Autumn of Sudan Brothers: demands to investigate massacres of the organization
The Sudan
People's Liberation Movement (SPLM), led by Malik Akar, issued a statement on
Wednesday, February 13, 2019, calling on the Attorney General to open an
investigation into the massacres of Port Sudan, Kajbar, Amri, Al-Hamdab,
Al-Manaseer and Al-Alif committed by the ousted President Omar al-Bashir's
regime against the Sudanese.
The movement declared its full support for the
sovereign transitional council led by Abdel Fattah Al Burhan, in continuing to
liquidate the Muslim Brotherhood regime from the institutions of Sudan, in
addition to putting peace as a priority and addressing the economic crisis with
policies that favor the poor and the marginalized.
The Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) was
fighting the former Brotherhood regime in South Kordofan and Blue Nile, part of
the Revolutionary Front (RUF) alliance, which was signed last month in
agreement with the Sovereign Council during negotiations in the southern
Sudanese city of Juba.
In a related context, at the Public Prosecution in
Khartoum, Monday, 12 November 2019, orders were issued to arrest medical
examinations in Sudan, involved in the 1989 coup, in addition to their travel
ban.
Meanwhile, the coordinator of the media committee of
the Coalition of Freedom and Change Forces, Mohamed Hassan Arabi, said that the
wrong prosecution authorities of the Cooper National Prison to extradite the
defendants, Omar al-Bashir, his deputy Ali Osman Mohamed Taha and Awad al-Jaz,
comes in order to investigate them about the coup.
He continued in press statements by saying that the
prosecution issued arrest warrants against all members of the Coup Command
Council.
Among the
civilians, arrest warrants have been issued against the Secretary General of
the Popular Congress Party, Ali al-Haj Mohammed and Ibrahim al-Sanusi, who are
expected to be arrested at any moment.
Prosecutors
arrested Youssef Abdel Fattah, one of the coup plotters involved, and placed
him in Kober National Prison.
It is noteworthy that the Muslim Brotherhood, led by
the late Hassan al-Turabi, seized power in Sudan by a military coup in 1989,
excluding the legitimate government elected headed by Sadiq al-Mahdi.
Last May,
Sudanese lawyers filed a legal petition against Khartoum's Attorney General
against Bashir and his aides on charges of "undermining the constitutional
order through a 1989 military coup."
This comes at
a time when trying to organize the Muslim Brotherhood, which ruled the country
for 30 years to stop the transitional government fabricated crises, taking
advantage of the control of its elements on many institutions of the Sudanese state.
Khartoum is experiencing a transportation crisis,
which has affected the work in the country, despite all the efforts of the
government to resolve the crisis, it is witnessing a new chapter of complexity.
For his part,
the leader of the forces of the Declaration of Freedom and Change Mohammed
Ziauddin, accused elements of the deposed regime, pointing out that they
control the public transport sector.
Zia said: “I do not rule out that there is a
systemic disruption of means of transport; to create a chronic crisis in
transportation” as the public transport sector is a focus of the Brotherhood
elements, and will not fix the situation without the liquidation of this
outpost even if a thousand buses were imported.
For his part, Ramadan Qarni expert on African
affairs and editor of the Journal of African Horizons said that political
experience in Sudan in recent years proved the failure of the Islamic trend,
and contributed to the deterioration of the Sudanese economy and Sudan's
regional and international relations.
Qarni said in
a statement to the Reference that the Transitional Council faces several
challenges. The biggest challenge is the dismantling of the Muslim Brotherhood,
and uprooting them from the joints of the state.