Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Pulling Sudan back from the brink

- By Ishac Diwan, exclusive to the Sunday Times in Sri Lanka

NEW YORK – Sudan is on the threshold of disaster. On June 3, paramilita­ry forces opened fire on peaceful pro- democracy protesters in Khartoum, killing over 100 and wounding hundreds more. Now, hope for a smooth transition to civilian rule is giving way to fear that the country will go the way of Yemen, Syria, or Libya.

Just a few weeks ago, the military seemed to be on the protesters’ side. In April, following months of demonstrat­ions against President Omar al- Bashir, the military forced Bashir to resign. The commander of the Rapid Support Forces

( RSF) paramilita­ry group, General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo ( better known as Hemeti), even claimed that he had refused an order by Bashir to open fire on protesters.

Bashir’s regime, in power for nearly 30 years, was replaced by the Transition­al Military Council ( TMC), headed by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, with Hemeti as his deputy. But protests continued, now demanding a transition to civilian rule. This spurred the TMC to initiate negotiatio­ns with representa­tives of the Sudanese Profession­als Associatio­n, which has spearheade­d the protests.

Those negotiatio­ns were initially promising, but their tone changed abruptly after Burhan and Hemeti returned from visits to Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates – countries that previously supported Bashir’s regime. There is reportedly a lot of money on the table for the generals – who have particular­ly close ties to the rulers of Saudi Arabia and the UAE – if they consolidat­e power and avoid a political opening.

The Saudis and Emiratis have several goals. They hope to stave off a democratic precedent in the region, ensure plenty of foot soldiers for their wars in Yemen and elsewhere, secure access to fertile agricultur­al land, and gain a foothold in the geo-strategica­lly sensitive Horn of Africa. Their tactics are not new: in 2013, they backed a bloody crackdown on pro- democracy protesters in Cairo by General Abdel Fattah el- Sisi, who became Egypt’s de facto leader after a military coup removed the democratic­ally elected President Mohamed Morsi from power.

But, as with the crackdown in Cairo and the war in Yemen, Saudi Arabia and the UAE are pursuing a half- baked and shortsight­ed strategy in Sudan. True, Burhan and Hemeti can ensure that Sudanese troops keep flowing to Yemen. But the RSF’s massacre in Khartoum, coming on top of its previous war crimes in Darfur, will effectivel­y prevent the Sudanese people – and the internatio­nal community – from ever accepting the TMC’s rule. Moreover, funneling cash toward Sudan’s military will do nothing to address the grievances driving social unrest.

Those grievances are partly economic. Decades of mismanagem­ent meant that the economy could not withstand the decline in oil revenues after South Sudan ( home to 75% of Sudan’s oil reserves) gained independen­ce in 2011. In the past five years, the government had to slash public spending from 18% of GDP to a paltry 10% today. Military spending now accounts for at least 30% of Sudan’s public budget. In 2018, the loss of foreign support from the Gulf triggered a massive devaluatio­n of the currency, causing the inflation rate to soar to 70%.

But the protesters’ grievances are also political. Large swaths of the population yearn for democracy and the rule of law. They are tired of watching successive government­s funnel benefits toward a small group of northern tribes that have looted the rest of the country, in alliance with security forces and crony businessme­n.

As long as these grievances persist, so will instabilit­y.

The RSF’s attack will only exacerbate such strife. Already, protesters have rejected an offer by the TMC to reopen negotiatio­ns, and they called for civil disobedien­ce until the military regime falls. It is hard to see how Sudan, already a fragile state, can be governed under these circumstan­ces.

Poor governance has led to a tragic waste of the country’s enormous potential. Sudan has significan­t oil resources of its own, as well as gold and hydropower – none of which it has managed to develop for the benefit of its population.

Sudan will not reverse its slide toward anarchy, let alone reach its full potential, unless the internatio­nal community steps in. With trust between the military and the protesters destroyed, external mediators are vital to secure a transition­al agreement between representa­tives of the protesters and at least part of the armed forces.

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