Republic of Sudan (1985–2019)

Republic of the Sudan
جمهورية السودان (Arabic)
Jumhūrīyat as-Sūdān
1985–2019
Map of Sudan before South Sudanese independence on July 9, 2011
Capital
and largest city
Khartoum
15°38′N 032°32′E / 15.633°N 32.533°E / 15.633; 32.533
Official languages
Common languagesArabic, English
Ethnic groups
Religion
Islam (official)
Demonym(s)Sudanese
GovernmentUnitary provisional government under a military junta (1985–1986)
Unitary parliamentary republic (1986–1989)

Unitary one-party Islamic Republic (1989–1998)
under a

Unitary dominant-party presidential republic under an authoritarian dictatorship (1998–2019)
President 
 1985–1986
Abdel Rahman Swar al-Dahab
 1986–1989
Ahmed al-Mirghani
 1989–2019
Omar al-Bashir
Prime minister 
 1985–1986
Al-Jazuli Daf'allah
 1986–1989
Sadiq al-Mahdi
 1989–2017
Post abolished
 2017–2018
Bakri Hassan Saleh
 2018–2019
Motazz Moussa
 2019
Mohamed Tahir Ayala
LegislatureNational Legislature
Council of States
National Assembly
Historical eraCold War, War on Terror
6 April 1985
April 1986
30 June 1989
23 April 1990
27 May 1998
9 January 2005
January 2011
2018–2019
11 April 2019
Area
19852,530,397 km2 (976,992 sq mi)
20111,886,086 km2 (728,222 sq mi)
CurrencySudanese pound (to 1992)
Sudanese dinar (1992–2007)
Sudanese pound (from 2007)
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Democratic Republic of the Sudan
Sudanese Transition to democracy
South Sudan
Today part of

This article covers the period of the history of Sudan between 1985 and 2019 when the Sudanese Defense Minister Abdel Rahman Swar al-Dahab seized power from Sudanese President Gaafar Nimeiry in the 1985 Sudanese coup d'état. Not long after, Lieutenant General Omar al-Bashir, backed by an Islamist political party, the National Islamic Front, overthrew the short lived government in a coup in 1989 where he ruled as President until his fall in April 2019. During Bashir's rule, also referred to as Bashirist Sudan, or as they called themselves the al-Ingaz regime, he was re-elected three times while overseeing the independence of South Sudan in 2011. His regime was criticized for human rights abuses, atrocities and genocide in Darfur and allegations of harboring and supporting terrorist groups (most notably during the residency of Osama bin Laden from 1992 to 1996) in the region while being subjected to United Nations sanctions beginning in 1995, resulting in Sudan's isolation as an international pariah.