The Sudanese newspaper al-Intibah reported on Sunday the dramatic details of the cell behind Sudan's isolated leader Omar al-Bashir after being deported to the largest and most heavily guarded prison in Sudan.

The newspaper quoted local sources as saying that the cell in which al-Bashir is being held includes television and air-conditioning, and two beds and two seats.

The sources said that Bashir is the only one who has these features in his cell, while the cells of 17 former Sudanese officials were arrested recently, lack of adaptation and television.

The newspaper said that the room where human beings are currently occupied was once the prison of the first team Salah Abdullah Qosh, the last head of the security and intelligence apparatus under the Bashir, who was arrested again after the isolation of Bashir.

In the context of reliable sources told the site «Bag News» that the cell of Bashir, which is the best, was detained by the head of the National Umma Party Imam Sadiq al-Mahdi and the director of the former political department of the security and intelligence apparatus Abdul Ghaffar al-Sharif.

Al-Bashir's cell is located in the eastern section of political prisoners, where former Secretary-General of the People's Congress Hassan al-Turabi was arrested during the Bashir era.

The authorities have banned the Sudanese president from using his mobile phone since he was transferred to Kober prison on April 17, where the army has been holding him in the guest house in Khartoum since he was sacked on April 11.

The newspaper quoted sources as saying that the transfer of the brothers of the isolated President Abdullah and Abbas to the prison of Huda, until the processing of rooms for them. The authorities arrested my brother Bashir on 17 April.

The Kober prison is located in the northern city of Khartoum. It consists of 14 sections, including a section for those convicted of execution, another for those with precedents, one for long and short sentences and one for political detainees.

The prison, which was built during the British rule of Sudan in 1903, extends over an area of ​​approximately 5,000 square meters in the Cooper neighborhood, which was taken from prison.

The prison is named after its first construction in the early 20th century, a British officer named Cooper.