Texarkana Gazette

Protesters lift Sudan blockade

Tribes offer reprieve to allow for government’s formation

- SAMY MAGDY Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Edith M. Lederer of The Associated Press.

The protesters demand the military fully dissolve the transition­al government of Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, whom the army put under house arrest following the coup. They also demand that a peace deal struck last year with a rebel alliance in the east be renegotiat­ed.

CAIRO — Tribal protesters Monday lifted their weekslong blockade on Sudan’s main seaport and oil pipelines and reopened roads linking the port to the rest of the country, a tribal leader said, after a deal with the military to remove the barricades for a month.

The developmen­t comes a week after the military dissolved the transition­al government in a widely condemned coup in Sudan that threatens to further derail the country’s fragile transition after a popular uprising forced the removal of longtime autocrat Omar al-Bashir in April 2019.

Pro-democracy activists have accused the military of engineerin­g the port blockade and another pro-military protest outside the presidenti­al place in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, to deflect from the military takeover of the country.

Kamal Sayed, secretary-general of the Baja tribal council, said the tribal leaders have reached a deal with the military to lift the blockade of the Red Sea port and oil pipelines and to reopen roads in the eastern city of Port Sudan for a month to allow the formation of a new government.

The council represents six nomadic tribes that live in northeaste­rn Sudan, where the port is located. They have held street protests in Port Sudan for the past two months, setting up barricades and staying out on the streets to block the port, a lifeline for the country, oil pipelines and major roads.

The protesters demand the military fully dissolve the transition­al government of Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, whom the army put under house arrest following the coup. They also demand that a peace deal struck last year with a rebel alliance in the east be renegotiat­ed.

The generals have denied accusation­s of engineerin­g the port blockade, saying the protesters’ demands in Port Sudan and Khartoum are legitimate and should be negotiated politicall­y.

In the weeks before the coup, Hamdok’s government and the U.N. had failed to negotiate the reopening of the port and the key roads.

Sayed, the tribal official, said the makeshift barricades at the port’s terminals and the main highway linking Port Sudan to Khartoum was removed Monday morning. He said the barricades would be reinstated if their demands are not met.

The blockade has caused food and fuel shortages across Sudan, with the government warning last month that the country was running out of essential goods, including medicines, food and wheat.

Meanwhile in Khartoum, a semblance of normalcy has returned, with several roads and bridges reopened after weeklong tensions and protests against the military’s takeover.

The U.S. Embassy in Khartoum said movement in and around Khartoum have improved since Saturday, but that military checkpoint­s remain in place in several areas. Protesters have continued to set up makeshift barricades in some neighborho­ods around Khartoum.

Simon Manley, Britain’s ambassador to the U.N. mission in Geneva, said some 50 countries have requested an emergency session of the U.N. Human Rights Council on the Sudanese military’s takeover. “The actions of the Sudanese military are a betrayal of the revolution, the transition & the hopes of the Sudanese people,” Manley tweeted.

Also Monday, security forces rearrested the country’s former foreign minister, Ibrahim Ghandour, hours after his release from a Khartoum prison, local media reported.

Ghandour was first arrested in June 2020 as part of efforts to dismantle al-Bashir’s Islamist regime. He was released late Sunday along with other former officials and alBashir allies, according to the Sudan Tribune news website.

No reason was given as to why Ghandour was rearrested. He had headed al-Bashir’s now-dissolved political party, and his release — which was not explained either — had stirred up controvers­y and anger among the pro-democracy movement.

Sudan’s military rulers also dismissed the country’s acting chief prosecutor, Mubarak Mahmoud Othman, late Sunday, according to state-run Sudan TV. The report offered no details.

Meanwhile, the U.N. envoy for Sudan, Volker Perthes, said mediation efforts were ongoing in Khartoum “by a host of actors” to find a way out of the crisis. Since last week, U.N. representa­tives have shuttled between the military and pro-democracy leaders.

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