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by Nimeiri (1983–4), then went into exile in the UK. After Nimeiri’s
overthrow in 1985 he returned to Khartoum as editor of the independent
Sudan Times, going into exile again after the 1989 NIF coup and editing the
independent monthly Sudan Democratic Gazette. He wrote in support of the
SPLM/A but broke with Garang over the slave redemption programmes
(buying back of southerners abducted by northern militias) in which he
was involved. After the CPA in 2005 he was appointed advisor to Presi-
dent al-Bashir. He leads the South Sudan Democratic Forum, one of the
southern parties in opposition to the SPLM.
Gadalla GubaRa al-Faki (1920–2008). Sudan’s first professional
film-maker and a pioneer of African cinema. Born in Khartoum and
educated at Gordon Memorial College, he was first exposed to film
making while serving in the British Army Signal Corps in North Africa
during the Second World War. After the war, he was employed by the
Anglo-Egyptian government to produce educational documentaries on
Sudan’s agricultural schemes. He later became the Director of the film
section of the Ministry of Information. In 1974 he left government service
and established his own film studio, ‘Gad Studio’, in Khartoum. In 1979 he
made the prize-winning Tajuj, an epic love story set in eastern Sudan and
the first feature film produced in Sudan. In a career spanning over sixty
years, he produced a total of 31 documentaries and four feature films.
Ghazi Salah al-Din Attabani (b. 1951). Prominent politician
in the ruling National Congress Party. Born in Omdurman, he studied
medicine at the University of Khartoum, where he returned to teach
after obtaining a PhD in Clinical Biochemistry from the University of
Surrey, UK. A long-time member of the Islamist movement, he has held
numerous official positions since the Islamist military coup in 1989,
including Minister of Culture and Information, Secretary-General of the
National Assembly, and leader of the Government of Sudan negotiating
team at Machakos. In February 2010 he signed the short-lived prelimi-
nary framework agreement in Ndjamena, Chad, with the Justice and
The Sudan Handbook, edited by John Ryle, Justin Willis, Suliman Baldo and Jok Madut Jok. © 2011 Rift Valley Institute and contributors Equality Movement, the largest rebel group in Darfur.
(www.riftvalley.net).