An event that totally took me by surprise recently was the remnants of the previous regime from the National Congress Party going taking to the streets in demonstrations condemning the transitional period anddemanding the fall of the government of Prime Minister AbdullahHamdock .
Entreating the Sudanese Armed Forces Headquarters to stand with them, and as a friendtold me what he saw on video on the social media, that one of the demonstrators said to one of the soldiers in the officers as he was crying : ” We were fighting together in the samebattalion” and I never knew what tears were they, was it some kind of nostalgia to the “Jihad” against our brothers from south Sudan as the I called, or tears of sorrow for the country, or tears over thenow devastated party, reasons for these tears are ; but it is not the main reason of this article, its rather to set an example ofthe nostalgic wave for a false belief half of it covered withspiritualties and the other half with tyranny and whoever sane as ahuman being would yearn or long for such a regime in which the firstagenda that was forced and implied is to empower its unqualifiedcadres, raising the slogan of loyalty before performance and that’show the government institutions became under their control whichautomatically paralyzed the effectiveness of the production cycle through the dismissal of the qualified members regardless of the necessityof their positions and roles, and whether their career was essentiallysabotaged through neglecting them and demeaning them among the othercoworkers who supported the regime who had the superiority, and thatresulted in the entire collapse of the production cycle and processfor over thirty heartbreakingly dry years, filled with not onlywasting the energy and capacity of the Sudanese employers to create butalso denying him his own rights in salary and the satisfaction in ajob achievement which lead to entire frustration of the employers. It made the ones who weren’t referred to the public interest from thevery beginning to run choosing the voluntary retirement to end theircareers very tragically !!
Rather, it is just a parable of his crying, in his opinion, he isnostalgic for the era of tyranny and tyranny, and any sane person whocraves for the Islamic System that was its first agenda is to
empower its unqualified cadres, raising the slogan of loyalty before
performance, and by this the state institutions became a game in theirhands and paralyzed the needles in them through the displacement ofcompetencies and separate it .
Even if it had to survive, their destruction was morally negligent byneglecting and canceling their presence among loyalists who have theadvantage. Those who do not know have triumphed over those who work,and the 30-year production and progress movement ended with a lean,filled with wasting the Sudanese employee and losing his energy andability to creativity not only deprived of the provision but rather deprived also from job satisfaction, and he was completely deprived ofthis, which frustrated most of the employees and made those who werenot referred to the public interest from the beginning rush the optional retirement so that their career ended sadly and they got oldbefore their time,
To keep the institutions of the government under the hand of the
NCP and its supporters who depend on mediations andnepotism until the last members of the Islamic movement “coz” were appointed before the fall of theirdisastrous regime and in order to be a successful and promotedemployee, you must prove your loyalty and the more you flatter themore you get your way up regardless of your failure in the job whileyour loyalty is being judged by your career failures only to end up inthe streets>
The relationship in Sudanese institutions was not ahorizontal relationship between employees to move the wheel, but morea vertical relationship through flattering and gossiping andblackmailing of various kinds, using the most brutal types ofimmorality and creating parties and alliances and groupies only toprotect the position in a competition of loyalty to the big boss
coz”??? No wonder that the employees are low in computer competenciesand basic English skills in which I recall in here the faculties of education that absorbs students with less degrees only to graduatestudents with lesser qualifications to teach generations of Sudan !!
A request to protect and fortify the inactive job site towards thedirector of the institution, the largest cob in it, which works toextend its influence to bring an employee closer and distance anotherto leak out a kind of insecurity to raise the degree of loyaltythrough competition between his employees and the competition for who is more loyal than the other, so what is this? No wonder that moststate employees Cezanne are slow to use computers, and they cannotspeak English. I mention here colleges of education that absorb thelowest percentages so that their graduates will be teachers forgenerations. Is this not a clear destruction of the people of Sudan?
Even the professions lost its value and the employee has to come tosign the attendance and there is no work. Where is the work? It is ajob weakness in its most glorious manifestation, as the job becameclear in the presence of the loyal person, not in the work that mustbe accomplished, so these loyalists cannot develop, so they remain aburden on themselves, the state apparatus, and the Sudanese people,and make themselves victims of the rescue system that contributed tostopping the normal life process By making them its servants,
The strangest of all that these victims identified this system, headedby Omar Al-Bashir and the symbols of the Islamic movement, withcreating fake heroic championships through the South War that havenothing to do with the reality and no wonder of creating multiplenational holidays and occasions and making Al-Bashir a national heroby setting his images all over the streets to be linked into theSudanese subconscious through nationalism and through the big enlarged–only externally_ medals and speeches, which seemed naive butcontrived, bringing the awareness of most of the Sudanese people, buteach tyrant has an end.
I here remember him during his visit to the state of Gedaref ineastern Sudan, how the National Congress followers were announcing his “arrival” and how they were taking us out in marches, when I was in theprimary school and during our march to welcome the deposed _ I wasaffected by the Egyptian revolution and the words of the people “wewant to overthrow the regime” _ I did not realize that This phrasewould raise all that anger towards me as the National Congress youthmembers who organized the march gave me a sharp look when I chantedthe people wanting to topple the regime, I was only interested in thecrowd at that time and I did not know that we were in a march tosupport and my emotions started calling for the fall of the regime andthat rush, that feeling remained inside me until the regime now is nowand only now has barely fallen.