The National - News

THE SUDANESE TEACHER WHO HELPED TOPPLE A DICTATOR

▶ Before he got involved in founding the Sudanese Profession­als Associatio­n, Ahmed Rabia taught maths and physics, writes Hamza Hendawi in Khartoum

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Long before he represente­d Sudan’s protest movement to sign a power-sharing document with Khartoum’s ruling generals this month, and before the group he co-founded led an uprising to topple longstandi­ng dictator Omar Al Bashir, Ahmed Rabia had a different calling. He taught high school maths and physics.

It has been a tumultuous year for the father of three, whose image was splashed across the front page of nearly every regional newspaper on August 5, signing a historic agreement to end military rule in Sudan.

The agreement, officially known as a “constituti­onal declaratio­n”, has the potential to end the cycle of military dictatorsh­ips and ineffectiv­e civilian government­s that has defined Sudan’s political landscape since independen­ce in 1956. The instabilit­y created by that cycle has yielded seemingly non-stop civil strife, ethnic and religious enmities, and institutio­nal corruption and cronyism that left Sudan resembling a failed state.

But Mr Rabia’s historic role in the transition has not given him an inflated sense of self-importance nor filled him with political ambition.

“I will never be a part of political rivalries or join a political party. I have every intention of resuming my teaching career when schools reopen shortly,” he told The National on Thursday at the Khartoum headquarte­rs of the Sudanese Profession­als Associatio­n (SPA), a group he co-founded five years before it organised four months of protests against Mr Al Bashir’s rule, beginning in December last year.

The military removed Mr Al Bashir in April, but protests pressing for civilian rule continued for months after.

Beyond the classroom, Mr Rabia, 42, envisages another role for himself. “We will develop the associatio­n to exercise oversight on the democratic process in Sudan. We need to dismantle the Islamist deep state,” he said, alluding to Bashir loyalists put in leading positions in state organisati­ons throughout the 29 years of his rule.

“It’s a deep state, but I don’t think it is that deep,” he said. “As Sudanese, we will never again be fooled by anyone acting in the name of religion. We will not be ruled again by someone using religion as a political tool.”

The document Mr Rabia cosigned is due to be formalised

in a ceremony on Saturday to which internatio­nal and regional dignitarie­s have been invited.

Sudan’s military rulers and the opposition represente­d by Mr Rabia have agreed to a transition­al period of a little more than three years during which an 11-member Sovereignt­y Council will operate as a collective presidency. One of the generals will head the council for the first 21 months, with a civilian at the helm for the next 18 months. Elections are scheduled for the end of the transition­al period.

A transition­al government of technocrat­s will be selected by the Forces of Freedom and Change, a loose coalition of political parties and trade unions that represents the protest movement and which negotiated the deal with the military. The alliance will also have a two-thirds share of a proposed 300-seat legislativ­e.

On Thursday the alliance, of which the SPA is a key member, nominated British-educated economist Abdullah Hamdouk as the transition­al prime minister. Mr Hamdouk’s career spans four decades of working for the Sudanese government and various UN agencies.

Mr Rabia said that giving the generals leadership of the Sovereignt­y Council for the first 21 months was not a major concession by the protest movement as many speculated. “Remnants of the former regime continue to control militias and cells of loyalists. The military will have to deal with that threat now.”

The deal was the product of months of negotiatio­ns that stalled on several occasions when security forces used deadly force against protesters. Tensions peaked on June 3 with the dispersal of a sit-in encampment outside the military headquarte­rs in Khartoum.

The opposition says nearly 130 people were killed in the violence, which was followed by a series of mass demonstrat­ions, drawing up to a million people demanding the military make way for civilian rule.

“Sudan’s streets and the awareness of the Sudanese youth are our only guarantee that the agreement will be respected,” Mr Rabia said.

His unassuming demeanour and modest appearance belie his status as a chief architect of a peaceful revolution to topple an entrenched regime that had long used violence with impunity against opponents. That the protest movement chose him for the distinctio­n of signing the constituti­onal declaratio­n shows the respect he enjoys among his peers.

“Many people just thought that the honour was given to a schoolteac­her because others wanted to avoid the limelight,” he said with a smile.

But his activism dates to 2002, when he founded a neighbourh­ood teachers’ associatio­n that evolved eight years later into a nationwide and independen­t teachers’ union to rival its government-controlled counterpar­t. Throughout the uprising, Mr Rabia, like other senior protest leaders, worked behind the scenes, using social media to mobilise and raise funds for their anti-government movement.

“We operated like ghosts. No one knew who we were. I was detained in January and released after Al Bashir was gone on April 11 and I stepped into the public arena for the first time a few days later,” he said at the SPA’s sparsely furnished headquarte­rs, a three-storey villa in the leafy Khartoum district of Garden City.

Initially, the military was reluctant to negotiate in good faith, Mr Rabia said, chiefly because the generals doubted the level of popular support behind the protest movement. At times, generals publicly suggested protest leaders were seeking to grab power, called for the inclusion of other groups in negotiatio­ns, or proposed elections be held by the end of 2019. At one point, according to Mr Rabia, the generals tried to undermine the alliance of Freedom and Change, seeking to create a power base of their own, flirting with forces and tribal leaders linked to Mr Al Bashir’s regime.

It seemed clear to Mr Rabia that the generals wanted to cling to power, as did fellow travellers from Mr Al Bashir’s regime. But the mass peaceful protests that continued even in the face of brutal violence finally convinced them to genuinely co-operate with protest leaders. “They realised that civilian rule is what the people really wanted.”

Sudan’s streets and the awareness of the youth are our only guarantee that the agreement will be respected AHMED RABIE Protest leader

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 ?? AFP ?? Above, an internally displaced South Sudanese man at a camp in Malakal in 2014. Left, Ahmed Rabia and Gen Mohamed Daglo shake hands after signing the constituti­onal declaratio­n in Khartoum
AFP Above, an internally displaced South Sudanese man at a camp in Malakal in 2014. Left, Ahmed Rabia and Gen Mohamed Daglo shake hands after signing the constituti­onal declaratio­n in Khartoum
 ?? AFP ?? Sudanese protest leader Ahmed Rabia, above, after signing the constituti­onal declaratio­n in Khartoum on August 4. Right, Alaa Salah, a Sudanese woman propelled to internet fame by clips of her leading protest chants, addresses protesters during a demonstrat­ion outside military headquarte­rs in Khartoum
AFP Sudanese protest leader Ahmed Rabia, above, after signing the constituti­onal declaratio­n in Khartoum on August 4. Right, Alaa Salah, a Sudanese woman propelled to internet fame by clips of her leading protest chants, addresses protesters during a demonstrat­ion outside military headquarte­rs in Khartoum
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