Nyala, May 22 (Darfur24)
The chairman of the Presidential Council of the RSF-led parallel Founding Alliance Government (TASIS), Lieutenant General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo “Hemedti,” on Thursday appointed Bilal Hussein Ismail Kano Koko as Auditor General, according to an official decision by the alliance.
The decision stated that the appointment aims to strengthen financial oversight, transparency, and accountability within state institutions.
The move comes as part of a series of steps taken by the parallel authority formed in opposition to the Sudanese army-backed government, including the appointment of ministers, the establishment of a regional council, the formation of parts of the judicial authority, and the creation of a transitional currency council.
According to the decision published on the Presidential Council’s Facebook page, the appointment was made under the provisions of the 2025 Transitional Constitution of Sudan and within the framework of efforts to enhance financial governance and improve accounting and oversight performance.
The Auditor General will head the General Audit Bureau and oversee the implementation of financial control standards and the auditing of state institutions.
The office will also monitor the accounts of the armed forces, public institutions, banks, and companies in which the state holds shares, as part of broader efforts to expand financial oversight and reinforce transparency.
The decision instructed all relevant institutions to cooperate with the General Audit Bureau and facilitate its work in accordance with governance and financial discipline requirements.
The TASIS administration was established through a political and military alliance between the RSF, the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North led by Abdel Aziz al-Hilu, and other allied groups, operating in parallel to the government controlled by the Sudanese army.
In recent months, the administration also announced the appointment of a chief justice and the formation of a Council of Regions, a supervisory body composed of 24 members representing Sudan’s eight regions under the coalition’s founding framework.

