Tag: Omar al-Bashir

  • ‘How Sudanese president fell’

    A ploy by influential Western nations and their allies to destabilise Sudan and effect regime change has been unearthed, amid reports that the ousted President, Omar al-Bashir ignored warnings by experts about the threat of a revolution in the country.

     Findings CAJ News indicate that Western nations influenced the massive demonstrations that led to the overthrow of the longtime leader by providing demonstrators with financial, technical and information  support.

     Besieged by the demonstrators, the army eventually overthrew al-Bashir after multiple months of protests, ending his almost 30 years in power.

     Links between opposition parties and pressure groups to the West have emerged. Among these parties is the Sudanese Congress Party (SCP), a western-sponsored organisation.

     As part of the links, it has emerged the party’s online platform, including Facebook, is administered from abroad. Officials from several countries including Britain, France and Saudi Arabia allegedly manage the account.

     Another opposition, the Nation Party headed by Sadi al-Mahdi, has its page allegedly run by officials from Saudi Arabia, United Kingdom (UK) and United States of America (USA) among others.

     Pressure groups also allegedly benefitted from links with the West and Saudi Arabia. These include the Sudanese Community for Professionals and Sudan Civil Disobedience Movement.

     There was support for protesters near respective Sudan embassies in France, Germany, US and UK among others.  Influential western media is also being accused of playing a familiar role.

     Among the most prominent images and videos these media widely circulated include that of a young woman identified as Ela Salah, seen atop a roof of a car, as well as a protester holding what looked like a stone and waving fingers as a sign of victory.

     Political scientists believe these were distributed by media and Western strategists as a symbol of the Sudanese revolution.

     Such ploys are seen as an attempt by the West to retain influence in Sudan, a country that is rich in resources, mainly oil.

     Al-Bashir apparently snubbed advice by Russian experts on how to revive and manage the economy. The advisers had been working with the Fund for the Protection of National Values.

    Among other measures, the advisers recommended that authorities ensure that political leaders must not loot state money.

    Read Also: Sudan hosts 140,000 S. Sudanese refugees

     Al-Bashir’s government was advised to alter the exchange rate and tighten controls on gold and export revenues. This is the Sudanese Pound continued losing value.

     Al-Bashir’s government was also urged to ensure ease of doing business by ending bureaucratic processes.

     Instead of appointing liberal economist Tariq Chalabi as Minister for Finance and Economic Development, he appointed Moataz Moussa instead, against Russian advice.

     The spiraling economic problems are widely believed to have led to al-Bashir’s eventual ouster.

     Initially, people came to the streets in protest against the increase of bread prices but the peaceful demonstrations turned into riots after the state security personnel reacted brutally.

     More than 100 people were killed in the major cities and scores of others arrested during the crackdown. The toll includes deaths from earlier protests.

     Al-Bashir resisted calls for his resignation and appeared to adopt measures to address the economic issues.

     More protests erupted on April 4, with renewed force. Protesters eventually reached the Army Headquarters, forcing the military to take action.

     In power since 1989, al-Bashir was ousted in a coup on the 11th as a result of the so-called Drum Revolution and taken under house arrest pending the formation of a transitional council.

  • Sudan coup leader Awad Ibn Auf steps down

    The head of Sudan’s military council stood down yesterday 24 hours after leading a coup that toppled long-time leader Omar al-Bashir amid a wave of protests.

    Defence Minister Awad Ibn Auf announced his decision on state TV. He named as his successor Lt Gen Abdel Fattah Abdelrahman Burhan.

    It came after protesters refused to leave the streets, saying the coup leaders were too close to Mr Bashir.

    The army has said it would oversee a transition followed by elections.

    Read also: Breaking: Army arrests Sudanese President, Omar Al-Bashir

    Ibn Auf was head of military intelligence during the Darfur conflict in the 2000s.

    Bashir has been indicted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity over that conflict but the Sudanese authorities said they would not hand over Bashir to the ICC..

    Bashir’s downfall followed months of unrest that began in December over rising prices. At least 38 people have died in the protests.

  • Breaking: Army arrests Sudanese President, Omar Al-Bashir

    The Sudanese military has removed President Omar al-Bashir from power and set up a transitional military council to rule the country for two years, Sudan’s Minister of Defense, Awad Mohamed Ahmed Ibn Auf, said in a televised statement on Thursday.

    Details shortly…

  • Al-Bashir sacks Sudan’s foreign minister

    President Omar al-Bashir of Sudan has issued a presidential decree relieving Foreign Minister, Ibrahim Ghandour, of his position, state news agency SUNA reported on Thursday.

    The news agency did not provide any further details or say who would be appointed in his place.

    Ghandour had on Wednesday asked parliament to step in and help Sudanese diplomats, who had not been paid their salaries in seven months or given funds to rent Sudanese diplomatic mission headquarters abroad.

    “The funds requested by the foreign ministry amount to less than $30 million,’’ he said.

    That was the first public comment by a Sudanese government official on the central bank’s inability to provide foreign currency to cover state affairs.

    Sudan has been largely cut off from international financing in the past decades by U.S. sanctions, which were lifted in October.

    Since then, officials have been trying to attract investors to help prop up its economy, which has been struggling since the south seceded in 2011.

    The seceding cost Sudan three-quarters of its oil output, the main source of foreign currency and government income.

    The central bank has, for years, avoided publicly releasing information surrounding its foreign currency holdings.

  • S. Sudan describes Al-Bashir’s remarks on supporting rebels

    South Sudan on Friday described the remarks by the President Omar Al-Bashir of Sudan that Juba was offering save haven to the Sudanese rebels as unfortunate.

    Al-Bashir in a public address in Kosti town in the White Nile State alleged that the South Sudan government was still not living up to the promises to stop backing and offering save haven to the Sudanese rebels.

    He also accused Juba of chasing away the northerners from South Sudan.

    President Salva Kiir’s spokesman Ateny Wek Ateny, said the remarks by the Al-Bashir were unfortunate because South Sudan is struggling to fix its security as it gains upper hand on rebels fighting it.

    Atenyi denied lending support to rebels fighting to overthrow President Omar al-Bashir’s regime in Sudan.

    “That is a nightmare. South Sudan has no reason completely to harbor (Sudanese) rebels.

    “We are looking forward to return security to our country,” Ateny said in Juba.

    Read Also: President al-Bashir defies ICC arrest warrant by visiting Uganda

    The two countries are at unease after them both deployed heavy troops on their common border.

    Ateny said the insecurity across the common border has aided Sudanese insurgents to cross illegally into South Sudan.

    “Insecurity has given (Sudanese) insurgents chance to cross into South Sudan at their own will. We are gaining momentum as our forces are moving to address the issue,” Ateny said.

    Both countries have in the past accused each other of supporting insurgents.

    South Sudan won independence from Sudan in 2011 after two decades of civil war, but descended into violence after President Kiir sacked his former deputy Riek Machar leading to death of thousands, displacement of millions in the ongoing more than four years of conflict.

    NAN

  • Al-Bashir apologises for inability to attend Islamic-U.S. summit

    Sudanese President Omar Al-Bashir on Friday apologised for  his inability to attend the upcoming Arab Islamic American Summit in the Saudi capital Riyadh, official SUNA news agency reported.

    “The President of the Republic has apologised for not attending the summit for special reasons and tasked the State Minister at the Presidency and Director of his offices Gen. Taha Al-Hussein to represent him at the summit and participate in all its activities,” SUNA said.

    Al-Bashir wished the leaders participating in the summit all success, expressing hope that the summit would serve the interests of humanity and achieve its objectives.

    He also expressed hope that the summit would achieve international peace and security, form a new partnership to confront extremism and terrorism and disseminate the values of tolerance, co-existence and joint cooperation.

    Earlier, al-Bashir received a message from Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz, delivered by his special envoy, to invite him to attend the summit.

    However, the U.S. embassy in Khartoum said on Wednesday that Washington opposes inviting anyone subject to outstanding International Criminal Court (ICC) arrest warrants, including Sudanese President al-Bashir.

    In 2009, the ICC issued an arrest warrant against al-Bashir for allegedly genocide and crimes against humanity.

    NAN reports that leaders of more than 56 countries will take part in the summit in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on Sunday, including U.S. President Donald Trump.

    For Trump, the visit to Saudi Arabia will be his first state visit.

     

  • S/Africa opposition sues government for not arresting Sudan president

    S/Africa opposition sues government for not arresting Sudan president

    South Africa’s main opposition party on Friday filed criminal charges against several governments and police officials for failing in 2015 to arrest Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court.

    The Democratic Alliance (DA) made the move two days after a court had thrown up a roadblock to the government’s attempts to part ways with the international tribunal, saying it should not have taken the decision without seeking parliamentary approval.

    The government had earlier justified the withdrawal by saying that ICC membership hampered its efforts to resolve conflicts in Africa, highlighting the dilemma it had faced over al-Bashir.

    The Sudanese president, wanted for war crimes by the ICC, attended an African Union summit in Johannesburg in June 2015.

    The government allowed him to return home, following which a court in the administrative capital Pretoria and an appeals court ruled that it had acted unlawfully.

    The DA said it had filed charges against several members of the cabinet, the police force, and senior government officials whom it accused of failing to uphold the law.

    A Pretoria court ruled Wednesday that the government had acted unconstitutionally when announcing in October that South Africa would leave the ICC without consulting parliament.

    DPA was unable Friday to obtain a comment from the Justice Ministry.

  • Sudan’s Al Bashir survives heart attack

    Sudan President Omar Al Bashir has left hospital after undergoing a cardiac catheterization, according to agency report on Friday.

    “The Presidency confirmed that Al Bashir has undergone an exploratory cardiac catheterisation at Royal Care hospital and the results were very reassuring,’’ an official said.

    He said the president left the hospital immediately after the procedure.

    The office of the Sudanese president had in November last year denied rumors that Al Bashir had died of heart attack.

    Taha Othman, the director in Bashir’s office, told Al-Arabiya.net that the president was in good health and was resuming his presidential tasks.

    “I am sitting next to President Bashir in Morocco and enjoying the rain. We are getting ready to leave in a while to Guinea to participate in the Arab-African Summit,” Othman said.

    A rumor had circulated on social media platforms claiming that the Sudanese president has died of heart attack.

    Al-Bashir had been outside the country since November 14.

    He participated in the United Nations climate change conference (COP22) in Marrakech, Morocco and the Fourth Africa-Arab Summit Malabo, Equatorial Guinea.

    President Al-Bashir was declared wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) since 2009 on charges of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity allegedly committed in Darfur from 2003 to 2008.

    The situation in Darfur, Sudan, was referred to the ICC in 2005 by the UN Security Council.

  • Sudanese president leaves hospital

    Sudanese president leaves hospital

    Sudanese President Omar Al Bashir left hospital after undergoing a cardiac catheterization according to agency report on Friday.

    “The Presidency confirmed that Al Bashir has undergone an exploratory cardiac catheterisation at Royal Care hospital and the results were very reassuring,’’ a presidency official told the news agency,

    He said that the president left the hospital immediately after the procedure.

  • Al Bashir: South Africa lawmakers reject bid to impeach Zuma

    South Africa’s parliament on Tuesday rejected investigating President Jacob Zuma for possible impeachment for allowing Sudanese President, Omar Hassan al-Bashir, to evade an arrest warrant and leave the country in June.

    Bashir, accused of masterminding genocide in Darfur, was allowed to leave an African Union summit in South Africa and fly home, in defiance of a local court ruling ordering his detention under a warrant from the International Criminal Court, Reuters reported.

    South Africa, a member of the ICC, is obliged to enforce warrants from the Hague-based tribunal.

    Mmusi Maimane, head of the opposition Democratic Alliance, which sponsored the motion put to lawmakers, urged members of parliament to vote to set up an ad hoc committee to look into the president’s role.

    “When President Jacob Zuma chose to violate the court order, he attacked the very foundations of our constitution,” Maimane told parliament in Cape Town in a debate broadcast live on television.

    Parliament is dominated by Zuma’s African National Congress (ANC) and the motion was defeated by 211 votes against, to 100 in favour.

    17 lawmakers abstained.

    Bashir’s exit triggered an international outcry and highlighted deep rifts between the global court and African powers who have accused the ICC of bias against the continent. The ICC – set up to try the worst crimes when local courts fail – has so far only charged Africans.