Hassabo Mohamed Abdul-Rahman

The Sixth Sudanese Expatriates Conference concluded its meetings Wednesday evening and issued its recommendations at the Police Club by a meeting held in the presence of the Vice President of the Republic, Hassabo Mohamed Abdul-Rahman, the Minister of Higher Education, Sumaia Abu Kashawa, the Wali (governor) of Khartoum State, Dr. Abdul-Rahman Al-Khidir, the Secretary General of the Sudanese Expatriates Organ, Haj Majid Suwar and the Chairman of the Higher Council for Communities in Sudan.
The conferees highlighted through the interventions on the expatriate's concerns and problems and his role in contributing greatly to the renaissance of the homeland, referring to the strong determination in this conference.
Commenting on the conferees' interventions, the Minister of Finance Badr-Eddin Mahmoud, affirmed the state commitment to the directives included in the address of the First Vice President of the Republic in the 2015 budget and to reconsider the expatriates' incentives to ensure the continuity of their resources.
In a response to an inquiry on the economic blockade imposed on Sudan, the Minister of Finance affirmed that it is a unilateral and directed on the economic side.
The Governor of the Central Bank of Sudan Abdul-Rahman Hassan has affirmed the concern with the immigrant economy, calling on expatriates to invest their money inside the country, giving a directive to banks to give concern to the expatriates' investments.
The Interior Minister, Lt. Gen. Ismat Abdul-Rahman, has pledged to send delegations abroad to issue the National Number and the electronic passport.
Meanwhile the Minister of the Higher Education Sumaia Abu Kashawa explained her ministry policy to enhance the education service inside and abroad, calling on the media not to escalate the abroad Sudanese students' problems in some countries as they have traveled there without the ministry knowledge.
The Wali of Khartoum State, Dr. Abdul-Rahman Al-Khidir pointed to the expatriates' contributions in supporting the national economy.
The recommendations of the conference were read over at the conclusion of the Sixth Expatriates Conference.