Date: Apr 24, 2019
Source: The Daily Star
New protests in Sudan seek to put pressure on military
Associated Press
KHARTOUM: Sudanese activists were holding nationwide protests Tuesday to press the military to hand over power to a civilian authority after the overthrow of President Omar al-Bashir earlier this month. Railway workers and other protesters gathered in Atbara, the northern transport hub where the uprising began in December, and traveled by train to the capital to join tens of thousands outside the military headquarters in Khartoum, where protesters have kept up a sit-in since April 6.

Thousands of people poured into the streets to join marches and sit-ins in Khartoum’s twin city of Omdurman and in the provinces of Kassala and South Kordofan.

Bashir, who ruled Sudan for 30 years, was forced from office on April 11 after four months of protests led by the Sudanese Professionals Association, a group of private unions that is demanding a full and immediate transfer of power to a civilian council.

The SPA said security forces attempted to break up their gathering outside the military complex and that protesters saw bulldozers moving toward them. They called for fortifying the barricades around the sit-in.

The SPA suspended talks with the military over the weekend after the military council said it was consulting all of Sudan’s political forces on a path forward. The protesters accuse the council of failing to make a clean break with Bashir’s regime and of trying to marginalize the SPA by depicting it as one of many factions.

The SPA says the head of the military council’s political committee and its chief negotiator, Lt. Gen. Omar Zein al-Abedin, was the head of Bashir’s party within the military and “is trying to bring back the deposed regime.”

The protesters also say the military council has yet to recognize the Forces of the Declaration of Freedom and Change - a coalition led by the SPA and including other groups - as their representative. The military council has said it is in talks with all political parties to name a prime minister and civilian government to run the country for two years.

The SPA has instead called for the formation of a legislative council, in which at least 40 percent of the membership would be women, to draft laws and oversee a Cabinet of technocrats until a new constitution is written. The SPA plans to announce its own civilian transitional council during mass rallies Thursday.

In Cairo, meanwhile, President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi hosted a meeting with Moussa Faki, the chairman of the African Union commission, and several other African leaders to discuss the situation in Sudan.

Bassam Radi, the spokesman for Egypt’s presidency, said the leaders agreed to give Sudan’s military three months to hand over power to a “civilian-led political authority” or face suspension from AU activities.

The AU had given the military 15 days to transfer power to civilians.

Sudan’s protesters have explicitly rejected what they call the “Egypt scenario,” referring to that country’s 2011 uprising and its aftermath.