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Omar Hassan Ahmad al-Bashir [a] (born 1 January 1944) is a Sudanese former military officer and politician who served as Sudan's head of state under various titles from 1989 until 2019, when he was deposed in a coup d'état. [2]
Omar Bashir (Arabic: عمر بشير) is an Iraqi-Hungarian musician of Assyrian descent. He is the son of Munir Bashir , who is widely considered to be one of the most important virtuosos in the history of the oud and a master of the modal tradition of Arabic maqam , as well as the nephew of expert oud player Jamil Bashir .
General Omar Zain al-Abideen, who at the time also served as head of the Transitional Military Council's political committee, [48] said that the military government would not extradite al-Bashir to The Hague to face charges in the International Criminal Court (ICC), where al-Bashir is the subject of an arrest warrant on counts of crimes against ...
Omar al-Bashir in 1989 On 30 June 1989, military officers under the command of then Brigadier Omar Hassan al-Bashir, with instigation and support from the National Islamic Front (NIF), [ 3 ] replaced the Sadiq al-Mahdi government with the Revolutionary Command Council for National Salvation (RCC) , claiming to be saving the country from the ...
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 ...
Omar al-Bashir was President of Sudan from June 1989 to April 2019. He was indicted on 4 March 2009 with five counts of crimes against humanity and two counts of war crimes: [ 18 ] Attack against a civilian population , constituting a war crime in violation of article 8(2)(e)(i) of the Rome Statute;
[1] [2] Only Omar al-Bashir’s National Congress Party and a small number of minority parties contested the elections. [2] About 66% of Sudan’s eligible voters cast ballots. [2] Al-Bashir received 86.5% of the votes cast for a five-year presidential term. [2]
Omar Bashir (musician) (born 1970), Iraqi-Hungarian musician and oud player, son of Munir Bashir and nephew of Jamil Bashir; Omar al-Bashir (born 1944), President of Sudan and Sudanese army field marshal; Palwasha Bashir (born 1987), Pakistani badminton player; Ruzwana Bashir (born 1983), British businesswoman & activist