Sudan’s Justice System in Free Fall: Attorney General’s Al Jazeera Interview Exposes Alarming Reality
Professor Babiker Faisal, head of the Executive Office of the Federal Assembly and leader of the Coordination of Civil Democratic Forces, said in response to the statements made by the Attorney General in his interview that the Attorney General’s statements reflect the abyss in which the justice in it. equipment in Sudan has decreased because of the Salvation regime and its military vassal. In exclusive statements to Sudan, Babiker explained the inability of the weak Public Prosecutor to provide any evidence that would require the submission of a memorandum to the international police to arrest the leaders of the Coordination of Democratic Civilian Forces (Taqaddum). political accusations to continue his professional and moral downfall known to him since he was an agent of the Consumer Prosecution and subsequently a Prosecutor for crimes in Darfur, where he ignored all the bases of justice and became a tool in the hands of political power. The Al Jazeera interview proved that the case was crude and without the slightest legal basis to base it on.
The Attorney General made the following statements in his interview with Al Jazeera:
The Public Prosecutor: We will pursue leaders who come forward and demand that Interpol arrest them
(SUNA) – The Public Prosecutor, Mawlana Al-Fatih Muhammad Issa Tayfour, confirmed that the authorities will continue to pursue the leaders of Taqadum against whom arrest warrants have been issued against the background of their collusion with the rebels’ Quick Aid militia, stating that Interpol is requested to arrest them.
Tayfour said, “We will pursue Hamdok and those with him on the list of 16 people according to the law and anywhere until they are arrested and tried on Sudanese soil,” adding that enough of proof and evidence that has proven their part in what has been attributed to them, and that this proof is presented to be advertised before the courts. The Public Prosecutor added, in a televised interview with Al Jazeera Today, that Abdullah Hamdok and those who are with him among the leaders of the Coordination of Civilian Forces (Taqaddum) have shared roles between them and the rebellion, and that they are partners, by note that there are citizens who have filed legal cases against them, which is enough to convict them. Tayfour said Hamdok was on a list of 16 people wanted before justice, and those who come after them on subsequent lists will also be pursued. SUNA points out that the National Committee for War Crimes and Crimes in the Rapid Aid Forces issued an order in April this year to arrest several leaders of the Coordination of Civilian Forces (Taqaddum), led by Abdullah Hamdok, head of coordination.
