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Major General Salah Gosh was the long-term director of Sudan's National Security and Intelligence Services. He was transferred to a post as presidential adviser in August 2009, [1] repplaced by his deputy, Mohammed Atta al-Moula. He has been accused of having a significant role in organizing the Khartoum government's militias in the Darfur Conflict, and, according to the American Prospect,[2] is "listed in a confidential annex to a January 30th Security Council report that identifies the 17 Sudanese individuals whom a panel of U.N. experts concluded were most responsible for war crimes and impeding the peace process. The panel recommends that the council place these men under targeted sanction, that they be banned from international travel, and that their foreign assets be frozen." He was described by the American Prospect as "Gosh was [the] personal government minder" for Osama bin Laden when the latter was in Sudan between 1990 and 1996. Gosh has also been the point of contact between the Central Intelligence Agency and Sudan on counter-terrorism issues[3]. In yet another of the situation where US interests in counter-terror and human rights are at odds with another, especially when the two interests are in different parts of Sudan, Gosh told the Al-Ahdath daily from Libya that the cooperation with the US “helped avert devastating measures [by US administration] against Sudan”.[4]. The US had flown Gosh to the US in April 2005, to discuss capture of terror suspects. Gosh also is suspected of complicity in human rights abuses in Darfur, so he was subsequently denied admission to the US for medical treatment. References[edit]
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