Ahmed Fadl-Khartoum

The passage of the law to dismantle the regime of ousted President Omar al-Bashir in Sudan has produced a state of queuing among his supporters. It was pointing to the collapse of the leaders of the isolated party and symbols calculated on the Salafist trend to Friday prayers at the mosque of the University of Khartoum.

Although the approved version did not provide for the political isolation of the NCP as stated in the bill, Bashir's supporters considered it a restriction of their freedom.

The mother of worshipers and sermons in the university mosque, historically known as an incubator for the activity of Islamists, the head of the State Party of Law, Mohammed Ali al-Jazouli amid cheers of arrogance and cheering.

Acting President of the National Congress Party Ibrahim Ghandour was active on his Facebook page to criticize the law. "The resolution will not prevent us from exercising our rights guaranteed by all national laws and international conventions," he wrote.

Collapsing and aligning
After Friday prayers at the University of Khartoum mosque, ANC leader Anas Omar spoke and urged the party's supporters to "be patient" before he launched a scathing attack on the law and described it as ridiculous and not worth the ink he wrote.

Omar stressed that no one is able to silence them or dissolve the National Congress Party.

Later, the University of Khartoum issued a statement accusing Mohammed Ali al-Jazouli of attacking the minbar of the mosque, and said it would take all legal steps to prevent a repeat of what happened after verbal altercations between university students and supporters of the former regime.

He considered the leader of the Congress Party Rabie Abdel Ati that the law is a legal precedent in Sudan and the world with the issuance of legislation confiscating freedoms.

Abdel-Ati explained to Al-Jazeera Net that the options would be open to his party, because the law itself granted the right to take rights by hand to anyone and codified taking people suspicions, adding, "Everyone has the right to defend his freedom in the way he sees fit.

He believes that the options will not be limited to the supporters of the National Congress because the law codifies chaos, which creates a state of alignment beyond the Islamists to all those who demand freedom, he said.

New interfaces
In contrast, former leaders of the National Congress considered that the law of dismantling the regime of June 30, 1989 and the removal of empowerment of 2019 does not concern them after they formed new interfaces.

"I will not comment on the law because I am no longer part of the National Congress," said Amin Hassan Omar, who was part of the Bashir leadership office behind a new entity called the Future Movement.

But the spokesman for the forces of the Declaration of Freedom and Change Wajdi Saleh confirms that the law has a definition of empowerment to accommodate all attempts to escape, as well as other laws complementary to remove the empowerment.

While acknowledging that the law does not provide for the 10-year political isolation of the Congress party as described in a leaked version, Saleh appears at the same time tough on granting freedom to supporters of the former regime.

He adds to the island Net that "it is natural that the National Congress goes with the former regime .. The people dissolved this party since April 11 and said its decision."

He considered that the law came to codify this popular solution to the National Congress "and to complete the dismantling of the institutions of the regime and remove all manifestations of empowerment under which he enabled himself to dominate the necks of the Sudanese people."

The leader of the Revolutionary Front Mohamed Sayed Ahmed secret seal of the risk of resorting to the National Congress to work underground, because legal procedures can affect them, as well as the decline of the party's influence and strength, he said.

Ghandour sticks to dissolved party's exercise of political rights (Reuters-Archive)

The National Congress is given
According to Wajdi Saleh, the law of dismantling the regime of June 30, 1989, has been in force since it was signed on the night of November 28.

He stresses that the basic lines of the law provide for the dissolution of the National Congress Party, trade unions and professional associations and the establishment of a committee to dismantle the system, which is concerned with the dismantling of the former regime and the confiscation of the party's property and facades for the benefit of the government after investigation and scrutiny.

"Our silence on these acts of aggression and this circumvention of freedoms by issuing political laws does not overturn the right of the NCP to exercise political life," Gandour said in a statement on his Facebook page.

The statement stressed that the silence of the party is not weak because it is coherent and strong and is working hard to arrange its situation and meet the upcoming electoral maturity and complete the reform proposal and change initiated by the party before others.