Gulf News

Sudan opposition chief to return

Mahdi has been in selfimpose­d exile for the last 30 months, mainly in Cairo

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Sudanese opposition leader and former prime minister Sadiq Al Mahdi was to return to the country yesterday more than two years after he fled abroad, a senior official in his party said.

Mahdi, whose civilian government was overthrown in the 1989 Islamist-backed coup that brought President Omar Al Bashir to power, has been in selfimpose­d exile, mainly in Cairo.

“Sadiq Al Mahdi will return today after an absence from the country of 30 months,” the deputy head of his Umma party, Fadlallah Burma Nasser, told AFP.

Mahdi, 81, was expected to fly into Khartoum airport and later make a speech to supporters.

He left Sudan in August 2014, a few weeks after being released following a month in custody on treason-related charges that could have seen him death penalty.

Mahdi had been arrested after accusing pro-government paramilita­ry forces of rape in western Sudan’s Darfur region.

The case sparked concern from Western government­s but Mahdi was released after his legal face the team appealed to the justice minister to drop or suspend the charges. The exact status of the charges is not clear.

A fixture of Sudanese politics since the 1960s, Mahdi was prime minister from 1966 to 1967 and again from 1986 to 1989. The Umma party is one of Sudan’s oldest political institutio­ns. Mahdi is also revered by followers in his Ansar al-Islam movement, a key component of the party.

While in exile Mahdi signed a controvers­ial agreement joining Umma in an alliance with other opposition parties and a number of rebel groups from the war-torn Blue Nile, South Kordofan and Darfur regions.

In a statement in November Mahdi had called for a threeday nationwide strike against Bashir’s regime, amid mounting anger over fuel subsidy cuts and other economic problems.

Bashir, who is wanted by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court on charges of war crimes and genocide related to the conflict in Darfur, has been accused of systematic repression of the opposition.

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Sadiq Al Mahdi

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