economist. I'm your host Jason Palmer.

0:41.1

Every weekday we provide a fresh perspective on the events shaping your world.

0:49.8

From the very start of Canada's national history, Indigenous children were shuffled off to

0:55.2

residential schools designed to strip them of their identities. As discoveries of mass graves

1:01.3

reveal the schools in humane conditions, Canada is set for a reckoning. And 50 years ago today

1:08.7

came the release of the second and final album by Karen Dalton, an extraordinarily gifted

1:14.2

folk singer. She was reluctant to perform or even to record her music, and as a result,

1:20.0

her talents are only now reaching wider audiences. First up though.

1:33.9

I go here by swear by the Almighty God that as the president of the Republic of South Sudan,

1:41.9

that as the president of the Republic of South Sudan, I shall be faithful, I shall be faithful.

1:48.8

Ten years ago today, a new sovereign country was born as South Sudan's president Salva Keir was sworn

1:55.8

in before a huge flag waving crowd in the country's capital, Juba. So help me God.

2:04.8

Then the celebrations began.

2:09.8

Sudan had been rocked by decades of successive civil wars.

2:13.5

Millions were killed as a rebel group fought for the independence of the mostly Christian South

2:19.2

against a government based in largely Muslim North. Millions more were displaced.

2:25.6

This was a ceaselessly brutal conflict. Amputations by machete were policy. Death by stoning was common.

...

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