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Gaafar Nimeiry

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Gaafar Muhammad an-Nimeiry (otherwise known as Jaafar Nimeiry, Gaafar Nimeiry or Ga'far Muhammad an-Numayri; born 1 January 1930) (Arabic: جعفر محمد النميري) was the President of Sudan from 1971 to 1985. He was born in Omdurman in central Sudan, and is the son of a postman and the great grandson of a tribal leader from the Wad Nimeiry region in Dongola.

In 1952 Nimeiry graduated from the Sudan Military College, where he was greatly influenced by the ideas of Gamal Abdel Nasser's Free Officers Movement, which gained power in Egypt that same year. In 1966 Nimeiry graduated from the United States Army Command College in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. Three years later he helped lead a military coup of the civilian government of Ismail al-Azhari, shortly after which he was named Prime Minister of Sudan. He used his position to enact a number of socialist and Pan-Arabist reforms.

Nimeiry successfully weathered a coup attempt by Sadiq al-Mahdi in 1970, and in 1971 was briefly removed from power by a Communist coup, before being restored. Later in 1971 he was elected President, and succeeded in ending the 17-year civil war between north and south Sudan the next year with the Addis Ababa Agreement.

In 1981 Nimeiry, still President of Sudan, began a dramatic shift toward Islamist political governance. In 1983 he imposed sharia, or Islamic law, throughout the country. In violation of the Addis Ababa Agreement he dissolved the southern Sudanese government, thereby prompting a renewal of the civil war. In 1985 Nimeiry authorised the execution of the peaceful political dissident and Islamic reformist Mahmoud Mohamed Taha after Taha--who was first accused of religious sedition in the 1960s when Sudan's President was Ismail al-Azhari-- was declared an apostate by a Sudanese court. Shortly thereafter Nimeiry was overthrown in a military coup.

Nimeiry lived in exile in Egypt from 1985 to 1999, in a villa situated in Heliopolis, Cairo. He returned to Sudan in May 1999 to a raptorous and populous welcome that surprised many of his detractors. Today he is affiliated to the National Congress Party.

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