Sudan’s Taaishi promises aid, return for displaced

Sudan’s Tasis coalition’s new Prime Minister, Mohamed Hassan Al-Ta’aishi, outlined a sweeping programme of urgent reforms in his first speech after taking office. Al-Ta’aishi pledged immediate action to issue identification documents, while expanding access to water, electricity, health, and education, calling these foundations of stability.

He stressed that the plight of displaced communities must be resolved, with conditions created for their safe return to homes scarred by conflict. The Prime Minister vowed to combat terrorism and dismantle the Islamic Movement allied with the General Abdel Fattah al Burhan’s army, branding it a global security threat.

He urged regional partners and the wider international community to unite against extremism, positioning Sudan as a willing ally in this struggle. Turning to foreign relations, Al-Ta’aishi promised stronger ties with neighbours, alongside unconditional cooperation with the United Nations to ease humanitarian suffering.

He pledged to build decentralized governance rooted in justice, rule of law, and protection of fundamental freedoms, while fighting corruption and hate speech. Economic growth, he noted, would depend on raising revenues and responsibly exploiting Sudan’s vast but often neglected natural resources for public benefit.

Al-Ta’aishi declared that the “old Sudan” would only invite fragmentation, insisting that youth and women must shape the nation’s future leadership. With a vision woven from urgency and ambition, Sudan’s new leader framed his government as both a reformist force and a guardian of unity.

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