The April 15 war that erupted between the Arab-Islamic Center, which has dominated the reins of power in Sudan since its independence, and the Arab Diaspora Alliance, which has worked together to Islamize and Arabize all the peoples of Sudan, did not come to answer the question of how Sudan is governed, but rather who governs Sudan.
The project (the Arab Gathering, which was manifested in the speech of Arab nomadic leaders from western Sudan, which was presented to former Prime Minister Sadiq al-Mahdi and before and after him in government, and the civilizational project) The two projects, which were implemented side by side, were not officially and publicly merged until the era of General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan after the overthrow of al-Bashir’s rule, as al-Burhan, the current head of the Sovereignty Council, was the secretary of the Janjaweed forces during their establishment and sponsorship in the Darfur region. The rulers of the center, the heads of the Sudanese state, under the auspices of the Armed Forces and Intelligence, created, trained and financed the Arab Diaspora militias with their various names (Marahil, Popular Defense, Janjaweed, Border Guard and Rapid Support), whose first and last goal is domination and demographic change at the expense of the indigenous peoples of Sudan, including the people of Chad and Central Africa.
Below is a quote from Sadiq al-Mahdi’s intellectual and historical observations on Sudan in “Sudanese Identity Between Founding and Deconstruction,” published Thursday, June 19, 2014 on “The Janjaweed and the issue of arming Arab tribes | Imam al-Sadiq al-Mahdi (alsadigalmahdi.com): “The brothers in the leadership once again submitted a request for help in urging citizens to join the armed forces to support them with men… To fill the shortage caused by the unwillingness of citizens to enlist, I issued a decree to form a committee from the Umma, Qawmi, Democratic Unionist and National Islamic Front parties to draft a law establishing the Popular Defense Forces under the command of the armed forces, but unfortunately the June 1989 coup took place before the committee completed its procedures and the National Islamic Front stole the idea and implemented the project in a way that made the Popular Defense Forces parallel to the armed forces and not subordinate to them. This is a wrong implementation of a good idea.” End quote.
The Sudanese Armed Forces, especially its commanders, are the ones who have ruled Sudan for the longest periods of time through military coups after its independence in 1956, along with the traditional tribal and religious parties and other parties of the center leaders who share the loyalty of the army officers to carry out the coups. The army generals and the parties of the center have a great responsibility for the injustice, marginalization, exclusion, Islamization, Arabization, looting, burning, rape, genocide and ethnic cleansing that Sudanese people are experiencing today.
The wars of the center on the periphery are an integral part of the implementation of the Treaty of Baqt between the Sudanese Nubian Kingdom of Al-Muqra and the invading Arab Islamic State, and that the discourse of the Arab gathering (Al-Quraysh 1, 2, etc.) is only one of the appendices to the Treaty of Baqt, which carried in its core the ideas of its leaders to colonize Africa and its people, not to spread the true Islamic religion, but for economic domination, identity, Arabization and demographic change.
The Sudanese nomadic Arabs and foreign diaspora Arabs who worked within the Marahil forces, the Janjaweed, the border guards and the Rapid Support to support the Sudanese Armed Forces to put down the civil and armed revolutions in the former South Sudan and in the Nuba Mountains, Blue Nile and Darfur regions and other regions, were and still are tools of the rulers of the center and Arab nationalism, because they are simply implementing plans and projects developed by what the Janjaweed call State 56 in their war against the Sudanese people in various regions to serve a regional agenda unrelated to nationalism, democracy and the renaissance of Sudan.
So, are the wars of the center on the periphery aimed at domination and demographic change or the dismantling of Sudan? Continued 2-5…