Oman Daily Observer

Sudan generals, protest leaders sign constituti­onal declaratio­n

PACT AT LAST: The agreement builds on a landmark power-sharing deal and provides for a joint civilian-military ruling body

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KHARTOUM: Sudan’s army rulers and protest leaders on Sunday signed a hard-won constituti­onal declaratio­n that paves the way for a transition from August 18 to civilian rule following more than seven months of often deadly street rallies.

The agreement, signed at a ceremony in Khartoum, builds on a landmark July 17 power-sharing deal and provides for a joint civilianmi­litary ruling body to oversee the formation of a transition­al civilian government and parliament to govern for a three-year transition period.

Protest movement leader Ahmed Rabie and the deputy head of the ruling military council, General Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, signed the declaratio­n at the ceremony attended by African Union and Ethiopian mediators.

“We turned a tough page of Sudan’s history by signing this agreement,” Daglo, who flashed a victory sign after making a short speech, told reporters.

The signing was met by a wave of applause in the hall as representa­tives from both sides shook hands.

Members of the protest umbrella group, the Alliance for Freedom and Change, broke into tears as they exchanged hugs.

Crowds of jubilant Sudanese people gathered outside the hall chanted “blood for blood, our government is civilian” and “revolution, revolution”.

A formal signing in front of foreign dignitarie­s is to take place on August 17 — the date on which ousted president Omar al Bashir is due to go on trial on corruption charges — another protest leader, Monzer Abu al Maali, said.

The next day, the generals and protest leaders are to announce the compositio­n of the new transition­al civilian-majority ruling council, he said.

“Members of the ruling sovereign council will be announced on August 18, the prime minister will be named on August 20 and cabinet members on August 28,” Abu al Maali said.

Sunday’s accord was the result of difficult negotiatio­ns between the leaders of mass protests which erupted last December against Bashir’s threedecad­e rule and the generals who eventually ousted him in April. ‘Martyrs’ blood not wasted’ The talks had been repeatedly interrupte­d by deadly violence against demonstrat­ors who have kept up rallies to press for civilian rule.

They were suspended for weeks after men in military uniform broke up a long-running protest camp outside army headquarte­rs in Khartoum on June 3, killing at least 127 people, according to doctors close to the protest movement.

The protest movement has largely blamed irregulars of the powerful Rapid Support Forces (RSF), commanded by Daglo, for deadly violence against demonstrat­ors.

Protest leaders say the accord calls for the formation of an investigat­ion committee into protest-related violence which, according to doctors, has cost more than 250 lives since December.

Under Sunday’s deal, RSF paramilita­ries are to be integrated into the army chain of command.

Omar Hussein, a protester waving the Sudanese flag outside the negotiatio­ns hall, was overjoyed by the signing.

“Now we can tell the martyrs that their blood was not wasted,” he said.

 ?? — AFP ?? Ethiopian mediator Mahmoud Drir, protest leader Ahmad Rabie, and General Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, Sudan’s deputy head of the Transition­al Military Council, after signing the constituti­onal declaratio­n, at a ceremony attended by African Union and Ethiopian mediators in Khartoum.
— AFP Ethiopian mediator Mahmoud Drir, protest leader Ahmad Rabie, and General Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, Sudan’s deputy head of the Transition­al Military Council, after signing the constituti­onal declaratio­n, at a ceremony attended by African Union and Ethiopian mediators in Khartoum.

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