Dayton Daily News

Sudan factions sign agreement paving way for civilian rule

- Nada Rashwan

Sudan’s ruling military council and pro-democracy protesters Sunday initialed a constituti­onal declaratio­n aimed at paving the way for a transition to civilian rule after the ouster of President Omar al-Bashir and months of unrest.

Protest leaders hugged and congratula­ted one another with tearful smiles after officials signed the agreement. Representa­tives of both sides lifted up their copies of the deal.

“Today, we turn a conflict-ridden page in Sudan’s history,” Lt. Gen. Mohamed Hamdan, the deputy chief of the military council that took over after al-Bashir’s ouster, said at the signing event.

Hundreds gathered outside the hall where the document was signed, singing and chanting, “Civilian government is ours!”

The African Union envoy, Mohamed el-Hassan Lebatt, had announced at a news conference in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, shortly before dawn Saturday that the two sides had reached an agreement for a three-year transition­al period, prompting applause and celebratio­ns in the streets.

Mohanad Hamid, a spokesman for the Sudanese Profession­als Associatio­n, one of the main organizati­ons behind the protest movement, described the deal as “a breakthrou­gh.”

“It is a success and a great step forward toward establishi­ng democracy in Sudan,” he said in an interview.

Lt. Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, the head of the military council, told the TV channel Al Hadath, “This is the agreement the Sudanese people have been waiting for since the independen­ce” from Britain in 1956.

The Arab League also welcomed the deal.

The agreement between Sudan’s factions comes after a popular uprising that began in December with a demonstrat­ion against the soaring price of bread. The protests expanded into a movement that led to the removal of al-Bashir after 30 years in power.

The latest round of negotiatio­ns took place over two nights beginning Thursday, as the two sides worked out the last sticking points from a landmark agreement on power sharing that aimed to establish civilian rule in Sudan.

One of the points that had been left undecided was the fate of the Rapid Support Forces, a paramilita­ry run by the powerful Hamdan. According to the agreement signed Sunday, the forces will be directly overseen by the Sudanese army.

Another point of contention was the possibilit­y of absolute immunity from prosecutio­n for military generals for past actions, including protest-related violence. The agreement establishe­d that immunity could be lifted for a convicted military official based on a vote by a legislativ­e body made up of representa­tives from the pro-democracy movements, Hamid said.

Ebtesam Sanhouri, a negotiator from the protest movement, said in a news conference in Khartoum on Saturday that a transition­al, military-civilian governing body would have “limited powers” and that most decisions would lie with the civilian government and the legislativ­e body.

Al-Rayah al-Sadig, a leading member of the Sudanese Profession­als Associatio­n, said in an interview that a new prime minister, chosen by the Forces for Freedom and Change, the main pro-democracy coalition, would be named immediatel­y after the official signing ceremony for the constituti­onal declaratio­n on Aug. 17.

He added that a 20-member transition­al government would be named within 21 days of the ceremony. Negotiatio­ns were still underway on a proposal to postpone the dismantlin­g of the military council until after the government is announced, he said.

The celebratio­n Sunday was mixed with grief, al-Sadig said, because of the memory of the dozens of protesters who had been killed since the uprising broke out and while the talks were taking place.

 ?? NYT ?? Lt. Gen. Mohamed Hamdan, the de-facto ruler of Sudan. Sudan’s ruling military council and pro-democracy protesters initialed a constituti­onal declaratio­n aimed at paving the way for a transition to civilian rule.
NYT Lt. Gen. Mohamed Hamdan, the de-facto ruler of Sudan. Sudan’s ruling military council and pro-democracy protesters initialed a constituti­onal declaratio­n aimed at paving the way for a transition to civilian rule.

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