بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم
News Right Now: The Sudan Scuffle
Sudan’s fighting broke out April 15 between two commanders who just 18 months earlier jointly orchestrated a military coup to derail the nation’s transition to so-called ‘democracy’. The power struggle between the Sudanese armed forces chief, Gen. Abdel-Fattah Burhan, and the head of the Rapid Support Forces paramilitary group, Gen. Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, has millions of Sudanese cowering inside their homes and international agencies competing to evacuate their nationals and officials as quickly as possible.
Khartoum has been wracked with violence for nearly a week. At least 420 people have been killed. Sudanese civilians trapped by the sudden outbreak of fighting are desperately short of food, water and medicine, aid agencies said. “Morgues are full. Corpses litter the streets,” said Attiya Abdallah, head of the doctors’ union, on Monday according to the French Press Agency (AFP), saying that heavy shelling of south Khartoum had caused scores of new casualties. Explosions have inflicted heavy damages on Sudan's infrastructure, complicating civilians' efforts to flee. Widespread phone and internet outages have also been reported across the country, impacting stranded individuals' ability to communicate with embassy officials or friends and family outside of the country who can provide guidance.
The now opposing factions SAF and RSF staged a coup against the civilian government on 25/10/2021 and stopped the course of the transitional phase that took place between the two parties in an agreement signed on 21/8/2019, and it stipulated that the military would preside over the Sovereign Council for a period of 21 months, and then civilians would preside over it for 18 months. It was extended to 53 months after the Juba Agreement on 3/10/2020, so the October 25, 2021 coup came to make the British agents miss the opportunity, and prevent them from presiding over the sovereign council. This agreement saved America’s agents from falling and prosecution, and thus preserved America’s influence in Sudan, it prevented the British agents from dominating everything, as they controlled the political milieu. The conclusion is that by contemplating these current events in Sudan, it becomes clear that the international conflict in it has not changed. Rather, it is a conflict not in secret, but in the open between America, which controls Al-Burhan, his deputy and his group, on the one hand, and Freedom and Change and the parties allied with it from Britain’s agents and its followers on the other hand, and because neither of the two parties, America or Britain, has so far been unable to extend its influence in the military component and the civilian component together.
In conclusion, we affirm once again that Sudan will not see a glimmer of hope as long as there are agents working for this colonizer or for that colonizer, and they are fighting over an Islamic country. They do not care about the country’s revival, solving its problems, feeding its people and securing their needs. There is no way for people except to get rid of the agents and not follow them or follow their misguided path, but rather they have to follow the path of those who repented and called to Allah and worked to implement His rule and to unite Muslims and revive them under a Khilafah on the method of the Prophet (saw).
[وَمَنْ أَحۡسَنُ قَوْلاً مِّمَّنْ دَعَا إِلَى اللهِ وَعَمِلَ صَالِحاً وَّقَالَ إِنَّنِي مِنَ الْمُسْلِمِينَ]
“And who is better in speech than one who invites to Allah and does righteousness and says, “Indeed, I am of the Muslims.” [TMQ Fussilat: 33]
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