Arab News

Sudan’s first PM since 1989 coup takes oath

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KHARTOUM: A former army general and top aide to President Omar Al-Bashir was sworn in Thursday as Sudan’s first prime minister since the post was scrapped in a 1989 coup.

Bakri Hassan Saleh, a military officer involved in the bloodless coup that brought Bashir to power three decades ago, was named prime minister a day earlier by the executive bureau of the president’s National Congress Party (NCP).

Saleh, 68, took the oath as prime minister at a presidenti­al palace in Khartoum. He will also continue in his post as first vice president.

Bashir abolished the post of prime minister after the coup, and analysts said the appointmen­t of Saleh as premier was an attempt by the president to give his decades-old regime a new look.

The appointmen­t falls in line with reforms proposed by a year-long national dialogue held between Bashir’s government and some opposition groups.

In October, after a quarter century in power, Bashir concluded the national dialogue aimed at resolving insurgenci­es in Sudan’s border regions and healing the country’s crisis-wracked economy.

The talks, launched in 2015, were boycotted by most mainstream opposition and armed groups.

“Our country is at a historic moment as it harmonizes all political parties and powers who participat­ed in the national dialogue,” Saleh said in a brief statement after taking oath.

Sudanese lawmakers had voted in December to reinstate the post of prime minister.

“General Bakri’s appointmen­t is broadly a continuati­on of Bashir’s rule rather than a new chapter in Sudan’s politics,” Khaled Tigani, editor-in-chief of weekly newspaper Elaff, said.

“But at the end of the day it depends on the leader- ship that General Bakri manages to show.”

Saleh, a key aide to Bashir for decades, has previously held important government ministeria­l portfolios like interior and defense. He has also been adviser to Bashir on national security and was head of the country’s all-powerful National Security and Intelligen­ce Service in the 1990s.

Bashir had led the 1989 coup against then-Prime Minister Sadiq Al-Mahdi with the help of Hassan Al-Turabi.

Mahdi fled abroad more than two years ago but returned to Sudan last month.

A fixture of Sudanese politics since the 1960s, Mahdi served as prime minister from 1966 to 1967 and again from 1986 to 1989.His government was the last to be democratic­ally elected in Sudan before the coup.

 ??  ?? Sudanese President Omar Al-Bashir
Sudanese President Omar Al-Bashir

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