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KHARTOUM (Reuters) - Sudan's last elected prime minister said on Tuesday he would run for president in April's elections, promising to settle the Darfur conflict and "dismantle totalitarianism" in Africa's largest state.
Sadeq al-Mahdi was overthrown with the rest of his civilian government in a bloodless coup by Sudan's current President Omar Hassan al-Bashir in 1989.
"Now it is possible for the people to reinstate (the person) who they believe represents their interests ... represents their aspirations," he told reporters after handing in his nomination for the ballot.
"This is simply a return to normal because I have not been fired by the people. I have been fired by the guns," he said.
The head of the opposition Umma party is also a descendent of a visionary Islamic leader who fought the British in the nineteenth century.
Sudan is preparing for a complex set of presidential and legislative elections promised under a 2005 peace deal that ended more than two decades of civil war between north and south Sudan.
Umma and other opposition groups have complained of widespread fraud during voter registration and last year threatened to boycott the poll if democratic reforms were not pushed through.
Mahdi released a statement on Tuesday saying the elections should be delayed until November so that officials could have time to deal with all their concerns, but added he had decided to go ahead with his candidacy in the interests of the country.
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