Arab News

Protesters back on Sudan streets

Protesters take to the streets in Khartoum and across the country over dire living conditions

- AP Cairo

Sudanese protesters took to the streets in the capital and across the country on Wednesday over dire living conditions and a deadly crackdown on demonstrat­ors in the east earlier this month.

The protests came on the anniversar­y of a 1964 uprising that ended six years of military rule. Sudan is currently ruled by a joint civilianmi­litary government, following the popular uprising that toppled longtime president, Omar Bashir, last year.

The demonstrat­ions came a week after at least 15 people were killed and dozens were wounded in tribal clashes and a government crackdown against protesters in eastern Sudan. The violence broke out after Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok earlier this month sacked Saleh Ammar, governor of the eastern Kassala province.

Footage circulatin­g online showed protesters marching on Wednesday in Khartoum and its twin city, Omdurman, as well as in other cities across the country. Protesters set tires ablaze in some areas in the capital. There were no immediate reports of violence. Security forces blocked off major roads, bridges and streets leading to the presidenti­al palace and the military’s headquarte­rs in Khartoum ahead of the demonstrat­ions. The state-run SUNA news agency said the city center was in complete lockdown.

The “million-man march” was called by the so-called Resistance Committees, which were

instrument­al in the protests against Bashir and the generals who removed him from office and briefly held power. Other political parties and profession­al unions took part in the demonstrat­ions. The protesters are calling for the formation of a legislativ­e body, which is supposed to happen as part of a power-sharing agreement they reached with the military last year.

They also demand results from an independen­t investigat­ion into the crackdown against protests last year, including the deadly breakup of the main Khartoum protest camp in June 2019. The probe was supposed to have been completed by February, but investigat­ors asked for an extension in part due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The transition­al government has

been struggling to revive Sudan’s battered economy amid a huge budget deficit and widespread shortages of essential goods, including fuel, bread and medicine. Annual inflation soared past 200 percent last month as prices of bread and other staples surged, according to official figures. Sudan’s economy has suffered from decades of US sanctions and mismanagem­ent under Bashir, who had ruled the country since a 1989 Islamist-backed military coup.

The country has more than $60 billion in foreign debt, and debt relief and access to foreign loans are widely seen as its gateway to economic recovery. But access to foreign loans is linked to the removal of sanctions related to the country’s listing by the US as a state sponsor of terror.

 ?? AFP ?? Tires are pictured ablaze as Sudanese protesters rally on Wednesday in Khartoum and its twin city, Omdurman, as well as in other cities across the country against a worsening economic crisis.
AFP Tires are pictured ablaze as Sudanese protesters rally on Wednesday in Khartoum and its twin city, Omdurman, as well as in other cities across the country against a worsening economic crisis.

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