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Sudanese businessman organises 'ice-breaker' Israel trip

Sudanese businessman organises 'ice-breaker' Israel trip
Sudanese businessman Abu al-Qassem is planning a trip to Israel which he hopes will 'break the ice'.
4 min read
Sudanese businessman Abu al-Qassem Bartoum was suspended from parliament in 2015 [AFP/Getty]

From his sprawling mansion in capital Khartoum, complete with a grand facade of pillars copying Washington's , businessman Abu al-Qassem Bortoum speaks excitedly of his controversial plan.

Bortoum has drawn up a list of 40 from all walks of life, regions and ethnicities he wants to join him when he leads a trip to he hopes will help overcome people's suspicion and fear.

"There are university professors, workers and farmers, singers, athletes and even Sufis," said Bortoum, 54, who heads agricultural and transport companies.

But the plan raises eyebrows in the North African nation, where leaders are split on the question of of ties with the Jewish state.

Bortoum said he had organised the five-day trip scheduled for November - costing $160,000, or some $4,000 per person - with "Israelis from civil society", but who he did not name.

"The objective is to break the ice," he said.

A former member of parliament, Bortoum was suspended in 2015 after he sparked fury from the Islamist regime then in power, when he called for the abolition of Islamic law and for relations with Israel.

He claims to have never been to Israel, and to have no contact with the authorities there.

Israel and Sudan do not have relations, and the two countries have been technically at war for decades.

'Psychological blockage'

Bortoum said nothing prevents him from going as travel restrictions were lifted over a decade ago.

"There is a psychological blockage on the part of ordinary people, because of the intellectuals imbued with Islamist ideology, the left, or Arab nationalists," Bortoum said.

In a poll released last week by the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies, only 13 percent of those questioned in Sudan supported relations with Israel - compared with 79 percent against.

Bortoum brushes aside the matter of Israel's occupation of Palestinian territories.

"I care about the interests of my country, and I see that our hostility towards the Jewish state has hurt us," said Bortoum.

"Our country is rich in natural resources - and yet we are reduced to begging."

Sudan's economy is in crisis, partly due to sanctions imposed because it is on a US blacklist as an alleged state sponsor of terrorism.

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The sanctions have had dire economic consequences, blocking investments and development.

Bortoum says it has also kept Sudan from accessing technology.

"An agreement with Israel will open the doors to Western technological investment for us," he said.

"Israel is a small country, but its citizens have an impact on the economy in Europe and the United States."

Divided opinions

Sudan's transitional government, which came to power a year ago after Islamist president Omar al-Bashir was ousted, brings together old rivals into a coalition.

Any deal with Israel under Bashir would have been unthinkable.

But there remain strongly different opinions among top leaders, since a deal with Israel potentially risks undermining that fragile political unity.

General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, who heads Sudan's transitional sovereign council, met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Uganda in February.

Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, the council's vice-president and a paramilitary commander, has been blunt in his support.

"Israel is a developed country... for our development, we need Israel," he said.

In September, Israel signed United States-brokered deals to normalise ties with the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain.

The administration of US President Donald Trump wants Sudan to follow suit, and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo visited Khartoum in August to push a deal.

But Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok later said Washington should separate the issue of removing Sudan from the US blacklist from recognition of Israel.

Hamdok last month said normalising ties has "many other complications," and that the matter "requires a deep discussion within our society."

This wait-and-see attitude exasperates Bortoum.

"The Hamdok government has no vision - either on the problem of the economy or on international relations," he said.

Sudan is gripped by record-breaking inflation, with rates last month topping 212 percent.

But opposition also comes from the highest religious authority in Sudan, said Adel Hassan Hamza, secretary general of the country's Islamic law council.

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"By 40 votes out of 50 we issued a fatwa stating that relations with Israel are prohibited because the nation occupies Palestinian land," Hamza said. "I think the government will follow this recommendation."

But Bortoum believes his trip will help build trust between people, and is determined it goes ahead.

"The question of Israel is political and not religious," Bortoum said. "I know that my trip will provoke negative reactions - but that does not frighten me.

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