Sudan Does Not Belong to the Elites… It Belongs to Its People

By: Adil Ibrahim Abdalla
In every Sudanese heart today, a single question echoes:
Is this homeland truly ours, or has it been stolen from us?
Are we destined to remain marginalized, living on the edges of life, while the so-called “elites” divide power and wealth in our name?
The unshakable truth is that Sudan belongs to its people — not to a handful of opportunists, not to foreign-backed alliances, and not to political factions that trade their principles for a seat at the table.
The people are exhausted.
Exhausted from fake political theater.
Exhausted from pointless dialogues and foreign mediations that only favor the powerful and rebrand criminals as “partners in peace.”
What Sudan needs today is not more conferences and committees — but a genuine rebirth, rooted in the—
people, in the villages, in the streets, in the minds and hearts that remain uncorrupted.
We need a clear vision that defines what we want and guides us toward a fair future.
We need steadfastness, even when the road is long and painful.
We need a unified national goal that transcends geography, tribe, and language.
We need faith in our ability to reach that goal, no matter how high the barriers.
Above all, we need trust — trust in ourselves, in our collective awareness, in our experiences, and in our power to make real change.
Sudan will not be rebuilt in luxury hotels or foreign capitals.
It will be rebuilt from the camps of the displaced, from the resilience of mothers in forgotten neighborhoods, from the chants of protesters in the streets, from unemployed youth who still dream, and from the unwavering commitment of those who never sold out.
This land does not need smooth-talking politicians — it needs those who feel its pain and fight for its freedom.
We don’t need those who manipulate the word “peace,” but those who redefine it through justice first.
We don’t need elites who make backroom deals — we need a national project that includes every Sudanese and restores dignity to all.
Within this context, the Sudan Liberation Movement/Army, led by Abdelwahid Mohamed Ahmed El Nour, stands as a unique voice —
a voice of resistance, a voice that has not compromised, a voice that remains rooted in the suffering and hopes of the people.
It is the living conscience of the revolution, and the honest path toward a new Sudan — one built not on exclusion but on citizenship, justice, and democracy.
This movement does not offer hollow slogans. It believes that every Sudanese — from Darfur to the Blue Nile, from the Nuba Mountains to Port Sudan, from Khartoum to the River Nile — deserves to be treated as a full citizen, not a stranger in their own land.
We dream of a Sudan where opportunities are distributed fairly — not based on loyalty or origin.
A Sudan where democracy is not a show — but a living system grounded in transparency, accountability, and participation.
A Sudan where education, healthcare, and protection are basic rights for all — not privileges for the few.
The new Sudan will not create itself.
It must rise from the unity of those who suffered, from the meeting of their hopes and scars — not from elite negotiations and recycled promises.
To every Sudanese, wherever you are — inside the country or in exile:
Let this article be a starting point.
Let it spark new awareness, and revive our belief in each other.
Let us walk together — with courage, faith, and a shared goal.
Sudan is not a distant dream. It’s a future we can create — if we hold on to our vision, stay committed to our principles, and trust in our people.
We are not powerless. We are simply being tested — and together, we will pass.
Let’s begin again…
For a homeland that includes us all.
For a new Sudan that lives up to our hopes.
Date: July 27, 2025



