Sudan's former president Omar Hassan al-Bashir sits inside a cage during the hearing of the verdict that convicted him of corruption charges in a court in Khartoum, Sudan, December 14, 2019. |
Khartoum,
SUDAN
Sudan has
seized the assets of ousted President Omar al-Bashir’s now dissolved party, a
senior member of the country’s ruling sovereign council said.
The
National Congress Party’s (NCP) assets were seized under a law that was passed
in November and ordered the party’s dissolution.
The
law’s implementation is widely seen as a test of how far Sudan’s transitional
authorities are willing or able to go to dismantle the system built up by
Bashir, who was ousted in April after nearly three decades in power.
The assets of four private
television channels and newspapers have been frozen but they have the right to
appeal, said Mohamed al-Faki, a sovereign council member who is also deputy
head of a legal committee assessing the NCP’s assets.
“These
institutions were financed by state funds and we want to return the money to
the Sudanese people,” he told a news conference late on Tuesday.
The
editor of Al-Sudani newspaper, one of the media outlets that had its assets
frozen, denied the accusations
“We
didn’t receive funds from anybody. They are targeting the newspaper and press
freedom,” the editor, Diaeldin Belal, said.
The
ministry of finance has also taken over the al-Quran al-Kareem Society, a
religious charity organisation which Taha Othman, a member of the sovereign
council legal committee, said had links to Bashir’s former government.
Othman said the ministry of
religious affairs would now manage the organisation. The al-Quran al-Kareem
Society was not immediately available for comment. - Africa
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