The Sudan Handbook

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kEy fiGuREs in sudanEsE histoRy, CultuRE & PolitiCs 335

political group calling for the unity of the Nile Valley. He became Sudan’s
first Prime Minister in 1954 and, in a reversal of his earlier support for
union with Egypt, led the country to independence in January 1956. He
was forced to resign as Prime Minister when 21 members of his National
Union Party defected to form a new party. In 1965, a year after the collapse
of General Abboud’s military regime, al-Azhari was appointed to the
largely symbolic position of President of Sudan, but was overthrown by
Nimeiri’s coup in 1969. He died later that year.

JaafaR NimEiRi (1930–2009). Politician, born in Omdurman, the son
of a postman. After graduating from military college in 1952, Jaafar Nimeiri
joined a group of officers committed to socialism and pan-Arabism. As
leader of the Free Officers who seized power in a military coup in 1969,
Nimeiri ruled Sudan for the next 16 years. He won acclaim in 1972 when
he signed the Addis Ababa Agreement, which ended the first civil war
and granted semi-autonomy to a new Southern Region. But Nimeiri is
also remembered for his increasingly authoritarian rule and unscrupu-
lous political pragmatism. At first affiliated to the communist party and
a proponent of secular government, by the early 1980s he had become
increasingly isolated and unpopular and shifted towards the Islamist
movement. In 1983 he passed the ‘September Laws’, which introduced
sharia criminal law. He was deposed in 1985 following popular protests
against rising fuel and food prices and a general strike that paralyzed the
country. In 1999, Nimeiri returned to Sudan, from exile in Egypt, at the
invitation of President Omar al-Bashir. He died ten years later.

John GaRanG dE MabioR (1945–2005). Leader of the Sudan People’s
Liberation Army and Movement, principal rebel group in Sudan’s second
civil war. A Dinka, born in Kongor County, he completed his secondary
school education in Tanzania, from where he won a scholarship to
Grinnell College in Iowa to study economics. When he returned to
Sudan, he joined the Anyanya guerrilla movement not long before the
end of the first civil war. After the 1972 Addis Ababa Agreement he was

The Sudan Handbook, edited by John Ryle, Justin Willis, Suliman Baldo and Jok Madut Jok. © 2011 Rift Valley Institute and contributors integrated into the Sudanese Army. He returned to Iowa to complete a


(www.riftvalley.net).

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