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The 'National Congress' (
Arabic: المؤتمر الوطني;
transliterated: al-Mo'tamar al-Watany) is the governing official
political party of
Sudan. It was created in
1998 by certain elements in the former
National Islamic Front (NIF) organization, as well as other politicians, as a legal political party. A splinter group, the
Popular National Congress Party, broke off of the National Congress Party in 2000 after disagreements between President
Omar al-Bashir and former Speaker of the Parliament and radical Islamist ideologue
Hassan al-Turabi.
The National Congress Party has wide grassroots support throughout Northern Sudan and its members were recently elected as heads of the Lawyers Union and heads of most of North Sudan's agricultural unions in elections that were widely accepted as transparent.
The National Congress Party also has a notable Southern Sudanese membership as manifested through the inclusion of Southern National Congress members in South Sudan's government. The National Congress southern sector is headed by former Vice President
Moses Machar and Southern Presidential Advisor
Riak Gai Kok.
At the last
legislative elections, December 2000, the party won 355 out of 360 seats. At the presidential elections of the same year, its candidate
Omar Hasan Ahmad al-Bashir won 86.5 % and was re-elected.
The National Congress Party is the main partner in the power-sharing agreement that is part of the comprehensive peace accords that brought the Sudan civil war to an end and were signed in January 2005. The other main partner in the power sharing agreement is the formerly rebel
Sudan Peoples' Liberation Movement. The National Congress party head is Omar al-Bashir. In 2005 it merged with the ''Alliance of Working Peoples' Forces'' Party of former President
Gaafar Nimeiry, who had won 9.6 % in Sudan's last Presidential elections.