Nasredeen Abdulbari: Birth of TASIS Government Marks New Era in Sudan’s Modern History
Nairobi: Alsudanianews
Nasredeen Abdulbari, the former Minister of Justice, wrote in today’s article that the birth of the TASIS government on July 26 in Nyala al-Behair, far west Sudan, is a historic event. He stated that this birth, based on a bold and unprecedented charter and constitution, marks the most significant event in Sudan’s modern history since the birth of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement on May 16, 1983, in Bor, far south Sudan.
Abdulbari highlighted that the new government, with its headquarters in Nyala, has a non-secessionist agenda and will serve as the voice, refuge, protector, and servant of all citizens opposing the old Sudanese state’s brutality.
– He noted that this government will be a constant nightmare for Islamists and their power-hungry army, and an antidote to forces of the old Sudan trying to preserve crumbling structures and corrupt systems.
Abdulbari emphasized that sovereignty, historically abused by ruling elites through assaults on freedoms, corruption, and reckless foreign policies, has returned to its rightful owners: the vast majority of the Sudanese people.
The new government, with its non-secessionist agenda and headquarters in Nyala, will not only serve as the voice, refuge, protector, and servant of all citizens who oppose and have suffered from the continued existence and brutality of the failed Sudanese state, but will also be a constant nightmare for the Islamists and their arrogant, power-hungry army, and a steadfast antidote to all the forces of the old Sudan that are futilely trying to preserve the crumbling structures, collapsing institutions, and corrupt systems of their oppressive state, which—by all standards—has lost any justification for its continuation or existence.
Sovereignty, which the ruling elites have historically abused—at times through blatant assaults on political and civil freedoms, at other times through corruption, favoritism, and nepotism, and repeatedly through reckless foreign policies driven by narrow, ideological, and dogmatic minds—has today, in action rather than words, returned to its rightful owners: the vast majority of the Sudanese people, long excluded from centers of decision-making.
So, congratulations to these peoples—whose necks, despite the weight and duration of oppression, have remained uplifted in yearning for freedom and the dawn of a new Sudan—on the birth of their first founding government. And congratulations to the TASIS alliance on this glorious proclamation of a new political and constitutional order.