On Sunday, the isolated Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir appeared in front of the Public Prosecution in Khartoum to interrogate him in the case of the execution of 28 Sudanese army officers in 1990, known as the "28 Ramadan Movement Officers Movement."

The prosecution heard 78 witnesses about the Ramadan massacre, and al-Bashir's interrogation to investigate him today is the first.

And the "National Salvation Movement" led by "28 Ramadan officers" was launched from inside the Sudanese army, in April 1990.

The regime of al-Bashir executed in April 1990 the officers who led a counter-coup nearly a year after he took office in June 1989.

The Sudanese army overthrew Omar al-Bashir, who ruled the country since he came to power in 1989 with a military coup.

Al-Bashir was arrested after his overthrow in April 2019 after popular protests that lasted for more than four months.

Al-Bashir faces corruption charges in several cases.

Last December, Al-Bashir was convicted of one of these cases, and a ruling was issued against him in a social reform house for two years.

The alternate chair of the Corruption Committee and member of the Sovereign Council of Sudan, Mohamed Faki Suleiman, announced last month that the committee had opened a new investigation against the ousted president, Omar al-Bashir, on charges of squandering state funds for personal interests.

Since the overthrow of Bashir more than a year ago, Sudanese authorities have confiscated companies, real estate, and property belonging to the former president and some of his family and aides.

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