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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Sudan protesters call mass rally

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Khartoum: Sudan’s leading protest group called Tuesday for a mass rally, as tensions mounted over the makeup of a new joint civilian-military council to run the country.


Demonstrators reinforced their barricades outside the army headquarters in Khartoum after the two sides failed to agree on the number of council seats for civilian and military representatives.


The joint council is supposed to replace the military body that took power after the army ousted veteran president Omar al Bashir on April 11 in the face of mass protests against his three-decade rule.


But the two sides are at odds over its composition, with the military pushing for a 10-member council including seven military representatives and three civilians.


The disagreements prompted the Alliance for Freedom and Change to announce a “million-strong march on May 2 to assert our main demand, which is for civilian rule”.


Risking the anger of demonstrators, a top Sudanese general announced on Tuesday that the new body would be headed by current military ruler General Abdel Fattah al Burhan.


Protesters have called the military council headed by Burhan “a copy cat of the toppled regime”.


Meanwhile, Sudan’s military rulers said on Tuesday that six members of the security forces were killed during protests, as tensions mounted over the makeup of a new joint civilian-military council.


Demonstrators reinforced their barricades outside the army headquarters in Khartoum after the two sides differed in talks on Monday on the number of council seats for civilians and military representatives.


The joint body is supposed to replace the military council that took power after the army ousted veteran president Omar al Bashir on April 11 in the face of mass protests against his three-decade rule.


But the two sides are at odds over its composition, with the military pushing for a 10-member council including seven military representatives and three civilians.


Risking the anger of demonstrators, a top Sudanese general announced on Tuesday that the new body would be headed by current military ruler General Abdel Fattah al Burhan. Protesters have called the military council headed by Burhan “a copy cat of the toppled regime”.


They want a majority of civilians on a 15-member joint council along with seven military representatives.


Adding to the deepening discord, the military council said that six security personnel were killed in clashes with protesters across the country on Monday.


“In different incidents, six people from the security forces were killed and 16 wounded,” the council’s deputy chief Mohamed Hamadan Dagolo, widely known as Himeidti, said.


“There were incidents of burning of markets, looting of money,” he said, adding that protest leaders told the military council that anything happening outside the Khartoum sit-in does not represent them.


Thousands of protesters began massing outside army headquarters in the capital on April 6, demanding that the armed forces back them in ousting Bashir.


Five days later, the army took power through a transitional military council, having deposed Bashir, after months of protests that began with unrest over a tripling of bread prices. Since then the 10-member council of generals has continued to resist calls to step down.


But in a breakthrough on Saturday, the two sides agreed to form a joint civilian-military body to pave the way for a civilian government.


The joint council would be an overall ruling body, according to protest leaders, who want a separate transitional civilian administration to run the country’s day-to-day affairs and work towards elections.


Late Monday, a Sudanese protest group said the army was trying to remove barricades and disperse the sit-in outside army headquarters, but witnesses said troops had not moved in.


“The military council is a copy cat of the toppled regime. The army is trying to disperse the sit-in by removing the barricades,” said the Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA), the group that first launched the protest movement against Bashir’s regime.


“We are calling on our people to come immediately to the sit-in area. We are calling on the revolutionaries to protect the barricades and rebuild them.” But the council’s deputy head insisted it was “not against” the Khartoum sit-in.


“We are not against the continuation of the sit-in and we offered to help in providing support for protesters during Ramadhan,” Himeidti told reporters.


— AFP


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