1990 Sudanese coup d'état attempt

The 1990 Sudanese coup d'état attempt was a bloodless coup attempt which took place in Sudan on 23 April 1990.[1][2] Reportedly orchestrated by two retired Armed Forces officers, Major General Abdul Gadir al Kadaru and Brigadier Mohamed Osman Karrar, and planned by junior officers loyal to them, the coup attempt was directed against the RCCNS, the ruling military junta led by Lieutenant General Omar al-Bashir (who himself took power in the 1989 coup d'état).

1990 Sudanese coup d'état attempt
Part of the Second Sudanese Civil War
Date23 April 1990
Location15°30′2″N 32°33′36″E
Result Coup attempt failed.
Belligerents
Republic of the Sudan SAF coup plotters
Alleged support:
SPLA
Commanders and leaders
Omar al-Bashir
President of Sudan
Hassan al-Turabi
NIF Leader
Abdul Gadir al-Kadaru  
Mohamed Osman Karrar  
Location within Sudan.

According to Bashir, loyalist troops foiled the coup attempt by striking before the plotters could make their move, crushing the coup bid 'in its cradle'. He also claimed the plotters were 'in alliance with the rebels' of the SPLA, a predominantly Christian group that waged the then-ongoing civil war against the Muslim-led central government.

The Egyptian news agency MENA said there were unconfirmed reports of an exchange of gunfire at the Khartoum International Airport and the Armed Forces headquarters during the coup attempt.

Officials said about 30 officers and retired officers had been arrested.

See also

References

  1. "Sudanese military government crushes coup attempt". UPI. 23 April 1990. Retrieved 30 September 2019.
  2. "Sudan Reports Blocking a Coup And Arresting Over 30 Officers". The New York Times. 24 April 1990. Retrieved 30 September 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.