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How South Sudanese Australians mobilised to help their homeland achieve independence from afar

Share Share on Twitter Nyok Achuoth Gor was just eight years old when he was forced to flee southern Sudan. It was the late 1980s and the Second Sudanese Civil War had begun a few years earlier.  He was conscripted as a child soldier and separated from his mother and younger siblings. He would spend decades in refugee camps in Kenya, Uganda, and Ethiopia. I ended up in Ethiopia, and became part of a generation [of displaced youths] referred to as the lost boys of Sudan ,  Mr Gor told SBS News. He came to Australia as a refugee a few years before the Sudan People s Liberation Movement and the Sudanese government signed a historic peace deal on 9 January 2005.

Three-part documentary Finding the Archibald and weekly magazine show Art Works can t fix ABC TV s coverage of the arts

Advertisement For too long, it’s looked as though the ABC has been afraid of the arts. Over the years, Aunty has marginalised and axed arts programs, shunting them off its main channel or consigning them to obscure timeslots, like 10pm Tuesdays. Early in 2021, The Mix, which ran unheralded for seven years on ABC News, was quietly retired. The short-lived Art Nation was terminated in 2011 and we’re now a long way from the days when magazine-style overviews such as Express and S unday Afternoon offered hours of interviews, documentaries, films and feature stories. More recently, whenever the ABC has produced arts programs, its discomfort has been evident. One indication of a lack of confidence has been the push to insert comedians at any opportunity. It’s as if the operative thinking is that, unless attention to books, film, theatre, visual arts, opera and music comes with a few laughs, no one will be interested.

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