Paragraph: (Sept11-reports/oanc-chapter-2-5.txt)
Sent 1: Not until 1998 did al Qaeda undertake a major terrorist operation of its own, in large part because Bin Laden lost his base in Sudan.
Sent 2: Ever since the Islamist regime came to power in Khartoum, the United States and other Western governments had pressed it to stop providing a haven for terrorist organizations.
Sent 3: Other governments in the region, such as those of Egypt, Syria, Jordan, and even Libya, which were targets of some of these groups, added their own pressure.
Sent 4: At the same time, the Sudanese regime began to change.
Sent 5: Though Turabi had been its inspirational leader, General Omar al Bashir, president since 1989, had never been entirely under his thumb.
Sent 6: Thus as outside pressures mounted, Bashir's supporters began to displace those of Turabi.
Sent 7: The attempted assassination in Ethiopia of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in June 1995 appears to have been a tipping point.
Sent 8: The would-be killers, who came from the Egyptian Islamic Group, had been sheltered in Sudan and helped by Bin Laden.
Sent 9: When the Sudanese refused to hand over three individuals identified as involved in the assassination plot, the UN Security Council passed a resolution criticizing their inaction and eventually sanctioned Khartoum in April 1996.
Sent 10: A clear signal to Bin Laden that his days in Sudan were numbered came when the government advised him that it intended to yield to Libya's demands to stop giving sanctuary to its enemies.
Sent 11: Bin Laden had to tell the Libyans who had been part of his Islamic army that he could no longer protect them and that they had to leave the country.
Sent 12: Outraged, several Libyan members of al Qaeda and the Islamic Army Shura renounced all connections with him.
Sent 13: Bin Laden also began to have serious money problems.
Sent 14: International pressure on Sudan, together with strains in the world economy, hurt Sudan's currency.
Sent 15: Some of Bin Laden's companies ran short of funds.
Sent 16: As Sudanese authorities became less obliging, normal costs of doing business increased.
Sent 17: Saudi pressures on the Bin Laden family also probably took some toll.
Sent 18: In any case, Bin Laden found it necessary both to cut back his spending and to control his outlays more closely.
Question: What was the assassination of President Hosni Mubarak a tipping point for? (false/0)
Question: When did the Sudanese regime begin to change? (false/1)
Question: What is the name of the Islamist regime that came to power in Khartoum? (false/2)
Question: Sudan refused to hand over three individuals identified as involved in the assassination plot of who? (true/3)
Question: When the Libyan members of al Qaeda renounced their connections? (false/4)
Question: What assassination plot caused the U.N. Security Council to sanction the Sudanese government? (true/5)
Question: Which group plotted the assassination of Hosni Mubarak? (false/6)
Question: Why did several Libyan members of al Qaeda renounce all connections with Bin Laden? (false/7)
Question: What are three reasons for Bin Laden's money troubles when he was based in Sudan? (true/8)
Question: Who outraged Libyans of al Qaeda? (true/9)
Question: With whom did several Libyan members of al Qaeda and the Islamic Army Shura renounce all connections? (false/10)
Question: Why did Bin Laden tell the Libyans who had been part of his Islamic army that he could no longer protect them and that they had to leave Sudan? (true/11)
Question: How long after the failed attempt to assassinate Hosni Mubarak did the U.N. impose sanctions on Sudan? (true/12)
Question: Why did Bin Laden tell his Islamic Army he could no longer protect them and that they needed to leave the country? (false/13)
Last updated: Mon Apr 16 04:55:33 EDT 2018
Generated from a file named: /Users/daniel/ideaProjects/hard-qa/split/train_456.json