Real estate dollars and fire extinguishers from hell according to Al-Numairi – Race in Politics – ✍️ Al-Tarifi Abu Naba

One of the anecdotes of former President Jaafar Numeiri, according to the narrator, is that his entourage asked him to promote the then Fire Chief to Major General so that the rest of the Fire Chief’s officers could be promoted, so the President only decisively told them (Why do they want to put out hell)…. The evidence in this story is that some people agree to promote a certain interest, as do others who conspire to advance a specific agenda. Both groups work without rights, and if they do not find a solution, they end up and are reinstated…
A few days ago, the media reported on a letter signed by the Minister of Finance on the rights of the first vice-president of the Sovereignty Council, which consists of travel expenses estimated at five billion dollars. This amount, if memory serves, may be imaginary and illogical, although travel costs outside the country vary among civil servants, and it is a right that carries great responsibilities. Despite this, we ask, in the words of the late Numeiri, those who volunteered to publish the letter (why does he even want to start a bank)… I have no doubt. There is a large sum of money for the first deputy, and it could be the same for the Prime Minister, the Minister of Foreign Affairs and even the Minister of Finance himself, and before them the president of the Sovereignty Council, because this is the dominant custom in foreign missions, but before confirming the value of the sum, whose authenticity I doubt, we must think of the gains obtained by the trips of the first deputy to Sudan, because we are still excited and let’s turn a blind eye to the interests and gains…
As journalists and media professionals, we must think about proposing readings that benefit the common citizen and allow the State to achieve its objectives, and not navigate the turbulent currents led by propaganda makers who seek to weaken the leaders… We must present ideas that contribute to the stability of the State and the preservation of transparency and public money…
If one dollar bills for Sudanese representatives abroad are the dominant norm, we must change our methodology, because resorting to jurisprudence (removing the pact) will not be a solution to achieve transparency, as it makes sense to discuss travel reports in the committees of the Council of Ministers and with the transparency experts of the Attorney General’s ministries to know the results and fruits of the missions abroad, otherwise we will be vulnerable to those who attempt to weave conspiracies and present false arguments. To cause conflicts and problems…




