This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-35737193
The article has changed 2 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Previous version
1
Next version
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Sudan Islamist opposition leader Turabi dies aged 84 | Sudan Islamist opposition leader Turabi dies aged 84 |
(35 minutes later) | |
Hassan al-Turabi, the Sudanese opposition leader who helped bring President Omar al-Bashir to power, has died at 84 in the capital Khartoum. | |
A hospital source told AFP news agency he had suffered a heart attack. | |
Mr Turabi was a key ally of Mr Bashir when he took power in a coup in 1989 but they fell out a decade later. | |
He was one of the most divisive figures in the country's turbulent history, says the BBC's former Sudan correspondent, James Copnall. | |
For the first decade of Mr Bashir's rule, Mr Turabi was the de facto leader of the country, and his influence spread beyond Sudan's borders. | |
His death was announced by state TV, which described him as a "well-known Islamic thinker", and was confirmed by his party. | His death was announced by state TV, which described him as a "well-known Islamic thinker", and was confirmed by his party. |
Karate attack | |
During his years of ascendancy, he promoted a radical version of Islamism, with sharia, or Islamic, law applied strictly, | |
Osama bin Laden accepted an invitation to live in Sudan, and the civil war against the largely non-Muslim southern Sudanese was intensified. | |
The Sudanese security services were accused of numerous human rights abuses against dissidents. Large numbers of Sudanese fled the country. | |
One, a Karate black belt, attacked Mr Turabi in the Canadian capital Ottawa in 1992, leaving him in a coma, but Mr Turabi survived. | |
In 1999, he lost a power struggle with Mr Bashir and subsequently founded an opposition party but spent much of the next decade in prison. | |
In March 2014, the two men had their first public meeting in years, with Mr Turabi visiting President Bashir at his guest house. | |
Born in Kassala in eastern Sudan, the son of a local imam, Mr Turabi moved to Khartoum to study law before completing his studies in London and Paris. | |
He joined Sudan's Muslim Brotherhood and rose to national prominence in the 1964 revolution which overthrew General Ibrahim Abboud. | |
A widely read man with a high-pitched giggle, Mr Turabi was famous for his comprehensive - some would say rambling - interviews, our correspondent says. | |
Mr Turabi advocated the rights of women and democracy within Islam, and saw himself as a moderate reformer - but he presided over perhaps the most brutal period in Sudan's history, James Copnall adds. |
Previous version
1
Next version