Coup plotters reinstate Sudan’s Prime Minister Abdullah Hamdok

Coup plotters reinstate Sudan’s Prime Minister Abdullah Hamdok

Inside the presidential palace, in front of which the security forces threw tear gas grenades to disperse the thousands of protesters who shouted “no to military power”, the two men signed an agreement to share power and promised to resume the transition process.

But in the streets, the mobilization continued. The organizers who promoted the revolt that ended the 30-year dictatorship of Omar al Bashir in 2019, they announced that they rejected “any agreement that allows the coup plotters to remain in any transitional authority”According to the Sudanese Professionals Association, the spearhead of the protests two years ago.

Since the military coup, protests have left 40 dead and hundreds injured, according to a pro-democracy medical association.

Hamdok, in his first public appearance since the coup, promised in a short speech “End the bloodshed in Sudan first.”

For his part, General Burhan “thanked him for his patience” after the former economist spent almost a month under house arrest.

Under the agreement signed by the two men, the ministers and civil leaders arrested on October 25 will also be released.

Despite the announcement of the agreement, thousands of protesters came out to protest in Khartoum and its suburbs, in Kasala and Port Sudan (east) and Atbara (north).

The forces of order fired tear gas at the protesters gathered in front of the presidential palace in the capital, according to an AFP journalist.

This Sunday’s announcement comes after weeks of mediation to get the country out of the crisis. During that time, Western ambassadors, UN negotiators and personalities from Sudanese civil society met with civilians and the military.

The objective was to relaunch a transition that should lead Sudan to free elections in 2023, after 30 years of dictatorship. Bashir’s military man, sacked by the army after mass demonstrations.

The Forces for Freedom and Change, Sudan’s main civil rights bloc, immediately rejected the deal.

“We clearly reiterate that there is no possibility of negotiation, or association” with “the coup plotters,” they said, calling for the generals to be brought to justice for their bloody repression of the protests.

For its part, the Oumma party, the largest in the country, affirmed “to reject any political agreement that does not address the roots of the crisis created by the military coup.”

Source From: Ambito

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