In the early 1980s
Islamist Hassan al-Turabi had returned from exile, and in 1989 took power in a military
coup. Al-Turabi appeared to promise political Islam as a solution; that with hard work and honesty as part of the
Ummah, people could solve the political and social problems afflicting the country. Many Muslims from the disadvantaged regions of West, East and Central Sudan flocked to al-Turabi and his message. However, by the mid-1990s, the Islamist project was collapsing due to entrenched
corruption and widespread anger at the waste of lives in the
Second Sudanese Civil War with the south. In 1998, al-Turabi managed to position himself as Speaker of the House under the new
National Congress. However,
Ali Osman Mohamed Taha, al-Turabi's former follower, defected to the side of al-Bashir and, in December 1999, al-Bashir declared a state of emergency, stripping al-Turabi of his position and power. The book's critics, mainly government officials connected to al-Bashir, have consistently claimed that it was made at the direction of al-Turabi. Al-Turabi has denied any connection with either the book or with the JEM. In interviews, writers have stated that they, al-Turabi and the ruling government were all connected through the
National Islamic Front, but that al-Turabi had nothing to do with the writing of the
Black Book. The writers trace their roots to 1993, when a cell of NIF members, including
Khalil Ibrahim, the former Darfur Minister of Education, began meeting in secret in
al-Fashir to discuss the possibility of reforming the NIF from within. A second clandestine cell formed in 1994 in
Kurdufan, and third in Khartoum in 1997. Most of the Khartoum cell were university graduates and most were Islamists. The year that the Khartoum cell was formed, the dissidents decided that their first step should be to inform the populace of the structural problems; a 25-man committee was set up to gather information and begin writing. Julie Flint and
Alex de Waal call the
Black Book "the obituary of the Islamic revolution". However, by the time of its publication, the cell members had already decided that internal reform was impossible and that armed resistance was the only course of action. In 2001, they sent twenty of their leaders to begin openly organizing and, in August 2001, Khalil Ibrahim announced the existence of the
Justice and Equality Movement, a group that would form a minority partner with the secular rebel
Sudan Liberation Movement (SLM) already active in Darfur. Exactly a year after the announcement, Part II of the
Black Book was put up on the JEM website. Almost all of the authors joined the JEM or secular resistance movements. As of October 2006, the JEM continued its armed rebellion in Darfur in a conflict that had
displaced hundreds of thousands. ==Notes and references==