| 1976Sudanese coup attempt | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of theCoups d'état in Sudan | |||||||
Corporal al-Freni, one of the conspirators, captured after the week-long fight | |||||||
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| Belligerents | |||||||
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| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| 2,000 | |||||||
Location within Sudan | |||||||
In early 1972,Gaafar Nimeiry visited Saudi Arabia and engaged in dialogue withSharif Hussein al-Hindi, the opposition leader, at the request of KingFaisal of Saudi Arabia. The dialogue revolved around addressing past grievances and the political landscape. Nimeiry attributed past massacres tocommunists while Sharif criticised Nimeiry's regime. Offers and suggestions were exchanged, including Nimeiry proposing theVice Presidency to Sharif, but no agreement was reached. Disappointed with the outcome, Sharif planned an attack onKhartoum with Libyan support.
Sadiq al-Mahdi joined the opposition and orchestrated acoup attempt in 1976, storming Khartoum with dissident forces led byMuhammad Nour Saad on 2 July. Their attempt to arrest Nimeiry was met with resistance, and the ensuing battle caused significant civilian casualties. Despite taking control initially, the rebel forces faced supply shortages and eventually succumbed to loyalist troops, ending the coup after a week. The aftermath involved searches, arrests, and executions of suspected plotters.
The coup's failure led to aNational Reconciliation in 1977, a brief period of pluralism and cooperation between opposition leaders and Nimeiry's government. However, tensions persisted, particularly with the South Sudan leadership, due to shifts in policy and language. The National Reconciliation eventually faltered due to disagreements, marking the end of the attempted reconciliation.
In early 1972,Gaafar Nimeiry visitedSaudi Arabia. During that visit,King Faisal arranged a meeting between Nimeiry andSharif Hussein al-Hindi (leader of the opposition) at the Al-Hamra Palace inJeddah. The King expressed to the two parties his desire for them to end their hostilities towards each other. The dialogue began, and Sharif talked about theAba Island massacre on 27 March 1970 andWad Nubawi massacre on 29 March 1970 against theAnsar. Nimeiry claimed that the massacres were the work of thecommunists. Al-Sharif criticized Nimeiry's government, regarding confiscations, nationalisation and democracy. Sharif asked Nimeiry to correct the mistakes, after which he could join him.[1]
Numeiri asked Al-Sharif to accept an appointment asVice President of Sudan, after which a democratic system would be implemented. Sharif was uninterested in the position and made it clear to him that he was not seeking personal gain. Sharif told Nimeiry to say what he told him in a public declaration. Nimeiry agreed, and the six-hour meeting adjourned.[1]
Sharif contacted his supporters at home and a committee led byMuhammad Hamza moved to arrange a meeting with Nimeiry, expecting the regime to change its course. The meeting was set at theKhartoum Racing Club, in April 1972. TheDemocratic Unionist Party and other parties waited to hear a speech from President Nimeiry of national reconciliation. Nimeiry ended up not making the announcement.[1]

Despite Sharif Hussein al-Hindi's adherence to the principles of democracy, he was convinced that the use of armed forces to overthrow the Nimeiry's government was necessary. Sharif Hussein, who was head of theNational Front, decided to move the resistance camps from theEthiopian border toLibya with the help of ColonelMuammar Gaddafi who felt that Gaafar Nimeiry had betrayed theArabs due to the signing of the 1972Addis Ababa Agreement with predominantlyChristian southern Sudan, ending theFirst Sudanese Civil War.[2] Nimeiry also promised to join theFederation of Arab Republics (FAR) in 1971 but did not join until Libya abandoned the FAR in 1976. Gaddafi began establishing camps and started stockpiling weapons in their base.[2]: 137 The new camps were established inMa'tan as-Sarra,Kufra District.[1]
Sharif laid out his plan to captureKhartoum, as when it is occupied, the regime would fall. Sharif Hussein supervised the establishment of training camps in Libya and sought the help of theMuslim Brotherhood.[1]
Sadiq al-Mahdi was released from the detention centre in late 1972, and immediately fled Sudan and started watching the progress of the training operations. Sharif relinquished the presidency of the National Front to Sadiq al-Mahdi, who began a new phase after the failure of theShaaban uprising in 1973 and the failure ofHassan Hussein Othman's coup in 1975.[1]
Sudan'sGeneral Intelligence Service knew about the plan and kept quiet about it, and began monitoring and following up the affairs of the camps in Libya. As for themilitary intelligence, it adhered to the traditional pattern of military coups, despite being enlightened that there was a possibility of an attack by an invading force on the morning of 2 July 1976.[1][3]
Two thousand followers of Sudanese opposition leaderSadiq al-Mahdi stormed Khartoum after leaving the oasis and crossing northernDarfur andKordofan.[4][5] The troops were commanded by Lieutenant ColonelMuhammad Nour Saad who was fired from theSudanese Armed Forces in 1974 after being accused of plotting a coup.[6][7] To avoid drawing attention, they arrived in Khartoum inconspicuously, disguising themselves in traditional Sudanese white robes and staying at local hotels. Each member carried two suitcases; one filled with money and one with a disassembled machine gun and ammunition. The group comprised various political dissidents who sought refuge in Libya under Muammar Gaddafi's protection. They believed that the Sudanese people would embrace them as liberators, thanks to Gaddafi's support and weaponry.[4][8]
The rebel officers reportedly initiated the coup the moment Nimeiry arrived atKhartoum airport at dawn on that day coming from official visits toWashington, D.C. andParis. Their plan was to arrest the President Nimeiry, but their attempt was met with resistance from loyalist forces.[9][10]
On Friday, 2 July 1976 at three o'clock in the afternoon, the residents of some areas in Khartoum heard the sound of gunshots and the sound of bombs in separate areas of the capital. The attackers uniforms were different from the military uniform, consisting of long white pants, and a long white "Araqi" shirt over it. The attackers asked passers-by about the location of the General Command Headquarter which was later surrounded.[11] The residents of Khartoum were terrified by this foreign group and did not welcome them as liberators. Many suffered and died as a result, holding the sentiment that though President Nimeiry might be a dictator, he was still their own.[4]
With the intensity of fighting increasing in intensity in several places in the centre of Khartoum, families rushed to stay in their homes, but what increased people's anxiety, that the radio transmission had completely stopped broadcasting, and the phones were broken due to theTelecommunications Authority falling into the hands of the militant. Despite their lack of knowledge of the geography of Khartoum and Omdurman, they were able to occupy the most important centres and main streets in Khartoum and imposed their full control over them.[11][12]
The insurgents engaged in three days of house-to-house fighting in Khartoum andOmdurman which killed some 30,00 people.[13] Officers and soldiers in the armed forces, who were at the time in their homes, could not reach the general command, as all the main and secondary roads leading to the command were located under the grip of the militants,[11] who, with their sub-machine guns outmatched the Sudanese army, forcing them to retreat to the desert on the opposite side of theNile.[4] TheKhartoum International Airport had been under their for three full days, during which they prevented the landing or take-off of planes and greatly damaged airport buildings.[11]Bona Malwal,Minister of Culture and Information at the time, andAbel Alier, SecondVice President of Sudan, continued to broadcast the news fromJuba instead ofOmdurman and painted the coup as an invasion by "mercenaries". During that time, Nimeiry was able to rally the nation via Radio Juba.[14][15]
Nimeiry confirmed through a speech over the radio to the people, that the country had been subjected to an invasion by mercenaries who came from Libya with the aim of changing the status quo in the country, and that many of these mercenaries were still in the capital. Nimeiry issued his strict directives to each officers and soldiers to "eliminate mercenaries without mercy or pity".[11][3][10]
The insurgent army held Khartoum for a while, but their supplies eventually ran out. The usual food shipments from rural areas were halted by Nimeiry's forces, and the city's inhabitants were unwilling to part with their small stashes of food. After a week of starvation, the insurgent army, despite their weapons advantage, could not continue fighting without sustenance. Taking advantage of this weakness, Nimeiry's forces re-entered Khartoum.[9][16]
On 5 July at eleven o'clock in the morning, the armed forces began to recover the important sites in Khartoum, and after unequal battles between the two parties in terms of equipment and military equipment.El-Sa'ka Forces landed on the roof of the Telecommunications Authority building. A fierce battle took place that increased the destruction of the building and equipment, the battle ended with 124 dead from both sides. After which the armed forces occupied the building and surrounded it with armoured vehicles The armed forces also easily recovered the radio and television building. Captured militants were immediately executed.[11] The loyalist forces retookal-Shagara Tanks Military Camp.[13] A column of army tanks entered the city and roamed the streets of Khartoum with no resistance from the surviving armed militia.[13]
Once the coup's failure was announced by the Sudanese Government, a "mopping-up" operations started with searching for the militants.[9] Many foreigners and expatriates from neighbouring countries, who originally had no interest in the events in Khartoum, were arrested. They were dragged to theGreen Belt area, south of Khartoum, where they were executed without trials, including manyEthiopians andEritreans. One officer said "We used to order the detainees to dig graves, and after they finished digging and deepening them, we would order them to lie down inside. Then the soldiers would shoot, and another batch of detainees will fill the graves and dig new ones."[11]
Some 3,000 were killed during the coup,[13] and 98 people were implicated and executed for plotting the coup, includingMuhammad Nour Saad.[17][18][19]
The coup attempt sparked national resentment against Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.[14] In 1977, anational reconciliation took place betweenSadiq al Mahdi, the leader of the opposition who was based abroad, and Nimeiry. A limited measure of pluralism was allowed and Sadiq al Mahdi and members of theDemocratic Unionist Party joined the legislature under the umbrella of theSudanese Socialist Union.Hassan al-Turabi, an Islamist leader who had been imprisoned and then exiled after the May Revolution, was invited back and becameJustice Minister andAttorney General in 1979.[20] Relations betweenKhartoum andSouthern Sudan leadership worsened after the National Reconciliation due to the shift toSharia law,[21] and adoptingArabic as the country official language.[22] The National Reconciliation itself came to a premature end in light of disagreements between the opposition and Nimeiry.[23]
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