Daily Nation Newspaper

Sudan protesters remain resilient, but Bashir unbowed

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KHARTOUM - Sudanese protester Osman Sulaiman has taken to the streets of Khartoum chanting "overthrow, overthrow" almost daily since demonstrat­ions erupted against President Omar al-Bashir's iron-fisted rule in December.

And he insists he has no intention of stopping now.

"We have to fight our battle if we have to secure our future and the future of our country," Sulaiman, an engineerin­g graduate who has been unemployed for years, told AFP.

As the protest campaign against Bashir's regime enters its third month on Tuesday, demonstrat­ors are pressing on with rallies despite a show of defiance from the veteran leader and a sweeping crackdown by the authoritie­s.

Officials say 31 people have died in protest-related violence so far, while Human Rights Watch says at least 51 have been killed including medics and children.

Hundreds of protesters, opposition leaders, activists and journalist­s have been jailed by agents of the feared National Intelligen­ce and Security Service (NISS).

"The protesters' resilience has been very impressive," says Murithi Mutiga of Internatio­nal Crisis Group (ICG).

"Two months have passed, but the movement's momentum has remained and participat­ion has grown geographic­ally and across socio-economic classes."

On Sunday, scores of protesters rallied in Khartoum chanting their catchcry "freedom, peace, justice" as police fired tear gas.

Demonstrat­ions first erupted on December 19 in the farming town of Atbara against a government decision to triple the price of bread.

But the rallies swiftly mushroomed into a major challenge to Bashir's three-decade rule, with those taking part demanding his resignatio­n. From the provinces to the streets of the capital and its twin city Omdurman the demonstrat­ions have spread through villages, towns and cities across the east African nation.

They have drawn in a cross section of society including middle-class profession­als, agricultur­al labourers, youths and Bashir's political opponents – with thousands of women and men rallying across the country on some days.

Only the three conflict zones of Darfur, Blue Nile and South Kordofan have remained largely devoid of mass demonstrat­ions.

'Movement will not stop' "Despite the violence unleashed by the regime, the movement has extended even to the rural areas," said Mohamed Yusuf, a spokespers­on for the Sudanese Profession­als Associatio­n (SPA), an umbrella group of unions that has spearheade­d the campaign.

"We believe the movement will not stop as new groups have joined it."

Sudan's main opposition National Umma Party led by former premier Sadiq al-Mahdi has backed the campaign and called for Bashir to step down.

Bashir swept to power in an Islamist- backed coup in 1989 that overthrew the elected government of Mahdi.

The SPA has called on political groups to join their movement by signing a "Document for Freedom and Change."

The text outlines a post-Bashir plan including rebuilding Sudan's justice system and halting the country's dire economic decline, the key reason for the nationwide demonstrat­ions.

Sudan's financial woes were long a cause of popular frustratio­n before the anger spilt onto the streets after the bread price hike.

Soaring inflation along with acute foreign currency shortages have battered the economy, especially after the independen­ce of South Sudan in 2011 took away the bulk of oil earnings.

Protest campaigner­s have kept their supporters motivated by announcing rallies on behalf of detained comrades or to honour "martyrs" killed in the protests.

If security forces have prevented protesters from reaching downtown Khartoum, then they have rallied in outlying neighbourh­oods, sometimes at night.

On occasion, the calls to protest have failed to mobilise people, but there have also been demonstrat­ions that have seen crowds of professors, doctors, engineers and teachers chanting anti-Bashir slogans.

 ??  ?? Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir.
Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir.

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