Sudan's Attorney General, Mubarak Mahmoud, announced the discovery of three graves believed to belong to the officers of "28 Ramadan," who were executed by Bashir in 1990. He mentioned in an interview with "Al Arabiya" and "Al Hadath" that some remains have been transferred to the UAE for DNA testing due to the availability of technology and resources there.
In another matter, the Attorney General noted significant cooperation between the International Criminal Court and Sudan, with a joint team working on data exchange and evaluation. Recently, a specialized committee in Sudan announced the discovery of 20 mobile phones in Kober Central Prison in Khartoum, where former President Omar Bashir and several key figures of his regime are detained.
The committee responsible for dismantling the ousted regime stated that the phones were found in the possession of Bashir, his former deputy Ali Osman Mohamed Taha, and his assistant Nafie Ali Nafie, along with Abdel Rahim Mohamed Hussein, Ibrahim Ghandour, Abdel Basit Hamza, Kamal Abdel Latif, and Osman Mohamed Yousif Kibir. They confirmed that these phones were used for making internal and external communications with organization members who fled the country after the regime's fall.