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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

US envoy pushes for ‘peaceful’ Sudan solution

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KHARTOUM: A US special envoy met Sudan’s top military ruler on Thursday to push for a “peaceful” solution to the standoff between protesters and generals following a deadly crackdown on demonstrators.


The diplomatic push comes after protesters demanding civilian rule called off a nationwide civil disobedience campaign and agreed to resume talks with the generals who ousted veteran leader Omar al Bashir in April.


Traffic jams returned to downtown Khartoum and some shops in the capital’s famous gold market began to reopen on Thursday as more residents and office employees ventured out.


Fewer troops and members of the feared paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, who protesters and rights groups accuse of leading the June 3 crackdown on demonstrators, were on the streets, according to an AFP correspondent who toured parts of the capital.


Several parts of the city suffered electricity cuts early on Thursday, while internet services remained erratic.


“Today is my first day to work after the campaign ended but I’m not in the mood to work,” said Suheir Hassan, an employee at a government office.


“Because, on my way I passed by the sit-in area and remembered that all those voices who used to chant revolutionary slogans have now disappeared.”


Protesters ended their disobedience campaign late on Tuesday and agreed to hold fresh talks with the ruling generals following mediation led by Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed.


Demonstrators had launched the strike after men in military fatigues launched a brutal crackdown on a sit-in by thousands of people outside the army headquarters last week, killing dozens of people.


In a bid to reach a swift solution to the crisis, Washington, which has consistently pushed for civilian-led rule following Bashir’s ouster, on Wednesday appointed veteran diplomat Donald Booth as special envoy to Sudan.


Booth was due to hold talks with General Abdel Fattah al Burhan, head of the ruling military council, to help craft a “peaceful solution” to the crisis that has rocked the northeast African country, Washington said.


Booth, who previously served as special envoy to Sudan and South Sudan during the administration of former president Barack Obama, arrived in Khartoum on Wednesday along with Assistant Secretary of State for Africa Affairs Tibor Nagy.


He and Nagy held a series of meetings with Sudanese officials and protest leaders.


The Alliance for Freedom and Change umbrella protest movement said that its leaders briefed the two US officials on the need for a transparent investigation in the June 3 killings.


They also called for the withdrawal of “militias” from the streets in Khartoum and other towns, an end to the internet blockade and establishment of a civilian administration, it said in a statement.


Protest leader Madani Abbas Madani told reporters that the US officials told them that Washington “backed the Ethiopian mediation” to arrive at a solution.


Booth and Nagy are later expected to travel to Addis Ababa to discuss the Sudan crisis with Ethiopian leaders and the African Union.


— AFP


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