San Diego Union-Tribune

PARTIES IN SUDAN SIGN PEACE DEAL

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Sudan’s coup leaders and the main pro-democracy group signed a deal Monday to establish a civilian-led transition­al government following the military takeover last year. But key players refused to participat­e, and no deadline was set for the transition to begin.

The framework — signed by Gen. Abdel-Fattah Burhan, Gen. Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo and the leaders of the Forces for the Declaratio­n of Freedom and Change — appears to offer only the broadest outlines for how the country will resume its progressio­n to democracy. That process was upended in October 2021, when Burhan unseated the civilian half of Sudan’s ruling Sovereignt­y Council with Dagolo’s backing.

Since the coup, internatio­nal aid has dried up and bread and fuel shortages, caused in part by the war in Ukraine, have become routine, plunging Sudan’s already inflation-riddled economy into deeper peril. Security forces have ruthlessly suppressed nearweekly pro-democracy marches. Tribal clashes have flared in the country’s neglected peripherie­s.

It’s not clear whether or how quickly the deal signed Monday can offer a way out for Sudan, given that it appears to leave many thorny issues unresolved and doesn’t have the support of key political forces, including the grassroots prodemocra­cy Resistance Committees. That network’s leaders called for demonstrat­ions against the agreement.

Several former rebel leaders, who have formed their own political bloc, have also rejected the deal.

Many of the points in a draft of the deal were already promised in a 2020 agreement that saw Sudan’s previous transition­al government make peace with several rebels in Sudan’s farflung provinces.

According to the draft, the deal envisions Sudan’s military eventually stepping back from politics. The document says it will form part of a new “security and defense council” under the appointed prime minister. But it does not address how to reform the armed forces, saying only they should be unified and controls should be imposed on militaryow­ned companies.

It makes mention of Sudan’s wealthy paramilita­ry force, the Rapid Support Forces, headed by Dagalo. The force amassed wealth through its gradual acquisitio­n of Sudanese financial institutio­ns and gold reserves in recent years.

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