328 thE sudan handbook
Abd al-Rahman SiWaR al-Dahab (b.1930). Born in El-Obeid
graduated from the Sudanese Military Academy and was Minister of
Defence and Commander-in-Chief under President Jaafar Nimeiri.
He seized power after Nimeiri was ousted by the popular uprisings,
the intifada, of 1985. He became chairman of the Transitional Military
Council, which ruled along with a civilian Council of Ministers, and
made a public commitment to restore democracy within twelve months.
He duly handed the presidency over to Sadiq al-Mahdi and his elected
government in 1986. A year later he became chairman of the Islamic Call
organization, al-Dawa al Islamiyya. He lives in Qatar.
Abdullah El-TayEb (1921–2003). Academic from Ed-Damer, known
as the ‘dean’ of Arabic literature in Sudan. A graduate of Gordon
Memorial College, he obtained his PhD from the School of Oriental and
African Studies, University of London, in 1950 before being appointed
as a Professor of Arabic at Khartoum University in 1956. He became the
Dean of the Faculty of Arts, and Vice Chancellor of the University. He was
also the founding Director of Juba University. In 1990 he became Presi-
dent of the Arabic Language Council at the University of Khartoum. He
wrote poetry, plays and literary studies, and produced the first collection
of northern folk stories. He is remembered for his colloquial Sudanese
Arabic interpretation of the Quran on a radio programme running from
1985 to 1993; for series of radio and television lectures on classical Arabic
literature and history; and for his canonical work, The Guide to the Making
and Understanding of Arab Poetry.
AbEl AliER KWai (b.1933). Southern Sudanese politician, lawyer and
judge from Bor. He studied Law in Khartoum and London, and become
Sudan’s first southern judge. He did not join the first southern rebellion,
but was a prominent leader of the Southern Front, the largest southern
party at the time. He was elected to the national parliament in 1968 and
held various ministerial positions in President Nimeiri’s government.
As Minister for Southern Affairs he played a key role negotiating the
The Sudan Handbook, edited by John Ryle, Justin Willis, Suliman Baldo and Jok Madut Jok. © 2011 Rift Valley Institute and contributors Addis Ababa Peace Agreement in 1972. He was the first Vice-President
(www.riftvalley.net).