Kuwait Times

Sudan generals and protest leaders sign transition deal

Crowds fill Khartoum’s streets to hail ‘new Sudan’

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KHARTOUM: Rapturous crowds filled the streets of Khartoum yesterday as Sudan’s generals and protest leaders signed a historic deal paving the way to civilian rule. Thousands of cheering people gathered around the Friendship Hall next to the Nile, where the documents that will govern Sudan’s 39-month transition were signed. “This is the biggest celebratio­n I have ever seen in my country. We have a new Sudan,” said Saba Mohammed, a veiled 37-year woman, waving a small plastic flag.

Minutes earlier, the deal was signed by Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, deputy chief of the military council, and Ahmed Al-Rabie, representi­ng the Alliance for Freedom and Change protest umbrella. Heads of state, prime ministers and dignitarie­s from several countries - including Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and Egypt’s Premier Mustafa Madbuli - attended the ceremony.

The constituti­onal declaratio­n formalizes the creation of a transition administra­tion that will be guided by an 11member sovereign council, comprised of six civilians and five military figures. The agreement brought an end to nearly eight months of upheaval that saw masses mobilize against president Omar Al-Bashir, who was ousted in April after 30 years in power. Thousands of people had arrived on trains from Sudan’s provinces to take part in the celebratio­ns, which will include a huge gathering in Khartoum’s main gardens.

“We hope Sudan can move forward now, we want to be proud of our country,” said Saida Khalifa as she got off the train after an all-night ride from Atbara, the town where the protests started in December last year. “The guns must go silent now and we must pull the country out of this mess to gain peace and freedom,” she said. One young girl wearing jeans and draped in a Sudanese flag rode a bicycle to the conference hall, an inconceiva­ble sight in the conservati­ve country even a few months ago. “This is the biggest celebratio­n I have ever seen in my country. We have a new Sudan,” said Saba Mohammed, a veiled 37-year-old woman, waving a small plastic flag.

The compositio­n of the civilian-majority transition ruling council is to be announced today. That follows the naming on Thursday of former senior UN official Abdalla Hamdok, a veteran economist, as transition­al prime minister. He is expected to focus on stabilizin­g Sudan’s economy, which went into a tailspin when the oil-rich south seceded in 2011. Economic woes were the trigger that sparked the initial protests.

At Khartoum’s central market early yesterday, shoppers and stallholde­rs interviewe­d by AFP all said they hoped a civilian government would help them put food on the table. “Everybody is happy now,” said Ali Yusef, a 19-year-old university student who works in the market to get by. “We were under the control of the military for 30 years but today we are leaving this behind us and moving towards civilian rule,” he said, sitting next to tomatoes piled directly on the ground. “All these vegetables around are very expensive but now I’m sure they will become cheaper.”

While it remains to be seen how the transition will change people’s daily lives, residents old and young were eager to exercise their newfound freedom of expression. “I’m 72 and for 30 years under Bashir, I had nothing to feel good about. Now, thanks to God, I am starting to breathe,” said Ali Issa Abdel Momen, sitting in front of his modest selection of vegetables at the market. But many Sudanese are already questionin­g the ability of the transition­al institutio­ns to rein in the military elite’s powers during the three-year period leading to planned elections.

The country of 40 million people will be ruled by an 11-member sovereign council and a government, which under the deal must be dominated by civilians. However, the interior and defense ministers are to be chosen by military members of the council. Observers have warned that the transition­al government will have little leverage to counter any attempt by the military to roll back the uprising’s achievemen­ts and seize back power.

Security forces deployed across Khartoum yesterday for the biggest internatio­nal event in years in Sudan, which had become something of a pariah country under Bashir’s rule. One of the most immediate diplomatic consequenc­es of the compromise reached this month could be Sudan’s return to the African Union, which suspended the country’s membership in June. Bashir, who took power in a 1989 coup and is wanted by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court on charges of genocide in the Darfur region, had been slated to appear in court yesterday on corruption charges. But his trial has been postponed to an as yet undetermin­ed date. — Agencies

 ??  ?? KHARTOUM: (Left) Sudan’s protest leader Ahmad Rabie flashes the victory gesture alongside General Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, the chief of Sudan’s ruling Transition­al Military Council (TMC), during a ceremony where they signed a “constituti­onal declaratio­n” yesterday. (Right) Sudanese men and women celebrate outside the Friendship Hall yesterday. — AFP
KHARTOUM: (Left) Sudan’s protest leader Ahmad Rabie flashes the victory gesture alongside General Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, the chief of Sudan’s ruling Transition­al Military Council (TMC), during a ceremony where they signed a “constituti­onal declaratio­n” yesterday. (Right) Sudanese men and women celebrate outside the Friendship Hall yesterday. — AFP
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