After the defeat of the
Mahdist State in 1899, Sudan came under a
de jure condominium of the
British Empire, and the
Kingdom of Egypt, in which Britain had
de facto control over Sudan. In the 1910s up to the
1924 White Flag League Revolt, nationalism emerged in Sudan and Sudanese graduates of
Gordon Memorial College formed the
Graduates' Club on 18 May 1918, which wanted to restrict the
Governor-General of Sudan's power and to obtain Sudanese participation in the council's deliberations. However, any change in government required a change in the condominium agreement. Neither Britain nor Egypt would agree to a modification. After the 1924 revolt was crushed, Sudanese educated elites shifted their focus to cultural and intellectual activities. The GGC worked to mobilise public support for Sudanese independence, organising strikes and protests to pressure the British government to grant greater autonomy to Sudan. On 3 April 1942, amid global shifts like the publication of the
Atlantic Charter, the Congress presented twelve demands to the government, including a call for Sudan's right to self-determination after the
World War II and end to the
"Closed-door" ordinances for
southern Sudan. These demands were rejected, leading to division in the GGC, influenced by the
Khatmiyya and
Ansar. In 1952, leaders of the Umma-dominated legislature negotiated the Self-Determination Agreement with Britain. The draft agreement was sent to Egypt in May 1952, but Cairo, which demanded recognition of Egyptian sovereignty over Sudan, repudiated the condominium agreement in protest and declared its reigning monarch,
Faruk,
King of Egypt and the Sudan. who supported Sudan independence. The statue was debated in the
Parliament of the United Kingdom on 22 October 1952, and on 20 January 1953 after Egypt approved the agreement. During this time,
Abdul Rahman al-Mahdi, Imam of the Ansar, became
Chief Minister of Sudan on 22 October 1952. == The statue ==