Oman Daily Observer

Mass protests in Sudan against prospect of military rule

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KHARTOUM: Huge crowds of people marched in different parts of the Sudanese capital and other cities on Thursday in demonstrat­ions to reject military rule as the crisis in the country’s troubled transition from authoritar­ian rule deepened.

The military has shared power with civilians in a transition­al authority since the removal of President Omar al Bashir in 2019 in a popular uprising after three decades in power.

A coalition of rebel groups and political parties have aligned themselves with the military, which has accused the civilian parties of mismanagem­ent and monopolisi­ng power, and are seeking to dissolve the cabinet.

Civilian leaders say this would amount to a coup and say the military aims to install a government it can control.

Thursday’s protest took place on the anniversar­y of the 1964 October Revolution and was preceded by days of smaller neighbourh­ood protests.

Reuters journalist­s estimated the number of participan­ts to be in the hundreds of thousands, making it the biggest demonstrat­ion of the transition.

Plumes of smoke could be seen as protesters burned tires and waved Sudanese flags.

Many chants were critical of head of the ruling Sovereign Council, General Abdel Fattah al Burhan, accusing him of being loyal to Bashir. Some demanded he hand over leadership to civilians and others demanded his removal.

“The government is ours, and our government is civilian,” one chant said.

Several government ministers were seen marching in different parts of Khartoum.

“October 21 is a lesson for any tyrants, loyalists, or opportunis­ts deluded into thinking they can turn back the hands of time,” wrote Sovereign Council member Siddig Tawer, one of several civilian officials who endorsed the protests.

Neighbourh­ood resistance committees said in a statement they were protesting the entire power-sharing agreement and demanded sole civilian rule.

Many businesses in central Khartoum were closed in anticipati­on of the protest and there was an extensive police presence.

The military says it is committed to the transition to democracy and elections at the end of 2023.

 ?? — AFP ?? Sudanese demonstrat­ors take to the streets of the capital Khartoum to demand the government’s transition to civilian rule, on Thursday.
— AFP Sudanese demonstrat­ors take to the streets of the capital Khartoum to demand the government’s transition to civilian rule, on Thursday.

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