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OMAR AL-BASHIR: SUDAN'S OUSTED PRESIDENT

Published14 August 2019
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Image source, AFP
Image caption,
Omar al-Bashir took power in a 1989 coup and was toppled by the military in 2019

Sudan's ousted President Omar al-Bashir's career has been defined by war. He
came to power in a military coup in 1989 and ruled what was until 2011 Africa's
largest country with an iron fist.

When he seized power, Sudan was in the midst of a 21-year civil war between
north and south.

Although his government signed a deal to end that conflict in 2005, another one
was breaking out at the same time - in the western region of Darfur, where Mr
Bashir is accused of organising war crimes and crimes against humanity by the
International Criminal Court (ICC).

Despite an international arrest warrant issued by the ICC, he won consecutive
elections in 2010 and 2015. However, his last victory was marred by a boycott
from the main opposition parties.

The arrest warrant has led to an international travel ban. However, Mr Bashir
has still made diplomatic visits to various countries, including Egypt, Saudi
Arabia and South Africa. He was forced into a hasty departure from South Africa
in June 2015 after a court considered whether to enforce the arrest warrant.

Before taking the helm, he was a commander in the army, responsible for leading
operations in the south against the late rebel leader John Garang.



When he signed the peace deal with Garang and his Sudan People's Liberation
Movement, he took pains to stress the deal had not been a defeat. "We did not
sign it after we had been broken. We signed it while we were at the peak of our
victories," he said.




ACCUSATIONS AGAINST OMAR AL-BASHIR

Genocide

 * Killing members of the Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa ethnic groups
 * Causing these groups serious bodily or mental harm
 * Inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about these groups'
   physical destruction

Crimes against humanity

 * Murder
 * Extermination
 * Forcible transfer
 * Rape
 * Torture

War crimes

 * Attacks on civilians in Darfur
 * Pillaging towns and villages

His goal was always to keep a unified Sudan, but a referendum on secession for
South Sudan was agreed as part of the peace deal.

In the January 2011 referendum, about 99% of South Sudanese voters were in
favour of separation. The independent state of South Sudan was declared six
months later.



While he agreed to let South Sudan go, his attitude to Darfur, where a conflict
has raged since 2003 when rebels took up arms at alleged government
discrimination, has been characterised by belligerence.

But he denies international accusations that he has backed Arab Janjaweed
militias accused of war crimes against the region's black African communities.

 * Darfur conflict: A bloody stalemate


MILITARY BACKGROUND

Mr Bashir was born in 1944 to a farming family in northern Sudan - then
Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. He is a member of al-Bedairyya al-Dahmashyya, a Bedouin
tribe belonging to the larger Ja'alin group.

He joined the Egyptian army as a young man and rose through the ranks, fighting
in the 1973 war against Israel.

Little is known about his private life. He has no children and took a second
wife in his 50s. He married the widow of Ibrahim Shams al-Din, considered a war
hero in the north - as an example to others, he said.

The long civil war had seen many colleagues fall, and he implored others to
marry again so war widows could be taken care of.


Image source, AFP
Image caption,
Little is known about Omar al-Bashir's private life

As head of state, his focus largely remained soldiering - the political lead
being taken by two other figures.

The first in the 1990s was Hassan al-Turabi, a prominent Sunni Muslim who until
his death in 2016 advocated an Islamic state and ushered in a bill introducing
Sharia to all provinces but the south.

After they fell out in 2000, Mr Turabi told the BBC: "He's a military person who
has been in power for a while and he wants to assert military power."

Then Osman Ali Taha, a politician who negotiated the north-south deal, came to
the fore. But his influence waned and the president took centre stage.

 * Why the end of US sanctions hasn't helped Sudan
 * Sudan's fashion police shave off afros

Sudan analyst Alex de Waal said Mr Bashir's longevity in office was probably
down to the fact that powerful rivals in the ruling National Congress Party
distrusted each other more than they did Mr Bashir.

But political unrest gained momentum quickly. Nationwide protests first started
in December 2018 after the government announced that prices for fuel and bread
would rise.

This turned into a wider call for Mr Bashir and his government to step down. Mr
Bashir declared a state of emergency in February 2019, reshuffling his cabinet
and replacing all state governors with members of the army and security forces.

Image source, Reuters
Image caption,
Demonstrators marching in Khartoum during anti-government protests in January
2019

After months of unrest, Sudan's military stepped in and finally toppled Mr
Bashir on 11 April 2019.

Mr Bashir was later charged with incitement and involvement in the killing of
protesters.

He also faces corruption charges, after prosecutors said a large hoard of
foreign currency was found at his home.


OIL MONEY FLOWS - AND LEAVES

For a while during his presidency, there were pockets full of dollars as the oil
flowed, controls were lifted and the telecommunications system revolutionised.
But the economy floundered since the secession of the south, which took
three-quarters of the country's oil with it. Ever since, belts have had to be
tightened in Khartoum.

Mr Bashir - who became president when it was punishable by death to be found in
possession of US dollars - has denied accusations that access to government
funds and oil money was an underlying cause of the unrest in Darfur.

It was perhaps inevitable that a soldier-president could only be brought down by
the armed forces. Once they lost faith in his ability to maintain stability in
the country, there was little he could do.

Despite the corruption trial, there will be little appetite to send him to also
face justice at the ICC, as some of those who fought for him in Darfur retain
considerable power and influence under Sudan's new dispensation.


RELATED TOPICS

 * Sudan
 * Khartoum
 * Omar al-Bashir


MORE ON THIS STORY

 * Sudan's secret hit squads
   
   Published13 February 2019

 * Why people keep cash under the mattress in Sudan
   
   Published10 January 2019

 * The fashion police who are shaving off afros
   
   Published19 November 2018

 * Why the end of US sanctions hasn't helped Sudan
   
   Published11 July 2018

 * Big and beautiful?
   
   Published20 July 2017


RELATED INTERNET LINKS

 * ICC

 * Making Sense of Darfur blog - a guide to the ICC controversy

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.




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