Dayton Daily News

Strike empties streets, shops in Sudan

- By Bassam Hatoum and Samy Magdy

Shops were closed and streets were empty across Sudan on Sunday, the first day of a general strike called for the start of the workweek by protest leaders demanding the resignatio­n of the ruling military council.

The Sudanese Profession­als Associatio­n urged people to stay home to protest the deadly crackdown last week when security forces violently dispersed the group's main sit-in outside the military headquarte­rs in the capital, Khartoum.

The protesters say more than 100 people have been killed since the crackdown began June 3, including at least four slain by security forces Sunday.

The protesters hope their strike and campaign of civil disobedien­ce will force the military to hand over power to civilians. The military leaders ousted longtime President Omar al-Bashir in April after four months of rallies. The generals have refused demonstrat­ors' demands for an immediate move to civilian rule, instead pushing for a transition­al power-sharing arrangemen­t.

The SPA posted photos of what it said was an empty Khartoum Internatio­nal Airport, adding that airport workers and pilots are taking part in the civil disobedien­ce.

Other videos online showed offices and businesses closed and light traffic, in both Khartoum and the Red Sea city of Port Sudan.

SPA activist Dura Gambo said participat­ion in the general strike “exceeded our expectatio­ns.”

“All private and some government banks joined the strike. Cities across the country are almost empty,” she said.

The head of the leading opposition Umma party, Sadek al-Mahdi, warned of escalation from both the protest leaders and the military council.

“The mutual escalation damages the county. We have been working to adjust the strike and disobedien­ce to contain the escalation,” he said in televised comments.

Military council spokesman Shams al-Deen al-Kabashi urged the protest leaders to retract their call for civil disobedien­ce.

In televised comments, al-Kabashi said the council would accept proposals provided by Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed to resume talks. Ahmed has been trying to revive negotiatio­ns between the generals and the protest leaders.

“We have no objections to get back to negotiatio­ns and reach consensus,” al-Kabashi said, adding that it would study the conditions provided by the Forces for Declaratio­n of Freedom and Change, an umbrella group of opposition figures and protest leaders.

An Associated Press journalist saw a heavy deployment of troops from the paramilita­ry Rapid Support Forces in several parts of Khartoum and its sister city of Omdurman. There are long lines for fuel in several areas in the capital.

The internet remains cut off in Khartoum, and other types of communicat­ions also are restricted, with reports of mobile network services heavily disrupted.

Security forces removed barricades from main roads and opened the sit-in area outside the military's headquarte­rs for the first time in a week. The SPA urged protesters to avoid clashes with the RSF.

The RSF grew out of the notorious Janjaweed militias used by al-Bashir in the Darfur conflict in the early 2000s. Protesters accuse it of leading the nationwide crackdown, and the SPA has called for the force to be disbanded.

The Sudan Doctors' Committee, the medical affiliate of the SPA, said that of the four people killed Sunday, one was a young man who was shot by the RSF in Khartoum's Bahri neighborho­od. Two others died of their wounds after RSF forces beat them, and a fourth was shot in Omdurman, it said.

The committee says 118 people have been killed since June 3. The military-run Health Ministry has offered a lower death toll of 61, including 49 civilians and three security forces in Khartoum.

The World Health Organizati­on said Saturday that 784 people were wounded in Khartoum since June 3, although it added that the actual number could be higher because not all cases are reported or recorded.

The opposition Sudanese Congress Party posted video of what it said was a funeral in Bahri.

The SPA said peaceful, civil disobedien­ce and a general strike “is the fastest and most effective way to topple the military council ... and to hand over power to a transition­al civilian authority.” It urged internatio­nal agencies to refrain from dealing with the military council.

The SPA said security forces have arrested and intimidate­d activists, bankers, doctors, air traffic workers and other profession­als recently.

“Dozens of airport workers have been arrested by intelligen­ce and the RSF since Monday. We do not know their whereabout­s. New workers have been seen in the past days to replace those who took part in the strike,” an airport worker told the AP, speaking on condition of anonymity, fearing reprisal.

The state-run SUNA news agency quoted authoritie­s as saying the airport was working normally and that all staff had reported for duty Sunday.

The Sudan Pharmacist­s Central Committee, which is part of the SPA, said RSF forces raided a government health agency in Khartoum that supplies medication­s and other care needs for patients across Sudan. The RSF has been accused of targeting hospitals and clinics treating wounded protesters.

The Umma party said Saturday that security forces had arrested one of its leaders, Adel al-Mufti, along with other opposition figures, including Mohammed Esmat, a negotiator for the protesters. Esmat was detained after meeting with the Ethiopian prime minister on Friday.

 ?? AP ?? In this frame grab from video, shops are closed during a general strike Sunday in the Al-Arabi souk business district of Khartoum, Sudan, on the first day of the workweek. Protesters want leadership turned over to civilians.
AP In this frame grab from video, shops are closed during a general strike Sunday in the Al-Arabi souk business district of Khartoum, Sudan, on the first day of the workweek. Protesters want leadership turned over to civilians.

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