The Mercury

Sudan’s Bashir under heavy pressure

Strongly supported and financed from outside, the president is facing a serious challenge from his own people

- MARTIN PLAUT | The Conversati­on

DAY after day, Sudanese are taking to the streets to protest against the rule of Omar al-Bashir.

The president, who himself seized power in 1989 when he led a coup, is facing the most serious challenge in his three decades in power. Fury at sharp rises in the cost of bread and fuel, and allegation­s of corruption have fuelled the protests.

Thus far, the president has managed to resist the anger of his people. But Sudanese have a long history of overthrowi­ng unpopular regimes. Twice before – in 1964 and 1985 – revolts led to changes of government. On each occasion the armed forces abandoned the regime and sided with the people. This has not occurred during the current protests, for good reasons, as university lecturer and author of Civil Uprisings in Modern

Sudan Willow Berridge points out: Bashir’s regime clearly learnt from the mistakes of its predecesso­rs. It has created a much stronger National Intelligen­ce Security Services as well as a host of other parallel security organisati­ons and armed militias that it uses to police Khartoum instead of the regular army. This set-up, combined with various commanders’ mutual fears of being held to account for war crimes if the regime falls, means an army interventi­on will not occur easily as in 1964 or 1985. This is one reason the current uprising has already lasted longer than its precedents.

But the regime’s survival cannot simply be seen as a domestic issue. He has strong internatio­nal allies. The West once reviled Bashir as an indicted war criminal. However, more recently they have begun to view him as a source of stability and intelligen­ce in a troubled region. The president also has the backing – both political and financial – of key Arab allies.

Sudanese have traditiona­lly been said to look north to Cairo for support. This crisis is no exception. In December, Egypt’s foreign minister and intelligen­ce chief visited Khartoum, pledging their support for Bashir.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry, who flew to Sudan with intelligen­ce chief General Abbas Kamel, confidentl­y stated: “Egypt is confident that Sudan will overcome the present situation.”

This sentiment was echoed during a reciprocal trip to Cairo this month by the Sudanese president when Egypt’s President Abdel Fatah al-Sisi commented: “Egypt fully supports the security and stability of Sudan, which is integral to Egypt’s national security.”

But political support alone wouldn’t be enough to keep the Sudanese regime in power. There is also financial backing from across the

Red Sea. In return for Sudan entering the Yemeni war, Khartoum is reported to have received investment­s worth $2.2 billion (R30.55bn). More than 10 000 Sudanese troops are fighting on the Yemeni front line. Some are said to be child soldiers who were recruited by the Saudis with offers of $10 000 for each recruit.

The rehabilita­tion of Bashir in the US goes back to President Barack Obama’s era. As one of the last acts of his office, he lifted a range of US sanctions against the Sudanese regime. The CIA’s large office in Khartoum was cited as one of the key reasons for his policy shift.

Nor is Washington alone in harbouring this view. As Europe battles to restrict the number of Africans crossing the Mediterran­ean, it has seen the Sudanese government as an ally. The “Khartoum Process”, signed in the Sudanese capital, is critical to this relationsh­ip. In November 2015, European leaders met their African counterpar­ts in the Maltese capital, Valletta, to try to put flesh on the bones of this accord. The aim was made clear in the accompanyi­ng EU press release, which concluded that:

“The number of migrants arriving in the EU is unpreceden­ted, and this increased flow is likely to continue.

“The EU, together with the member states, is taking a wide range of measures to address the challenges and to establish an effective, humanitari­an and safe European migration policy.”

The summit led to the drafting of an action plan which has guided the EU’s policy objectives on migration and mobility ever since.

The plan detailed how European institutio­ns would co-operate with their African partners to fight irregular migration, migrant smuggling and traffickin­g in human beings.

Europe promised to offer training to “law enforcemen­t and judicial authoritie­s” in new methods of investigat­ion and to help set up specialise­d anti-traffickin­g and -smuggling police units.

These commitment­s were an explicit pledge to support and strengthen elements of the Sudanese state. A regional operationa­l centre has been establishe­d in Khartoum whose chief aim is to halt people-smuggling and refugee flows by allowing European officials to work directly with their Sudanese opposite numbers.

The counter-traffickin­g co-ordination centre in Khartoum – staffed jointly by police officers from Sudan and several European countries, including Britain, France and Italy – will partly rely on informatio­n sourced by the Sudanese national intelligen­ce service.

Finally, there is some evidence of Russian involvemen­t in the Sudanese crisis. Russian troops, working for a private contractor, are reported to have been seen on the streets of Khartoum, suppressin­g the uprising.

Given the range of support for Bashir, it isn’t surprising that he’s managed to resist popular pressure to step down. Much depends on how long demonstrat­ions can be maintained, and how much force the regime is prepared to deploy to crush its opponents.

Martin Plaut is a senior research fellow, Horn of Africa and Southern Africa, Institute of Commonweal­th Studies, School of Advanced Study

 ?? | EPA African News Agency (ANA) ?? SUDANESE President Omar al-Bashir at the 2015 AU Summit in Johannesbu­rg.
| EPA African News Agency (ANA) SUDANESE President Omar al-Bashir at the 2015 AU Summit in Johannesbu­rg.

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