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Flag of South Sudan | flagsworld.org

South Sudan flag At the point when Sudan got free on Jan. 1, 1956, the prevalently animist and Christian people groups living in the south of the new nation had no local images, while the prevailing Muslims in the nation's north and focus showed pennants with Islamic imagery. Before autonomy the British (who had controlled together with the Egyptians) had masterminded proper neighborhood images for the areas in Sudan, yet the new government in autonomous Sudan restricted the utilization of these images as being in opposition to cultivating national solidarity. 

Flag of South Sudan

From the beginning the southern Sudanese felt victimized by the Islamic north. The southerners battled an extended and grisly polite war to pick up their freedom, coming full circle in a harmony understanding in 2005 that remembered a choice for autonomy in the south. That submission was passed overwhelmingly in January 2011, and South Sudan got autonomous on July 9. During the 1990s, during their battle with the north, the southern Sudanese had made a pennant of autonomy, which turned into the new national banner raised just because as South Sudan got autonomous on July 9, 2011.

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