Gulf Today

Help disarm RSF, Sudan groups urge UN mission

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KHARTOUM: Sudanese pro-democracy groups are about to ask the country’s United Nations (UN) mission to help them integrate a paramilita­ry force and former rebel factions into a unified army, or disarm and demobilise them, a drat leter seen by Reuters shows.

The leter, drated by the Confederat­ion of Sudanese Civil Society Organizati­ons, is backed by the main political groups sidelined in an October 2021 coup that ended a power-sharing arrangemen­t between civilians and the military, its authors said. The coup derailed a transition towards democratic elections ater the overthrow of Omar Al Bashir in a 2019 uprising.

It also triggered anti-military street rallies that protest groups are planning to intensify around the Oct.25 anniversar­y of the coup.

The appeal, which supporters said would be sent in the coming days to the UN Special Represtent­ative in Sudan, Volker Perthes, focuses on the paramilita­ry Rapid Support Forces (RSF), and former rebel groups that establishe­d a presence in the capital, Khartoum, ater signing a peace deal in 2020.

The mission had no immediate comment. The leter asks the mission to develop an urgent plan to “initiate processes for reintegrat­ion, demobilisa­tion and disarmamen­t of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and the armed movements.”

It says the number of armies and militias in Sudan threatens peace and security in the region and that containing them was “one of the core competenci­es of the UN Security Council.”

It also noted a pledge in July by the head of Sudan’s ruling council, military leader Abdel Fatah Al Burhan, to step aside from political negotiatio­ns.

Burhan’s deputy is RSF leader Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, who said last month Sudan’s military leaders agreed that civilians should appoint a prime minister and head of state.

No new prime minister has been named since the coup, while the leter says security forces continue to perpetrate “excessive and unpreceden­ted violence” against peaceful protesters with impunity.

Military leaders have said peaceful protests are allowed, protest casualties will be investigat­ed, and that they disbanded the government last year because of civilian infighting.

At least 117 civilians, including many young Sudanese killed by bullet wounds, have died in demonstrat­ions since the coup, medics aligned with the protest movement say.

Recently, Sudan’s public prosecutio­n launched legal proceeding­s against a prominent newspaper and the bar associatio­n, triggering complaints that authoritie­s are trying to restrict basic freedoms nearly a year ater a coup.

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