Sudan army wants barricades lifted
khartoum — Sudan’s new army rulers on Monday ordered protesters to dismantle their barricades on roads leading to the military headquarters as tensions grew after talks between the two sides broke down.
The demonstrators have accused the ruling military council of being little different from veteran leader Omar Al Bashir who was toppled by the army on April 11 following months of street protests.
The demand to reopen roads came a day after rally leaders suspended talks with the 10-member military council about their main demand to transfer power to a civilian administration.
Protests triggered in December over bread price hikes are still brewing, and Egypt announced it will host an emergency summit of African leaders on Tuesday on “the evolution of the situation” in neighbouring Sudan.
The protest leaders in Khartoum had planned to name on Sunday members of a civilian body to take over from the military rulers, but by nightfall it was clear it would not happen.
“We are suspending our talks with the military council,” spokesman Mohamed Al Amin told the tens of thousands of protesters gathered at the army complex.
“We call for escalating and continuing the demonstrations until the demands are met,” he said.
“We are treating the military council as an extension of the regime.”
Protesters have massed outside the army complex since April 6, putting up barricades on roads leading to the area as well as checkpoints to frisk people coming to the rally.
But initial jubilation at the end of Bashir’s three decades of iron-fisted rule quickly turned to anger on the streets over the military council’s plan to rule for a two-year transition period.
“The roads have to be opened immediately to facilitate the movement of trains, and all means of transport in the capital and other states so as to help movement of essential items,” the military council said in a statement.
On Sunday, Sudan’s new military ruler General Abdel Fattah Al Burhan voiced dissatisfaction with protesters setting up checkpoints
The military council has been stalling and attempting to take over power
Assad Saeed Gaber, a protester
and searching those who come to the sit-in. “It can’t continue like this because security is the responsibility of the state,” Burhan said.
But he insisted the army rulers were “committed to give power to (the) people,” and pledged to respond to the demonstrators’ demands within a week.
Protesters vowed to remain at the checkpoints they have set up every few metres across the roads leading to the protest site in central Khartoum. —