Ƶ

Sudan generals agree civilians will appoint top leaders

A Sudanese anti-coup protester waves a national flag as people take to the streets of the capital's northern district of Khartoum-Bahri, on September 17, 2022. (AFP)
A Sudanese anti-coup protester waves a national flag as people take to the streets of the capital's northern district of Khartoum-Bahri, on September 17, 2022. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 17 September 2022

Sudan generals agree civilians will appoint top leaders

Sudan generals agree civilians will appoint top leaders

KHARTOUM: Sudan’s generals have agreed to leave the choice of future heads of state and prime ministers to civilian political factions, the deputy head of the military government has announced.
The announcement was made by paramilitary commander Mohamed Hamdan Daglo following a meeting with army chief Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan who led a military coup last year.
But he gave no indication of when power might be returned to civilians amid the persistent failure of talks with the main civilian factions since the coup.
“We renewed our previous commitment for the military institution to exit power and leave the governance to civilian (factions),” said Daglo, also commonly known as Hemeti, on Twitter.
He said the generals “agreed unequivocally that civilian (factions) should choose the civilian head of the Sovereignty Council and prime minister.”
He said that the military institution would then “devote itself completely to its duties as stipulated in the constitution and the law.”
Sudan has been rocked by turmoil since Burhan led a military coup in October last year that ousted the mainstream civilian bloc from power and triggered widespread international condemnation.
Near-weekly anti-coup protests, a spiraling economic crisis and a rise in ethnic clashes in Sudan’s remote regions have since fed into the deepening unrest.
In July, Al-Burhan pledged in a televised address to step aside and make way for Sudanese factions to agree on a civilian government.
Civilian leaders dismissed the move as a “ruse,” and pro-democracy protesters have maintained their rallying cry of “no negotiation, no partnership” with the military.
Several initiatives have emerged in recent months in attempts to resolve Sudan’s political crisis but none has made any significant headway.