Sudan .. Organizations traded the needy through Doha's poisoned funds

Side of the capital Khartoum

The decision of the Sudan Humanitarian Aid Commission (HAC) to ban 24 registered organizations, unions and institutions in the country highlighted the way they were managed and funded. According to information obtained by Sky News Arabia, most of these organizations were financed by direct or indirect national flows or monthly payments from the Republican Palace budget.

Among the banned organizations is "Sanad Charity", which was run by Widad Babiker, wife of ousted president Omar al-Bashir, and "Al-Bir Wal-Tawasol", owned by the wife of Ali Osman Taha, a prominent leader of the National Congress.

Strangely, the list did not include two of the most dangerous Brotherhood organizations, the "Nawafiz Alkhair" led by the man believed to have been the architect of the process of Osama bin Laden's entry to Sudan, as well as the "Maarij" headed by Ali al-Bashir, brother of Omar Hassan al-Bashir.

Sharaf al-Din Ali Mukhtar, secretary general of Windows of Goodness, was one of three Muslim Brotherhood members who established Khartoum's relationship with Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and the ensuing disasters that have afflicted Sudan and its people for more than 20 years.

According to confirmed reports, Mukhtar, Omar Abdulmarouf and Mutraf Siddique met with bin Laden in the Pakistani city of Hyderabad in the early nineties and pledged with him to establish a caliphate from the ocean to the Gulf with Sudan as the starting point, and went to Khartoum regiments of extremists and nerds.

Mutraf Siddique was a leader of the Popular Security Service, an official of the African Relief Agency, and one of the movement's youths involved in securing Omar Bashir's June 30, 1989 coup.

According to Mohamed Mahjoub, who has long worked for a number of non-governmental organizations, many of the organizations involved in the dissolution have been engaged in suspicious activities, pursuing the agenda of the Muslim Brotherhood and terrorist organizations, and receiving massive funding and facilities from the Bashir regime.

These include customs exemptions and tax exemptions on cars and many devices and equipment that are not used for relief, humanitarian or basic purposes for which these organizations were established but for the benefit of the organization.

The facilities obtained by banned organizations over the last five years are estimated at $ 750 million.

In addition, organizations such as Sanad, run by Widad Babiker, the second wife of al-Bashir, have been involved in massive banking and commercial corruption and have received hundreds of millions of dollars in public treasury funds from Qatar and Turkey.

Mahjoub points out that the Humanitarian Aid Commission has decreed laws that obligate foreign organizations to work through organizations registered exclusively for members of the regime and whose boards are headed by influential members of the Brotherhood, including ministers. All non-compliant organizations were expelled on the grounds that they had an external agenda.

 Mamoun Juha, an expert in the field of humanitarian aid, asserts that the write-off organizations were a tool in the hands of the regime's operatives through which they passed many suspicious activities. He pointed out that these organizations have played through the cadres of the Muslim Brotherhood known on the tension of ethnic conflicts, taking advantage of the huge funding received from governments and certain destinations.

 He added, "These organizations did not hide their loyalty to the Muslim Brotherhood regime, and they were hideouts of corruption and spying on humanitarian activities."

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