http://www.asharq-e.com/news.asp?section=2&id=32756

Islamist Division in Sudan: Reality or Ploy

31/01/2013 
By Osman Mirghani


There has been a lot of talk recently about deep divisions and rifts in the 
ranks plaguing the ruling Islamic Movement in Sudan, as a result of 
accumulating governance errors, corruption, and the inner circle’s 
monopolization of decision making. This is in addition to the struggle over who 
will succeed President Al-Bashir, which has intensified after reports of his 
illness that required him to travel abroad twice for treatment. Some aspirants 
from among the ruling party and Islamist Movement have rushed to take up 
advanced positions now, rather than waiting until the president’s term ends 
next year. Several issues came to a head after the regime announced it had 
thwarted a coup attempt late last year and arrested a number of military and 
civilian personnel responsible. It soon became clear to the people from their 
names that the perpetrators belonged to the Islamist movement and the ruling 
party. Indeed, some of them were among the most prominent fighters in the ranks 
of the regime who protected it on both the military and security levels. Then 
the pillars of the regime did their utmost to launch an attack on what they 
described as a coup and sabotage attempt, forgetting or overlooking the fact 
that they originally came to power via a military coup that overthrew a 
democratically elected government. This confirmed that political Islamist 
movements are sick with the desire for power, to the extent that they do not 
accept the practice of true democracy and do not believe in the concept of the 
peaceful transfer of power through the ballot box. 
>From here, the Sudanese people are divided. On the one hand there are those 
>who believe the talk of an explosion of inherent differences, reaching the 
>stage whereby they threaten the survival of the regime itself, after it became 
>bloated and ravaged by the disease of power and domination. On the other hand 
>there are those who dismiss this as the Islamists’ game of tricks to distract 
>the people and absorb the rising popular anger in light of the severe economic 
>crisis, the high cost of living, and the outrage towards corruption. These 
>factors led to the streets of Khartoum, and a number of other Sudanese cities, 
>witnessing a series of demonstrations and angry protests which the regime 
>quelled with severe repression to prevent their spread. The Sudanese street 
>remains motivated after the Arab Spring uprisings, which revived memories of 
>their first popular revolution in October 1964 and then their second uprising 
>in April 1985, both times overthrowing military regimes.

The coup attempt was revealed a few days after the Islamic Movement’s general 
conference, which was held this time amid unprecedented media clamor, after 
previous conferences had been held in secrecy and away from the media 
limelight. Much talk was leaked about sharp differences, calls for reform, 
disengagement between the party and the state, and even talk of reconsidering 
the overlapping relationship between the Islamic Movement and the ruling 
National Congress Party. This talk was seen as the culmination of a wider 
debate about the so-called “thousand brothers” memorandum, allegedly put 
forward by groups of youths within the movement and some of its “reformist” 
elders, to President Bashir, vice president Ali Osman Mohammed Taha, who is 
referred to as the “emir of the Islamic Movement”, along with other leading 
figures in the party, demanding a package of reforms. This memorandum was the 
talk of Sudanese councils for a few months and raised many questions and 
speculation that the regime failed to resolve with a clear statement, but 
rather it heightened this atmosphere with ambiguous, conflicting statements 
from a number of officials or those affiliated with the regime. 

Yet the timing of the publishing of the memorandum contributed to an increase 
in uncertainty about whether the whole process is another maneuver or trick 
from the National Islamic Front, which has recently changed its name, not for 
the first time, to the Islamic Movement. The memorandum, as is rumored, was put 
forward in December 2011 after months of demonstrations that erupted in Sudan. 
These demonstrations had raised fears among some of those in power that the 
infection of the Arab Spring would be transferred to Khartoum, especially in 
the aftermath of the secession of the south, which the Bashir regime considered 
responsible for the protests and their consequences. From this standpoint, the 
memorandum, at least for those skeptical of the regime, seemed like an attempt 
to contain the popular anger or save the regime from itself by calling for 
internal reform rather than regime change. However, on the other hand there 
were those who believed that the regime had already begun eroding as a result 
of its bloated and corrupt nature, and the sense of marginalization among many 
of the movement’s youth. There were also strong feelings of anger among a 
number of military leaders who had borne the brunt of the fighting and had 
defended the regime for many years, only to see their sacrifices wasted because 
of in-fighting and squabbles over the spoils of war. In this context there 
appears to be a link between the “thousand brothers’ memorandum and another one 
allegedly signed by 700 officers in the armed forces, where the vast of 
majority of recruits are from the Islamic Movement or at least sympathize with 
it. The latter memorandum was submitted to President Bashir in October 2010 to 
demand that the path be rectified and to bring his errors to his attention. 
Some of these signatories were also among those arrested in the coup attempt in 
Khartoum at the end of November last year, with the most prominent signatory, 
Brigadier General Mohammed Ibrahim, being detained and considered the leader of 
the alleged coup. 

There are strong indications that the differences within the corridors of power 
are not entirely artificial. It is true that some may have been manufactured by 
the security services or from inside the Islamic Movement, but this does not 
deny the fact that some stem from varying views, or from the struggle for 
influence and positions. The problem is that those at odds with the regime want 
to salvage it rather than overthrow it, and even if they resort to a military 
coup they just want to reproduce the regime in a new guise that guarantees 
their stay in power for God knows how long. Even for those who disagree among 
themselves, the survival of power within their hands remains the goal. How else 
can we explain the remarks of the Islamic Movement’s new secretary general, 
AL-Zubair Ahmed Hassan, who said that he would work to reunite the Islamists in 
the National Congress Party and the People’s Congress Party, the latter led by 
Turabi. He added that if he failed in doing so, then it could in fact be in the 
interests of Islam in Sudan for the two parties or congresses to remain 
independent, because it may allow them to succeed one another.

Such talk clearly demonstrates the intention of the Islamists in Sudan to cling 
onto power, even if they disagree about the exact style or direction, because 
in the end they are merely different schools of thought within a single 
movement. Sudan’s experience and evidence shows that the Islamists only care 
about staying in power, even if they end up losing the rest of the country. 


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