KHARTOUM: A group of Sudanese military officers were sentenced to between two and five years in prison yesterday for their role in an alleged coup last year, a lawyer said.
According to analysts, the case highlights turmoil within the regime of President Omar Hassan Al Bashir, who himself seized power in a putsch 24 years ago. “Today the military court issued its decision about the members of SAF (army) who have been accused of a coup. It gave various jail sentences from five years to two years against nine of the soldiers,” one of their lawyers, Hashiem Al Jali, told AFP.
All were expelled from the military but a 10th accused was freed for lack of evidence, Jali said, after a trial that lasted about three weeks.
Magdi El Gizouli, a fellow at the Rift Valley Institute, described the verdict as “a political statement not a court ruling.”
The heaviest sentence of five years went to Brigadier Mohammed Ibrahim, Jali said of the man who played a role in the 1989 events which put Bashir in power.
He called it a “heavy punishment” for all the soldiers and said the defence team would look at ways of appealing to the military commander.
But a regional political expert told AFP the penalty was in fact relatively light as they could have faced the firing squad.
“It means that President Bashir would like to calm the situation,” said the expert, asking for anonymity.
“The regime is scared about (its) opponents.”
When the trial began he said that the case against them was “not very clear” and the evidence scant, with officials releasing only vague details about the plot. “The problem is that the people who did this this time were hardcore supporters of Bashir, once upon a time,” Gizouli said, adding that the possibility of an appeal provides room for further political negotiation.
Most of the detainees are close to a vocal group of former volunteer mujahedeen fighters and an elite group within them called Al Saihun or “tourists for the sake of God”. AFP