The Hidden Facts of Emptying the Prisons: How the Janjaweed Released the Most Dangerous Terrorist Elements (2-2)

During the past ten months, the detention centres of the General Intelligence Service, or rather the detention sites for extremist elements in Khartoum, were subjected to continuous attacks. The fierce attack, amidst the barking of rabid dogs late at night, was supported by a rescue battalion, the goal of which was, without ambiguity, the release of the terrorist group.

Attack After Attack

This repeated attack created a state of chaos, enabling the group of four, Amjad Faisal, Al-Wahi Al-Imam, Ahmed Ibrahim, and Salah Salem, to escape through a C-section caused by a hand grenade in the walls of the bathroom attached to the intelligence prison.

In March 2024, the RSF militia carried out another violent night attack on all the detention centres, which led, once again, to the escape of a group of 13 terrorist elements. All of this fighting, led by an infernal plot, was paved for the encirclement of a Rapid Support battalion, and it was assisted in its mission by the fugitive Four Cell, some of whose members later became clear to have joined the Janjaweed headquarters in Bahri.

Among the last group was a man who specialised in manufacturing explosives named Abu Ubaida and another young man in his prime, with a clean-shaven beard, if not black, who looked like a Somali, in addition to one of the leaders of ISIS in Sinai, Musa Hamdan, who belonged to the Jabra cell. The one in which the intelligence service lost many of its members in the year 2021, led by “The Joker”, the boy with unique and extraordinary abilities in the world of networks and dismantling information crimes.

A Stronghold of Terrorism and Readiness

After the escape of the last group, by which we mean the 13 groups, the total number of terrorist elements that the rebel militia smuggled became 17 detainees, and only a list of “9” individuals remains, while the militia is still to this day, besieging them, without the sound of their cannons and rifles towards those detention centres stopping, as if releasing terrorism from its cage to resume its activity in the country of the Nile is a matter of utmost importance to them, and this necessarily cannot bear more than one explanation, especially since the process of spreading chaos and attacking the terrorist detention centres was not a picnic.

In those battles, 5 officers and 9 members of the protection and security crews were martyred.

It is also important to point out that since the beginning of the rebellion, the militia had released about 40 of the most dangerous terrorists and criminals, who can be classified according to their prisons, as follows: 23 in public jails and 17 from intelligence service detention centres, in a way that suggests, or even almost a clear fact is that finding these people, after sorting and liberating them, was not a coincidence, but rather was the primary goal that was planned very carefully from the beginning, and perhaps before the war, through the recruitment campaigns of mercenaries who were brought from West Africa and the Sahel, that is, those Areas where ISIS, Al-Qaeda and Boko Haram are active.

Loyalty to Those with Black Turbans

The process of releasing the terrorist elements and criminals was not a free Christmas gift but rather something planned one night so that the same elements would join the “readiness”(RSF) forces to help them in fighting, intimidating people, and making explosives to compensate for the shortage of weapons and ammunition, and therefore most of them – to this day – are present in the militia headquarters, such as Bakr Haggar, the Chadian who belongs to Al-Qaeda, and Al-Nour Jumaa and Othman Youssef are among those who pledged allegiance to ISIS out of blind obedience.

The militia killed Musa Nazir and released Abu Khaled, a Sudanese, in exchange for a financial ransom estimated at $13,000, which his family paid after bargaining and threatening to liquidate him. As for the rest, there is insufficient information about them, led by Abu Fatima, Zaidan Saleh, and Al-Nassim. They are a mixture of different Arab nationalities.

But the confirmed facts, which are the militia’s motive in emptying terrorists’ cells, are that it subjected some elements to intense interrogations and blackmailing to fight with them. It successfully recruited some of them, most notably the Somali Othman Yusuf. This behaviour necessarily contradicts international laws and the rules of war in dealing with terrorist elements and criminals.

It reached the point of including them in the ranks of the RSF without the rebel forces feeling embarrassed as they put on the shoes of democracy and human rights shirts blatantly stained with the blood of innocents. This is the same thing that prompted the militia to evade this charge by paying loyalty to those wearing black turbans and pointing fingers of accusation at the children of Wad Anoura Village.

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