Sudan: Expected Auction on Properties Confiscated From Bashir's Regime

Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, Ibrahim Al-Badawi speaks during a press conference of the Sudan News Agency on Monday (SUNA news agency)
Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, Ibrahim Al-Badawi speaks during a press conference of the Sudan News Agency on Monday (SUNA news agency)
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Sudan: Expected Auction on Properties Confiscated From Bashir's Regime

Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, Ibrahim Al-Badawi speaks during a press conference of the Sudan News Agency on Monday (SUNA news agency)
Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, Ibrahim Al-Badawi speaks during a press conference of the Sudan News Agency on Monday (SUNA news agency)

Sudan's Minister of Finance and Economic Planning Ibrahim Al-Badawi uncovered on Monday plans to hold an international auction of properties confiscated from the regime of ousted President Omar al-Bashir.

Earlier, the Sudanese government announced a detailed program to be presented at an international conference planned for April 2020 to secure a broader range of assistance to support the transition.

During his speech at the press conference of the Sudan News Agency Monday, Badawi said that his ministry plans to establish a specialized committee with the mission of organizing an “international auction” of properties confiscated from officials loyal to the Bashir regime.

“Until now, those confiscated properties are worth 1 trillion Sudanese pounds,” the Minister said.

He added that the 2020 budget targets a minimum growth rate of 3% compared to 2% in the past two years. 

Badawi revealed a significant increase in the development component in the current year’s budget amounting to 155 billion pounds.

He said the cabinet initially approved a budget that includes reforms and resource allocation and mobilization, expecting that an economic conference scheduled for next March would come up with a vision to boost the economy in the country.

Badawi said his ministry is keen to reform wages and salaries in the light of the continuous deterioration of the purchasing power of people with limited income, pointing out that task forces have been formed to review the job structure and address distortions in the civil service so that they achieve job satisfaction and justice.

The Minister disclosed an external financing for the 2020 budget through grants and loans provided by regional and international financing institutions.

He said 48% of the total grants and loans are from Arab institutions, 43% by international institutions, and 9% via bilateral cooperation.

Reviewing the sources of budget financing, Badawi said the current government started to pay arrears for the Arab Funds, that the previous regime failed to pay back.

“We are now ready to get advantage of the financing in the development projects,” he said, adding that loans and grants for 2020 include $160 million from the Kuwaiti Fund, $40 million from the African Development Bank and $17 million the World Bank 17 million dollars.

He also referred to the grants of IGAD countries in the framework of bilateral cooperation at $21 million, United Nations agencies at $462 million $ 107 million, in addition to China grants and loans, which amounted to $169 million.



UN: More than 1.3 Million Return to Homes in Sudan

Members of army walks near a destroyed military vehicle and bombed buildings, as Sudan's army retakes ground and some displaced residents return to ravaged capital in the state of Khartoum Sudan March 26, 2025. (Reuters)
Members of army walks near a destroyed military vehicle and bombed buildings, as Sudan's army retakes ground and some displaced residents return to ravaged capital in the state of Khartoum Sudan March 26, 2025. (Reuters)
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UN: More than 1.3 Million Return to Homes in Sudan

Members of army walks near a destroyed military vehicle and bombed buildings, as Sudan's army retakes ground and some displaced residents return to ravaged capital in the state of Khartoum Sudan March 26, 2025. (Reuters)
Members of army walks near a destroyed military vehicle and bombed buildings, as Sudan's army retakes ground and some displaced residents return to ravaged capital in the state of Khartoum Sudan March 26, 2025. (Reuters)

More than 1.3 million people who fled the fighting in Sudan have headed home, the United Nations said Friday, pleading for greater international aid to help returnees rebuild shattered lives.

Over a million internally displaced people (IDPs) have returned to their homes in recent months, UN agencies said.

A further 320,000 refugees have crossed back into Sudan this year, mainly from neighboring Egypt and South Sudan.

While fighting has subsided in the "pockets of relative safety" that people are beginning to return to, the situation remains highly precarious, the UN said.

Since April 2023, Sudan has been torn apart by a power struggle between army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, commander of the rival paramilitary Rapid Support Forces. The fighting has killed tens of thousands.

The RSF lost control of the capital, Khartoum, in March and the regular army now controls Sudan's center, north and east.

In a joint statement, the UN's IOM migration agency, UNHCR refugee agency and UNDP development agency called for an urgent increase in financial support to pay for the recovery as people begin to return, with humanitarian operations "massively underfunded".

Sudan has 10 million IDPs, including 7.7 million forced from their homes by the current conflict, they said.

More than four million have sought refuge in neighboring countries.

- 'Living nightmare' -

Sudan is "the largest humanitarian catastrophe facing our world and also the least remembered", the IOM's regional director Othman Belbeisi, speaking from Port Sudan, told a media briefing in Geneva.

He said 71 percent of returns had been to Al-Jazira state, with eight percent to Khartoum.

Other returnees were mostly heading for Sennar state.

Both Al-Jazira and Sennar are located southeast of the capital.

"We expect 2.1 million to return to Khartoum by the end of this year but this will depend on many factors, especially the security situation and the ability to restore services," Belbeisi said.

With the RSF holding nearly all of the western Darfur region, Kordofan in the south has become the war's main battleground in recent weeks.

He said the "vicious, horrifying civil war continues to take lives with impunity", imploring the warring factions to put down their guns.

"The war has unleashed hell for millions and millions of ordinary people," he said.

"Sudan is a living nightmare. The violence needs to stop."

- 'Massive' UXO contamination -

After visiting Khartoum and the Egyptian border, Mamadou Dian Balde, the UNHCR's regional refugee coordinator for the Sudan crisis, said people were coming back to destroyed public infrastructure, making rebuilding their lives extremely challenging.

Those returning from Egypt were typically coming back "empty handed", he said, speaking from Nairobi.

Luca Renda, UNDP's resident representative in Sudan, warned of further cholera outbreaks in Khartoum if broken services were not restored.

"What we need is for the international community to support us," he said.

Renda said around 1,700 wells needed rehabilitating, while at least six Khartoum hospitals and at least 35 schools needed urgent repairs.

He also sounded the alarm on the "massive" amount of unexploded ordnance littering the city and the need for decontamination.

He said anti-personnel mines had also been found in at least five locations in Khartoum.

"It will take years to fully decontaminate the city," he said, speaking from Port Sudan.