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NCP logo used in the 2010 Sudanese elections, dropped after South Sudan gained independence in 2011.. With Omar al-Bashir becoming President of Sudan, the National Congress Party was established as the only legally recognised political party in the nation in 1998, with the very same ideology as its predecessors National Islamic Front (NIF) and the Revolutionary Command Council for National ...
Liberal Party of Sudan (Al-Hizb Al-Librali) Binaa Sudan Party (Hizb Binaa Al Sudan) Liberal Democrats (Hizb Al-Demokhrateen Al-Ahrar) Nubian Front of Liberation (Jabhat al-Tahrir al-Nuwbia) National Democratic Alliance [4] Sudan National Alliance ; The National Reform Party ; Sudanese Unity National Party (S.U.N. PARTY) Islamic Socialist Party
Khalid Omer Yousif, former secretary-general of the Sudanese Congress Party (SCP), describes the origin of the SCP in terms of three events: the 1977 creation of the Congress of Independent Students (CIS) at Khartoum University by students opposed to president Gaafar Nimeiry; the creation in 1986, following the 1985 Sudanese Revolution, of the National Congress political party led by Molana ...
Pages in category "National Congress Party (Sudan) politicians" The following 23 pages are in this category, out of 23 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
National Congress Party may refer to: National Congress Party (Sudan), the ruling political party in Sudan from 1998 until 2019. National Ittihadi Congress, Morocco; Indian National Congress, a major political party in India; Nationalist Congress Party of India, based in the state of Maharashtra Nationalist Congress Party (Ajit Pawar Faction)
Papua New Guinea: People's National Congress (Papua New Guinea) South Africa: African National Congress; Sri Lanka: National Congress (Sri Lanka) Sudan: National Congress Party (Sudan), an Islamist, pan-Arabist party, given the name National Congress Party c. 1988/1989; Sudanese Congress Party, a social-democratic party, initially created as ...
Today the Sudanese Socialist Democratic Union, the successor party to the SSU, exists as a registered political party in Sudan. Until 2018, it was led by Professor Dr. Fatima Abdel Mahmoud, who was Sudan's first female minister during the presidency of Gaafar Nimeiry as well as a former member of the National Congress Party. [2]
National Congress Party (until 2000) Rtd. Gen. George Kongor Arop (born 1951) was the Second Vice President of Sudan from February 1994 to October 2000. He was a police officer , the governor of Bahr el Ghazal from 1992 to 1993, the president of the African National Congress and was granted an honorary doctorate from the University of Juba in ...