TASIS PM unveils plan for a federal state and a new national army

Mohamed Hassan al-Ta’ayshi, prime minister of the TASIS-aligned “Government of Peace and Unity,” on Saturday framed Sudan’s choice as a break with the “Old Sudan” or a decisive shift to a new federal order. He set immediate priorities of civilian protection, urgent aid, and restoring core services.

Ta’ayshi said mobile issuance of civil identification and the resumption of electricity, water, healthcare, education, and telecoms would begin in TASIS-held areas, alongside measures to enable the safe return of displaced communities.

He anchored his program in the Founding Charter and what TASIS describes as a 2025 transitional constitutional framework, pledging to build a decentralized federal state, form a new national army with a different doctrine, and guarantee accountability for grave abuses.

The prime minister vowed to confront terrorism and dismantle the Islamist networks aligned with the army, adding that a tougher legal toolkit and anti-corruption push would be paired with protections for equal citizenship and rule of law. Youth and women, he said, would be brought into leadership “from day one.”

On foreign policy, Ta’ayshi promised unconditional cooperation with UN agencies and humanitarian organizations to ease access, while pursuing relations that serve Sudan’s interests.

Ta’ayshi was sworn in earlier in the week before RSF chief Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo and the coalition’s chief justice, formalizing his role in the TASIS structure.

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