San Diego Union-Tribune

SUDAN’S PM ANNOUNCES RESIGNATIO­N

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Sudanese Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok announced his resignatio­n Sunday amid a political deadlock and widespread pro-democracy protests following a military coup that derailed the country’s fragile transition to democratic rule.

Hamdok, a former U.N. official seen as the civilian face of Sudan’s transition­al government, had been reinstated as prime minister in November as part of an agreement with the military after the October coup. In that time he had failed to name a Cabinet, and his resignatio­n throws Sudan into political uncertaint­y amid uphill security and economic challenges.

In a televised national address Sunday, Hamdok called for a dialogue to agree on a “national charter” and to “draw a roadmap” to complete the transition to democracy in accordance with the 2019 constituti­onal document governing the transition­al period.

“I decided to return the responsibi­lity and declare my resignatio­n as prime minister,” he said, adding that his stepping down would allow a chance for another person to lead the nation and complete its transition to a “civilian, democratic country.” He did not name a successor.

The prime minister said his efforts to bridge the widening gap and settle disputes among the political forces have failed.

He warned that the political stalemate since the military takeover could become a full-blown crisis and damage the country’s already battered economy.

“I tried as much as I possibly could to prevent our country from sliding into a disaster. Now, our nation is going through a dangerous turning point that could threaten its survival unless it is urgently rectified,” he said.

The October coup had upended Sudan’s plans to move to democracy after a popular uprising forced the military’s overthrow of longtime autocrat Omar al-Bashir and his Islamist government in April 2019.

Four months after al-Bashir’s ouster, the generals and the protesters reached a power-sharing deal to rule the country through elections in 2023. However, military-civilian ties have been frayed by the military takeover that has threatened to return Sudan to internatio­nal isolation.

Hamdok’s resignatio­n comes amid a heavy security crackdown on protesters denouncing not only the takeover but the subsequent deal that reinstated him and sidelined the pro-democracy movement. He was returned to office in November amid internatio­nal pressure in a deal that calls for an independen­t technocrat­ic Cabinet under military oversight led by him.

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