A Decade after Bashir Dismissed him, ‘Gosh’ Reappointed Sudan Security Chief

Sudan’s Salah Abdallah Mohammed Salih, aka Salah Gosh. (AP)
Sudan’s Salah Abdallah Mohammed Salih, aka Salah Gosh. (AP)
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A Decade after Bashir Dismissed him, ‘Gosh’ Reappointed Sudan Security Chief

Sudan’s Salah Abdallah Mohammed Salih, aka Salah Gosh. (AP)
Sudan’s Salah Abdallah Mohammed Salih, aka Salah Gosh. (AP)

The reappointment of Salah Abdullah Mohammed Salih, commonly known as Salah Gosh, as head of the Sudanese National Intelligence and Security Service (NISS), has puzzled analysts and politicians.

It also raised questions and speculation of a major cabinet reshuffle likely to be announced by President Omar al-Bashir that will include the dissolution of the Islamist Movement.

No one expected the reappointment of Gosh to his former post or any other public post after he was sacked in 2009. He was accused of masterminding a coup against Bashir. He was consequently brought to trial and imprisoned, before being released by a presidential pardon after which he had stayed away from the political scene.

Bashir surprised the Sudanese by reappointing his former security man. He replaces Intelligence chief Mohamed Atta, the state news agency, SUNA, reported without providing further details.

As soon as the decision to reinstate Gosh was announced, information spread about the major cabinet reshuffle Bashir is expected to make in light of the economic crisis in the country, deterioration of the value of the national currency, the increase in bread prices and other major commodities.

The hike in prices drove protesters to the streets of Khartoum and other cities in recent weeks, but NISS agents and anti-riot police violently broke up the rallies.

The security services have since January been leading a wave of arrests against a number of opposition leaders, political activists and civilians. The most prominent of these were the secretary of the Communist Party, the deputy chairman of the opposition Umma Party and the President of the Congress Party. Several of them were released last week.

Salih, who studied engineering, has worked for the NISS since the 1989 coup that brought Bashir to power. As its chief, he is credited with building NISS into one of the most powerful security agencies under Bashir's regime.

Saleh earned his nickname Gosh from a famous Indian math professor who used to teach at the University of Khartoum. No one knows if the nickname was a testament to his math skills or if it was given to him to mock him. For whichever reason, the name Salah Gosh stuck.



Libya Receives Invitation from Greece to Maritime Zone Talks to Ease Strained Ties

Children play by the tents, as recently arrived migrants shelter at the temporary migrants' camp staged on a soccer pitch in the region of Rethymno in Crete island, Greece, June 24, 2025. REUTERS/Stefanos Rapanis/File Photo
Children play by the tents, as recently arrived migrants shelter at the temporary migrants' camp staged on a soccer pitch in the region of Rethymno in Crete island, Greece, June 24, 2025. REUTERS/Stefanos Rapanis/File Photo
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Libya Receives Invitation from Greece to Maritime Zone Talks to Ease Strained Ties

Children play by the tents, as recently arrived migrants shelter at the temporary migrants' camp staged on a soccer pitch in the region of Rethymno in Crete island, Greece, June 24, 2025. REUTERS/Stefanos Rapanis/File Photo
Children play by the tents, as recently arrived migrants shelter at the temporary migrants' camp staged on a soccer pitch in the region of Rethymno in Crete island, Greece, June 24, 2025. REUTERS/Stefanos Rapanis/File Photo

Greece has invited Libya's internationally recognized government in Tripoli to start talks on demarcating exclusive economic zones in the Mediterranean Sea, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said late on Wednesday.

The move is aimed at mending relations between the two neighbors, strained by a controversial maritime deal signed in 2019 between the Libyan government and Türkiye, Greece's long-standing foe, which mapped out a sea area close to the Greek island of Crete.

"We invite - and I think you may soon see progress in this area - we invite the Tripoli government to discuss with Greece the delimitation of a continental shelf and an exclusive economic zone," Mitsotakis told local Skai television, Reuters reported.

Greece this year launched a new tender to develop its hydrocarbon resources off Crete, a move that Libya has objected to, saying some of the blocks infringed its own maritime zones.

Law and order has been weak in Libya since a 2011 uprising that toppled dictator Muammar Gaddafi, with the country divided by factional conflict into eastern and western sections for over a decade.

Therefore, any communication with Libya was not easy, Mitsotakis said. He indicated that Greece was determined to continue talking to both the Tripoli-based government and a parallel administration based in Benghazi.

In recent months, Athens has sought closer cooperation with Libya to help stem a surge in migrant arrivals from the North African country to Greece's southern islands of Gavdos and Crete and passed legislation banning migrants arriving from Libya by sea from requesting asylum.

In an incident earlier this month, the European Union migration commissioner and ministers from Italy, Malta and Greece were denied entry to the eastern part of divided Libya, shortly after meeting the internationally recognized government that controls the west of Libya.