Gulf News

FROM DEMONSTRAT­IONS TO TRANSITION ACCORD

The launch of a historic transition to civilian rule yesterday in Sudan comes eight months after the start of popular protests, in which more than 250 were killed.

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A TIMELINE:

Bread prices

Protests erupt on December 19, 2018, against a government decision to triple bread prices. They quickly spread in the form of weekly demonstrat­ions, and morph into demands for President Omar Al Bashir to quit after three decades of ironfisted rule.

In the capital Khartoum on December 20, demonstrat­ors take to the streets chanting “freedom, peace, justice”.

On April 6, 2019, thousands gather outside army headquarte­rs in Khartoum, staying there for six days to plead for the military’s support.

On April 11, military authoritie­s announce they have removed Al Bashir from power and that a transition­al military council will govern for two years. Defying a monthlong curfew, thousands of demonstrat­ors remain camped in front of army headquarte­rs as the protest movement demands power be handed to a civilian government.

Talks between ruling generals and protest leaders end abruptly on May 20 without an accord on the make-up of a joint civilian-military council to govern during a transition.

Thousands of public and private sector workers strike on May 28 and 29 to pressure the military leaders.

In late May, military council chief Abdul Fattah Al Burhan visits Saudi Arabia, Egypt and the UAE, countries wary of popular uprisings in the region.

Bloody crackdown

On June 3, armed men in military fatigues move in on the protest camp outside army headquarte­rs and disperse thousands still gathered there.

It is the start of a crackdown that lasts several days, in which 127 people are killed, according to doctors close to the demonstrat­ors.

The Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a feared paramilita­ry which sprang from the notorious Janjaweed militia accused by rights groups of committing war crimes in Darfur, is blamed for the violence. The military rulers announce a probe.

The military scraps all previous agreements with protest leaders for a transition and calls for elections within nine months.

Protesters denounce a putsch.

On June 9, protest leaders launch a nationwide campaign of civil disobedien­ce that paralyses the country for two days, hitting the economy hard. After both sides signal they are ready to talk again, Ethiopia and African Union mediators in late June present new proposals for a transition.

On June 30, tens of thousands of protesters again rally. Security forces are deployed en masse and police fire tear gas at crowds. Several are killed.

Power deal agreed

On July 5, after two days of negotiatio­ns, the two sides agree in principle on an accord providing for power-sharing before transition to civilian rule. Crowds take to the streets of Khartoum to celebrate.

On July 29, six demonstrat­ors, including four school students, are shot dead during a rally in the central town of Al Obeid against shortages of bread and fuel. Negotiatio­ns are suspended, before resuming on August 1.

On August 4, the military and protest leaders sign a declaratio­n, under which a joint civilian-military ruling body will govern for a 39-month transition period, overseeing the formation of a civilian government and parliament.

On August 15, veteran economist Abdullah Hamdok is nominated as prime minister of the future transition government.

 ?? AFP ?? Protesters shouted “Civilian rule, civilian rule” as they gathered in Khartoum to celebrate the transition to civilian rule.
AFP Protesters shouted “Civilian rule, civilian rule” as they gathered in Khartoum to celebrate the transition to civilian rule.

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