The Economy…Brotherhood’s Card to bring Sudan down
Qatar and Turkey put Sudan hostage in the hands of
the Muslim Brotherhood and extremist and terrorist groups, via internal crises
such as the lack of fuel, bread and the deterioration of the Sudanese currency.
Bread crisis
The Brotherhood’s battle is to bring down the
transitional council and Sudanese government and the sovereign council.
In the past few days, the crisis of bakeries in
Sudan and the high price of bread have caught in Sudan.
The Brotherhood controls the bread market in Sudan
with different and multiple tools between controlling the supply of wheat, or
the gas used in making bread, or the bakery network that is run by the National
Congress Party from behind the curtain and constitutes one of the most
important sources of plundering the money of the Sudanese people.
The capital and a number of cities in Sudan
witnessed a great shortage of flour.
According to the follow-up, the past period
witnessed a muffled struggle between the Sudanese Ministry of Finance in the
interim government, some agents and some bakery owners against the background
of control imposed on them by the resistance committees in coordination with
the ministry.
Qatar-backed brotherhood has urged bakery owners to
raise the price of a 100% loaf of bread, making it 2 Sudanese pounds ($ 0.02)
instead of 1 Sudanese pounds ($ 0.01).
Elements of the Brotherhood take control of the dissolved
Sudanese Bakeries Union.
And recently, the Sudanese Ministry of Finance paid
part of the dues of the grain companies as arrears, and the companies committed
themselves to work in full capacity to produce what covers the country's needs
every day.
Follow-ups to the Freedom and Change Forces Media
Committee revealed a solution to the exact problem of the Ministry of Trade and
Industry receiving about 73,000 bags from companies after their production on
Thursday was 53,000 bags, to be completed to 100,000 bags starting from
tomorrow, Sunday, knowing that the country's actual need is 80 One thousand bags
daily.
The fuel crisis
Although 10 months have passed since al-Bashir was removed,
without a fuel crisis as it was used to during the time of brotherhood, the
past days saw Sudan try to manufacture a fuel crisis in the street to overthrow
the "table" on the transitional phase.
During the past weeks, repeated attacks on the oil
pipelines in Sudan, as well as the deliberate disruption of fuel transport
operations, by the Brotherhood sleeper cells and with the support of the Qatari
regime, which seeks to undermine and bring down the Sovereign Council and the
Abdullah Hamduk government.
The Sudanese Minister of Energy and Mining, Engineer
Adel Ali Ibrahim, said today, Sunday, that the fuel crisis was caused by
sabotage of the carrier line from Port Sudan.
Ibrahim added that the Sudanese engineers were
able to repair the line and the flow of fuel would return to normal.
On the electricity crisis, the Sudanese Minister of
Energy and Mining said that for electricity there were some breakdowns in the
thermal power plants that had been addressed and the electrical supply would
stabilize.
The deterioration of the Sudanese currency
The plan "brotherhood to bring down Sudan and
return to power with the support of Qatar and Turkey, does not stop there, but
also extends to the economy as it worked to end and bring down the Sudanese
pound, with currency smuggling and spreading rumors, which led to the deterioration
of the value of the Sudanese pound, threatening the living conditions of the
citizen, Which aims "cobs" behind the street rampage in factional
demonstrations and the manufacture of "famine" in the country.
The rule of the "Brothers of Sudan", which
lasted for three decades, led to the devaluation of the Sudanese pound at
unprecedented rates, as its value fell from 12 pounds against the dollar to 65
thousand pounds in the parallel market now, taking into account the three
zeroes drawn from the currency.
And set the Central Bank of Sudan, on Sunday, the
purchase price of the US dollar against the Sudanese pound on Sunday at 50.4000
pounds and sale, up 0.5%.
In order to remove the Sudanese exchange market from
the "hands", a legal committee in the Sudanese government announced
Thursday (February 6) the dissolution of the Boards of Directors of the Central
Bank of Sudan and 11 other banks, with the managers of eight banks being
exempted from their posts, and the Governor of the Central Bank maintained his
position, a committee was formed.
The Sudanese economist Abdul Rahim identified the
economic feature of the counter-revolution in the almost total control of the
Brotherhood's elements over most of the state’s joints, institutions, and
commercial and economic companies.
In a newspaper statement, Professor of Economics at
the University of Khartoum, Mohamed Al-Jack estimated the cumulative size of
the economic effects resulting from corruption practiced by the national
conference networks in force during the past three decades, at hundreds of
billions of dollars.
Al-Jack notes the direct impact of looting tens of
billions and smuggling them abroad, and thus taking them out of the Sudanese
economy and the intended policies that led to the sale of dozens of huge
institutions in deals marred by many aspects of corruption, in addition to the
indirect impact that was represented in the loss of billions of dollars from The
returns that could have been collected in the event of a transparency and
accounting approach.