Sudan activists to unite under ‘revolutionary council’

A Sudanese protester raises a flag during a rally in Khartoum as a group of women join the ongoing rallies against military rule. (AFP)
A Sudanese protester raises a flag during a rally in Khartoum as a group of women join the ongoing rallies against military rule. (AFP)
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Updated 07 July 2022
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Sudan activists to unite under ‘revolutionary council’

A Sudanese protester raises a flag during a rally in Khartoum. (AFP)
  • A total of 114 people have been killed in a crackdown against protesters since the October coup, according to pro-democracy medics

KHARTOUM: Pro-democracy groups in Sudan announced a “revolutionary council” on Thursday to close ranks against coup leader Gen. Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, rejecting his offer of a civilian government, as protesters keep pressing for his resignation.

Gen. Al-Burhan led a coup in October last year that derailed a transition to civilian rule, unleashing near-weekly protests and prompting key donors to freeze much-needed funding.

The transitional government he uprooted was forged between the military and civilian factions in 2019, following mass protests and a sit-in outside army headquarters that prompted the military to oust former President Omar Bashir.

But in a surprise move on Monday, Gen. Al-Burhan vowed to make way for a civilian government — an offer quickly rejected by the country’s main civilian umbrella group as a “ruse.”

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The ‘revolutionary council will make it possible to regroup revolutionary forces under the orders of a unified leadership,’ said Manal Siam, a pro-democracy co-ordinator.

On Thursday, pro-democracy groups, including local resistance committees, announced their plans to establish a revolutionary council in opposition to Gen. Al-Burhan.

This “revolutionary council will make it possible to regroup revolutionary forces under the orders of a unified leadership,” said Manal Siam, a pro-democracy coordinator.

The council will consist of “100 members, half of whom will be activists from resistance committees,” according to another coordinator, Mohammed Al-Jili.

The rest of the new organization will come from political parties, unions, rebel movements opposed to the military and relatives of those killed in the repression of protests, Jili added.

A total of 114 people have been killed in a crackdown against protesters since the October coup, according to pro-democracy medics.

Activists are deeply skeptical of Gen. Al-Burhan’s promise to make way for a civilian government, not least because he pledged at the same time to establish a new “Supreme Council of the Armed Forces.”

Opponents and experts foresee this new body being used to sideline any new government and maintain the military’s wide-reaching economic interests, under the pretext of “defense and security” imperatives.

Gen. Al-Burhan has also said he will disband the country’s ruling Sovereign Council — established as the leading institution of the post-Bashir transition — and on Wednesday he fired civilian personnel serving on that body.

The protests against Gen. Al-Burhan received a new lease of life last Thursday, when tens of thousands gathered, and they have evolved into new sit-ins in some areas.

Young protesters on Thursday sat on stone barricades and on felled pylons in Khartoum, while also maintaining sit-ins in the suburbs and in Jazeera, an agricultural province to the south of the capital.