Sudan's Bashir appoints first PM since his coup
Bakri Hassan Saleh was named prime minister by the executive bureau of Bashir's National Congress Party (NCP).
"He will take the oath as prime minister tomorrow," Ibrahim Mahmoud, the NCP's deputy chief, told reporters, adding that Saleh, 67, would also hold onto his current post of Sudan's first vice-president.
Sudanese lawmakers voted in December to reinstate the post of prime minister.
Following the appointment of Saleh - a fellow officer involved in the coup - 73-year-old Bashir is expected to announce a cabinet reshuffle on Thursday.
The naming of a premier and the delegation of some of the president's powers fall in line with reforms proposed by a year-long national dialogue held between Bashir's government and some opposition groups.
In October, after a quarter-century in power, Bashir concluded the national dialogue aimed at resolving insurgencies in Sudan's border regions and healing the country's crisis-wracked economy.
But the talks - launched in October 2015 - were boycotted by most mainstream opposition and armed groups.
Bashir abolished the post of prime minister after he led a bloodless coup almost three decades ago against then premier Sadiq al-Mahdi with the help of Islamist leader Hassan al-Turabi.
Mahdi, who fled abroad more than two years ago, returned to Sudan last month.
A fixture of Sudanese politics since the 1960s, Mahdi served as prime minister from 1966 to 1967 and again from 1986 to 1989.
His government was the last to be democratically elected in Sudan before the 1989 coup.