KHARTOUM — Thousands of
Sudanese protesters
rallied in the capital Sunday to demand an end to military rule and tribal clashes
that have killed over 100 people, AFP correspondents said.
اضافة اعلان
“Down with Burhan,” they chanted, referring to
General Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, the army chief who last year led a military
coup that upended a transition to civilian rule following the 2019 ouster of
president Omar Al-Bashir.
Near-weekly protests have been held since, despite a
deadly crackdown that has killed at least 116 people, according to
pro-democracy medics.
“The authority is the people’s,” protesters chanted,
demanding soldiers return to their barracks.
Since last year’s coup,
Sudan — already one of the
world’s poorest countries — has been reeling from a spiraling economic crisis
and a broad security breakdown which has seen a spike in ethnic clashes in its
far-flung regions.
On July 11, tribal clashes over a land dispute
erupted in southern Blue Nile state, leaving at least 105 people dead and 291
wounded, and sparking protests demanding justice and calls for coexistence.
Protester Mohamed Ali told AFP on Sunday that he was
demonstrating for “one unified nation”.
The military council has “turned a blind eye” to
tribal violence, Ali said, “because these problems allow it to stay in power”.
Pro-democracy activists have long accused Sudan’s
military and ex-rebel leaders who signed a 2020 peace deal of exacerbating
ethnic tensions for political gain.
The strength of the pro-democracy movement has ebbed
and flowed since the coup, most recently rocked by a surprise announcement on
July 4, when Burhan pledged in a televised address to step aside and make way
for Sudanese factions to agree on a civilian government.
Key civilian leaders dismissed his move as a “ruse”,
and pro-democracy protesters have held fast to their rallying cry that there
can be “no negotiation, no partnership” with the military.
Other civilian
factions have been more amenable to negotiations, seeing them as a necessary
stepping stone to democratic rule.
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