Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Tensions escalate in Sudan protests

-

KHARTOUM, Sudan — Tensions escalated in Sudan on Monday after talks broke down between protesters and the country’s military rulers, who called for the reopening of roads blocked by sit-ins establishe­d during the uprising that drove President Omar alBashir from power.

The protesters, who have been rallying outside the military headquarte­rs in Khartoum since April 6, have demanded a swift handover of power to civilians. A military council has ruled since al-Bashir was forced from office on April 11 after nearly four months of mass protests against his 30-year rule.

Thousands of people demonstrat­ed outside the capital Monday. Videos showed hundreds of high school students marching in the Red Sea city of Port Sudan and shouting “Revolution.” Other footage showed thousands of protests outside a military complex in the province of Sennar, about 225 miles east of Khartoum.

The military council issued a statement earlier in the day calling for the “immediate opening of the roads and removal of the barricades” around the sit-in in Khartoum. It asked that other roads, closed by similar protests across the country, also be opened.

The Sudanese Profession­als Associatio­n, which has led the protests, vowed to carry on with the sit-in. The umbrella group of profession­al unions called for a march today and mass rallies on Thursday, when it plans to announce its own civilian transition­al council in a challenge to the military.

Large crowds had gathered outside the military headquarte­rs overnight, singing and dancing as protest leaders delivered fiery speeches. Qurashi Diefallah, a protester, said the army is “just an extension of the regime, which stole 30 years from us.”

The organizers on Sunday suspended talks with the military council, saying it had failed to meet their demands for an immediate transfer to a civilian government. Spokesman Mohammed al-Amin Abdel Aziz said the military council “is delaying its response to our proposals, saying that they are considerin­g proposals from all political forces.”

This has raised fears among the protesters that Islamists and other factions close to al-Bashir, who is now jailed in Khartoum, will have a role in the transition. They fear that could leave much of his regime intact or pave the way for another strongman.

The associatio­n has instead called for a Cabinet of technocrat­s to run the country’s daily affairs. They want a legislativ­e council, in which at least 40 percent of the membership would be women, to draft laws and oversee the Cabinet until a new constituti­on is written.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States