Mohammed Abdul Ghaffar
Sudan’s Muslim Brotherhood branch, Kezan, has been living through some difficult weeks following several resolutions ending the terrorist organization’s control of many important sectors in Khartoum.
Justice sector
The Sudanese revolutionary forces succeeded in ending the Brotherhood’s control over the Ministry of Justice. Nemat Abdallah Mohamed Khair was appointed head of the judiciary, becoming the first woman to hold this position in Sudan, while Taj al-Sir al-Habr was appointed the country’s Secretary General.
The Brotherhood sought to stop this appointment for long periods, because the new minister comes from the womb of the revolution, which means that it will take tough positions against the group’s terrorism.
Former Sudanese judge Saif al-Dawla Hamdanallah wrote on his official Facebook page on Friday, October 11 celebrating the appointment, saying, “We lost the battle for the inauguration of Abdul Qadir Muhammad and Muhammad al-Hafiz in the posts of Chief Justice and Attorney General, but we won the war by taking over their alternatives, Nemat Abdallah and Professor Taj al-Sir al-Habr, after the followers of the deep state did everything in their power to thwart their appointment. We congratulate the revolution on the beginning of the long-awaited process of justice. The completion of this appointment begins the first steps to rebuild the judiciary and the prosecution, not reform them.”
Awqaf Ministry trembles
After decades of the Brotherhood’s control of the Ministry of Awqaf (Endowments) and religious councils in Sudan, harnessing all potential to spread the group’s ideology through mosques and religious lessons and taking advantage of the state of religiosity among the Sudanese people, it aims to fuel extremism and restrict all religious ideas inappropriate to the group’s ideology.
The Sudanese cabinet issued a decision on the recommendation of Awqaf Minister Nasruddin Mufreh, exempting Director of the Hajj and Umrah Department Omer Mustafa, Director of Awqaf Omar Ahmad Omar Al-Imam, and Secretary General of the Supreme Council for Islamic Dawah Abdullah al-Ardab from their posts. All are members of the terrorist Brotherhood political movement.
Universities reject Brotherhood
To spread its ideas, the Brotherhood relies on mosque-goers who can be influenced by the group’s false religious manifestations and university students whom they can exploit and brainwash in order to carry out reckless and irrational plans.
To reduce this, the ruling sovereign council in Sudan announced on Thursday, September 19 the abolition of the terrorist group’s “jihadist units”, which are widespread in the Sudanese universities, while reserving their headquarters.
Mohammed al-Faki Suleiman, spokesman for the military council, said the decision was aimed at creating a climate in the country for the resumption of university studies, which are scheduled to begin in October.
Suleiman said that there are decisions to direct the university guard to take control of the buildings and records of the jihadist units, saying that this decision comes in the light of consultations by the council with Prime Minister Abdallah Hamdouk to reopen universities to ensure the safety of students and the continuity of study without disturbance.
It is clear that the governing bodies in Sudan are trying very hard to rid the country of the terrorist Brotherhood and remove it from leadership positions in order to ensure everyone works peacefully, both politically and economically, especially with the tendency for the perpetual use of violence in public life.
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