Miami Herald

Sudanese general tightens grip on power, 2 weeks after coup

- BY FAY ABUELGASIM AND NOHA ELHENNAWY

Sudan’s top general reappointe­d himself as head of the army-run interim governing body on Thursday, a sign that he’s tightening his grip on the country two weeks after he led a coup against civilian leaders.

The move by Gen. Abdel-Fattah Burhan — along with other appointmen­ts he announced for the Sovereign Council — was expected to anger Sudan’s pro-democracy protest movement, sidelined in the coup. Since the Oct. 25 takeover, pro-democracy leaders have demanded the military relinquish power and refuse to be part of any administra­tion in which a military maintains a role.

Thursday’s developmen­t, announced in a bulletin by Sudan’s state television, comes amid repeated promises from the military that they will hand over power to civilian authoritie­s. Since the coup, more than 100 government officials and political leaders have been detained, along with a large number of protesters and activists. Almost all remain in custody.

At least 14 anti-coup protesters have been killed due to excessive force used by the country’s security forces, according to Sudanese doctors and the United Nations.

Sudan’s culture and

informatio­n minister, Hamza Baloul, who was arrested during the coup and later released, condemned the appointmen­ts. He described Thursday’s announceme­nt of the new council as “an extension of

the coup“and said prodemocra­cy protesters are right to refuse to negotiate with military leaders. The protest movement has in recent days rejected internatio­nally backed initiative­s to return to a powershari­ng arrangemen­t with the military and has called for a nationwide strike.

Sudan has been in the midst of a fragile transition since a 2019 pro-democracy uprising led to the removal of longtime autocrat Omar al-Bashir. The 11member Sovereign Council was first formed in the summer of 2019, after the military signed a powershari­ng deal with pro-democracy forces.

A number of other members of the body sat on the previous council that Burhan headed before he dissolved it in the coup. Also reappointe­d to the body Thursday was the powerful paramilita­ry leader Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, as vice-president. And Burhan reappointe­d as council members another three generals who had served in the previous council.

Three others on the council are leaders of rebel groups who fought Bashir’s government for years, but who have moved towards peace with the transition­al government. They all also served on the previous council. One of them, Malik Agar, a prominent leader of the Sudan Revolution­ary Front, a rebel movement in Sudan’s southern Blue Nile States, was one of signees to a historic peace accord with the transition­al government in Juba, South Sudan last year.

Five of the members are civilians, only one of whom — Raja Nicola, a Christian lawyer — served on the previous body. She is one of two women appointees.

The agreement under which the council was formed after Bashir’s ouster stipulated that the council should include five civilians chosen by activists, five military representa­tives chosen by the armed forces and one civilian member to be chosen in agreement between civilians and the generals.

 ?? MARWAN ALI AP ?? Sudan’s top general, Abdel-Fattah Burhan, announced a new sovereign council — with him as its leader — Thursday after staging a coup two weeks ago.
MARWAN ALI AP Sudan’s top general, Abdel-Fattah Burhan, announced a new sovereign council — with him as its leader — Thursday after staging a coup two weeks ago.

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