Does Mohammed Tahir Ayala have the political clout to succeed President Omar al-Bashir in 2020?
That
is the question in Khartoum after President al Bashir chose the 66-year
old longtime operative of the ruling National Congress Party (NCP) and
governor of the agriculture-rich Gezira State as his successor.
Even
though the Sudan Constitution says the prime minister, who oversees the
day-to-day running of the government, is supposed to succeed the
president, Al Bashir still overlooked First Vice-President and Prime
Minister Bakri Hassan Saleh for Ayala, who has no military and
intelligence background, which are considered essential for the job.
Mathias Muindi, an analyst with Control Risks, told The EastAfrican
that Mr Ayala is from a generation of politicians who emerged after the
1989 coup and hence represent a compromise between those who are for
generational change and those who want continuity within the NCP.
Mr
Ayala, an economics graduate, is among the group of 1980s intellectuals
seen as more neutral, especially by the youth who have been yearning
for a generational change.
Khartoum-based journalist Mohammed Alameen told The EastAfrican
that Mr Ayala is close to President al-Bashir and has enjoyed prominent
appointments in the past few years. He was appointed director of the
Sudan Seaports Corporation soon after the 1989 coup; became federal
minister of roads and bridges.
He became the governor
of the Red Sea State in 2005, where he stayed until 2015 when he was
appointed the governor of Gezira State.
But Mr Ayala’s
first reaction was to reaffirm his support for President Bashir’s
re-lection in 2020. There have been calls within the NCP’s Sufi Order—an
Islamic wing of the party—for a change of the Constitution to allow
the president to contest again.
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