During the
First Sudanese Civil War (1955-1972) the school was forcibly closed by government forces. The Government of Sudan targeted the Christianized-Westernized educated elite, treating them as rebels. In July 1965 the headmaster of the girls' schools at Doleib Hill was one of the first to be tortured and then killed. The school was reopened after the
Addis Ababa peace accord of 1972. The school was subsequently forced to close for a second time after the outbreak of the
Second Sudanese Civil War (1983-2005). The school buildings were occupied as a Sudanese government garrison in 1983. In late 1986 and early 1987 rebel
Anyanya-2 forces attacked
Shilluk villages near Doleib Hill and
Taufikia several times. Possibly as many as 600 civilians were killed. In 1991 the Lou Nuer Anyanya-2 militia was based near Doleib Hill under
Yohannes Yual when it declared for
Riek Machar's breakaway
SPLA-Nasir. In 1995 Riek Machar granted an amnesty to Commander Gordon Kong Banypiny, who had been convicted for using his troops in an ethnically motivated attack on
Nasir, held by a different section of Nuer within the SSIA command. After trying to raise support in the
Waat region, Gordon Kong fled to Doleib Hill, which was held by a government militia commanded by Mabur Dhol, a former
Anyana soldier. He went on from there to Malakak where he obtained arms from the government. Since 2011 Doleib Hill has been in the northern region of the new country of
South Sudan, in the
Upper Nile state. ==References==