Newsletter

An open letter to all Sudanese: – Sudanile

In the name of God, the most gracious, the most merciful
February 18, 2024
Ambassador Nasraldin Wali

An open letter to all Sudanese:

Sudan first:

Dear brother:

Do not contribute to the loss of the homeland.
Do not work to break up your country,
Put your country before yourself,
Nothing is valuable without a homeland.
Sudan…is bigger than this miserable situation.

The Sudanese people…are taller than this decadence!
Every minute that passes in our country, the homeland is being torn apart, pure lives are being lost, innocent blood is being shed, displacement, deportation, plundering, rape, and blind destruction are spreading across Sudan, and there is no real horizon for a solution!

It is a matter of overcoming and transcending a war that is taking place over the body of the nation, a war whose parties we know, but let us think outside the box. In the region in which we live, there are countries that want to fan the flames and continue the war more than those parties until the agenda of tearing Sudan apart is completed, and they are very happy to see Sudan, weak, Torn apart, so that they can benefit from this by expanding on our borders, and plundering and destroying our resources, and they and their agendas are not hidden from me, and there too, and that is a fact; There are international forces that are in the same boat, but they do not disclose their intentions publicly, but on the other hand, they are reluctant to do anything visible and tangible, except for statements and declarations from time to time, stressing and calling for an end to the war, and emphasizing the support of the Sudanese people in their ordeal, political rivalry. The frenzy on the Sudanese plate is cooking slowly in various capitals, to serve various agendas! This piece will be eaten by many hands! The ambitions of the regional powers are represented in: the nightmare population explosion that they are suffering from, the limited amount of land reclaimed for agriculture, the atrophy, scarcity or absence of natural resources, and the lack or scarcity of water. All of these are factors that will push the peoples of those countries that surround us to seek expansion at the expense of Sudan, at a time when we are in a state of war, division, and security chaos, and in the absence of rational governance that is aware of our national interests and elevates them above narrow personal interests.

The matter of Sudan, my brothers, is in our hands, we Sudanese, alone, and no one else. It is like an ember that only those who step on it can feel, and we are the ones who step on the ember, and others, no matter how much they try to gather their thoughts, will not feel that pressure, as we feel it.

Come, let us call for a common word:

Let us leave aside watching the war as spectators. We live in a whirlpool and a narrow circle whose borders and horizons are the analysis of what is happening. It may be true or disappointing, or the shameful alignment that deviates from true patriotism whose time has come. This is not the time to blame each other. The facts will not change, nor will the positions change. History will decide. Let us leave that for another time. But, I believe, we must look beyond the tip of our nose. Time is a serious time, and time is a time for a homeland, and let each of us feel our patriotism and our position on preventing the sweeping slide of our homeland on all fronts, and let us stand as an impenetrable bulwark, to prevent the loss of our identity, the tearing of our cultural cohesion, and the blow to our unity. True patriotism calls on us to be sensitive to our consciences and our positions on the conspiracy that surrounds our country, and to stop the war among us. The human heart is his guide, and we awaken and awaken that voice deep within us. Peoples are tested and examined, and we are in a difficult test, but it is not impossible. The Sudanese-African wisdom rooted in our blood is still running in our veins, and it remains. Let us shake off the dust of partisanship, fanaticism, regionalism, and tribalism. And let us hold on to its embers, to guide us on our increasingly lost path in shallow, stagnant waters. Our feet will inevitably drag (God forbid) towards a rushing river if we do not seek advice. And our sight will be diverted from the right path.

Within this personal statement, I would like to say the following:

Raising the slogan: Sudan first.

My dear brother, my dear sister:

Do you agree (do you agree) to stop the war and form a caretaker civilian government?

Simple questionnaire:

A call we make to ourselves and to all Sudanese inside and outside the country. Perhaps he will find an listening ear, a discriminating mind, and an aware conscience!

Let us now agree on the importance of stopping the war, as an urgent priority, to preserve the dignity of our people and our people, to prevent the reasons for tearing our homeland apart, and to prevent the loss of the future of our generations inside the homeland and in the forced migration diaspora, and let us agree on a common word between us.

Let us make stopping the war a gateway to restoring our homeland, as follows:
First, a bilateral, simultaneous and compatible declaration of a commitment to stop the war.
Secondly, both sides of the war pledged to refrain from resorting to force to achieve their ambitions and goals.
Third, enhancing the value of a peaceful negotiated solution, in order to reach the minimum demands.
Fourth, a commitment to stop media campaigns, exchanges and mutual accusations, and to adhere to wisdom in action and reaction.
Fifthly, satisfaction of national, regional and international oversight, to supervise the process of silencing the guns in all parts of Sudan.

Ceasefire oversight:

They are as follows:

– Separating the warring forces, removing them and leaving the capital and other Sudanese cities at an appropriate, agreed-upon distance (establishing a Buffer Zone), activating the joint international monitoring mechanism, and involving:
• Representatives of the youth resistance committees, and members of the Sudanese police,
• Enhancing remote monitoring mechanisms, through satellites and remote-controlled aircraft,
• Broadcasting media awareness directed to the public to help report any violations occurring in residential neighborhoods, public facilities, and strategic locations.
• Imposing a curfew in the entire capital, Khartoum, in its three cities, and unsafe cities, and a curfew (including marches), starting at six in the evening and ending at six in the morning, for a period determined by the joint monitoring mechanism, and subject to renewal.

Treating the effects of war:

1- Agreeing to form an expanded committee that includes professional, scientific and legal competencies, composed of national figures, who have the ability to work under the exceptional circumstances left by the war, in order to address all forms of the effects on the lives of Sudanese people affected by the war, and to conduct studies and evaluation of what The country had catastrophic effects on all aspects of life, social and economic, and the resulting destruction of facilities and infrastructure at the civil level.

2- Evaluating the damages that occurred to citizens and state property. An independent legal committee is entrusted with the task of presenting a study of compensation for all damages that occurred during the war period.

3- A highly qualified military committee will be formed to study and evaluate the damage to the country’s military capabilities with the aim of seeking compensation for those damages.

Sixth, the mutual commitment to agree to form a civilian-led government that is acceptable to the Sudanese people, through a general and comprehensive referendum for all Sudanese, by asking one question: (Do you accept stopping the war and forming a temporary civilian caretaker government until the general elections are held or not?).

Seventh, agreeing on the mechanisms and supervising all these issues is left to a group of Sudanese wise men, and the focus is on finding a consensus, at a minimum, to form a caretaker government, made up of independent national competencies, that agrees to give priority to the country’s supreme national interest, is attested to its integrity and uprightness, and is entrusted with a mission. Running the helm of government for a transitional period with specific dates and timelines for the priorities to be achieved, agreed upon by the Sudanese people in a comprehensive referendum.

Eighth, I propose to nominate Professor Mahdi Amin Al-Toum (whom I have never met, but I have come across his patriotic stances, visions and sincere patriotic proposal), a university professor and national expert with outstanding national, regional and international scientific and intellectual contributions, to head a committee of wise men concerned with interim management tasks. Supervising the launch of the referendum, supervising the monitoring of the ceasefire, and the endeavors and steps to form the interim government, and leaving him the right to choose someone who he enjoys independence, competence, and integrity to join this committee.

And the God of the intent behind.

n.wally08@gmail.com