Policy

Efforts to Eliminate Empowerment and Pursue the Terrorist Group, Sudan’s Brotherhood Face a New Storm


The terrorist Muslim Brotherhood Group is active in Sudan during this period of its alleged repercussions and adherence to looting, kidnapping, and spreading chaos in the country, in an attempt to return to the political scene in Sudan, and penetrate again around executive positions in the country, but it is facing a storm and major rejection from Sudan.

Since the 1989 coup, dubbed the Muslim Brotherhood’s “Salvation Revolution,” Sudan has been ruled by the Muslim Brotherhood in its own revolutionary brand, and the terrorist regime claims to be Islam’s representative and leader in the world. Nonetheless, more than three decades of corruption and authoritarianism in the country could end with the help of the country’s international efforts.

Uprooting in Sudan

As part of its fight against the Muslim Brotherhood in the country, to defeat the terrorist organization at its roots after more than 30 years of spreading chaos, extremism, and poverty to achieve its goals and ambitions in power, the administration may seek to implement measures that would strengthen mechanisms to pursue terrorist elements and restrict their activities.

At the conclusion of the conference on the renewal of the process of dismantling the Brotherhood regime, an agreement was reached on a roadmap that included several items that would cancel all decisions issued by the Appeals Chamber and the judiciary, in addition to imposing laws to activate the fight against corruption in the country, canceling the decisions of the former dissolution committee, and an agreement to establish a special police to dismantle empowerment, and grant members of the committee procedural and legal immunity.

Informed sources said that the planned laws are a first step towards the final agreement on the transfer of power to civilians by addressing key issues including the dismantling of the Muslim Brotherhood system, justice, reform of the army and security apparatus, reform of the judicial apparatus, and the review of the peace agreement signed in October 2020.

Enacting anti-corruption laws

In a statement, the Department of Enablement Operations recommended ending the empowerment of employees in the security and military apparatus of deposed President Omar al-Bashir’s regime, conducting comprehensive reviews of the oil, mining and education sectors at all levels, combating corruption, and holding those involved in suspicious funds accountable.

The conference also recommended the elimination of all religious facets of the former regime, the formation of a review committee at the central and state levels, the abolition of the Unified Collection System, and the dismantling of the enabling structure in all media outlets, especially official ones.

Final phase of the Sudan Framework Agreement

Sudanese media reported that the final stage of the Sudanese political framework agreement between the forces of freedom and change and the Sudanese Sovereignty Council headed by Abdul Fattah al-Burhan is now within reach in Sudan, although some issues are still pending.

On 16 November, sources on both sides reported that the framework agreement was “essential” as a first step to ending the protracted political crisis triggered by last year’s coup in Sudan.

In September, the Sudan Bar Association Steering Committee presented a draft transitional constitution to the UN Tripartite Mechanism, the African Union and the Intergovernmental Authority on Development.

Recently, supporters of al-Bashir’s Muslim Brotherhood organized demonstrations to protest their failure to participate in the talks. However, the Popular Congress Party (PCP), which is ideologically affiliated with the terrorist group, and the Unionist Party (DUP), both participated in the negotiations and refused to sign the agreement.

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