Even though Sudan's legal systems have been drawn from various other jurisdictions,
capital punishment has always existed in the country. During the twentieth century, there were several changes to Sudanese law. In the early 1900s until 1974 the death penalty was active in a legal system based on Indian criminal law, which itself was influenced by British law. In 1974, during President
Gaafar Nimeiry's time in office, largescale amendments to the penal code were carried out which included some elements of civil law. However, the civil law amendments were never integrated into the Sudanese penal code which caused a number of limitations for the courts. After this failure the previous Indian influenced penal law was reinstated. The basis of the legal system continued its yoyo pattern when in
1983 the Nimeiry regime sought to promote the
Muslim Brotherhood's version of Sharia law. Nimeiry's office revised a number of national laws to reflect this, including the penal code, only to have it repealed two years later and the 1974 criminal code restored once more. In 1991 the 1974 penal code was replaced for a second time by the
1991 Criminal Code which was still in use . By that time President
Omar Al-Bashir had come to power after a 1989 coup, led by the fundamentalist
National Islamic Front (NIF). The reformations made by the Al-Bashir government helped to promote Islamisation in the country. Though the identifier "criminal code" was chosen over "penal code" due to the fact the new laws included provisions which would promote care and rehabilitation, the government had no plans to follow growing international opinion against the death penalty and, to the contrary, further entrenched the practice. Rather than begin to draw back, the scope of the application of the penalty expanded following the introduction of the code. The 2012 periodic report of the government of Sudan to the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights stated that Sudan saw no reason to abolish the death sentence. ==Legislation==