Sudan struggles to contain mounting protest wave

<p>KHARTOUM (AA) – Sudan has been overwhelmed in recent days by steadily mounting demonstrations in 13 out of 17 provinces across the country.</p> <p>Protesters decry deteriorating economic conditions and chronic shortages of basic necessities, including bread, fuel and cash — especially given the recent devaluation of the country’s local currency.</p> <p>Last week, demonstrations erupted — for the first time — in Atbara, a city teeming with laborers, as thousands of students and local residents flooded the streets to condemn rampant inflation and skyrocketing bread prices.</p> <p>Protests have also spread to other cities, with many demonstrators venting their dissatisfaction with the policies of President Omar al-Bashir, who has remained in power for the last 30 years.</p> <p>In some areas, government buildings and offices affiliated with al-Bashir’s ruling National Congress Party have been torched.</p> <p>While official estimates now put the total death toll from the protests — which in some places have turned violent — at eight, opposition groups insist that at least 22 people have been killed in the unrest.</p> <p>Each day, demonstrations have spread to more cities and villages — to the discomfiture of the regime in Khartoum.</p> <p>Some observers have noted that demonstrators have gone from merely condemning rising living costs to demanding the departure of the al-Bashir regime.</p> <p>In an article posted on Facebook, Abdullah Ali Ibrahim, a former presidential candidate, said the protests “may finally offer an exit from Sudan’s long history of [rotation of power through] military coups”.</p> <p>Sudanese journalist Majid Mohamed Ali told Anadolu Agency that protest organizers “are now the ones determining the country’s political trajectory — not the government or the opposition”.</p> <p>“Only a few days ago, Sudan was nothing more than a file on discussion tables in Washington, Paris and Berlin,” he said. “Now it is in the hands of the masses.”</p> <p>He added: “The Sudanese people can decide their fate better than the government or the opposition parties.”</p> <p>The presidency and the ruling party, meanwhile, have vowed to stand firm against perceived threats to public order while also resolving the country’s economic crisis “as soon as possible”.</p> <p>Khartoum has not, however, offered anything else, except to declare its adherence to al-Bashir’s “National Dialogue” initiative, launched in 2014 (which largely failed to attract major opposition parties or rebel groups under its umbrella).</p> <p>Meanwhile, many Sudanese are voicing skepticism regarding the opposition’s reaction to the mounting protests.</p> <p>For example, Sadiq al-Mahdi, leader of Sudan’s opposition National Umma Party (and a former prime minister), has been accused by critics of trying to “conclude a settlement with the regime”.</p> <p>Al-Mahdi, for his part, has declared his rejection of any proposed political deal that would save the current government in Khartoum, insisting his party sought a &quot;new regime&quot;.</p> <p>Speaking at a press conference in the capital, he promised to present the government with a “memorandum”, which, he said, would lay out means of “setting a new presidency for the country&quot;. </p> <p>“We will consult with all the country’s political forces regarding the articles of the memorandum and when to submit it,” he asserted. </p> <p>&quot;If the government doesn’t respond to the memorandum, we will call for a general strike — to be followed by a general uprising scenario,&quot; he added. </p> <p>Al-Mahdi has also called for the establishment of a transitional government with a view to avoiding “unnecessary division”.</p> <p>Other opposition parties, meanwhile, including Sudan’s Communist and Baath parties, have announced their solidarity with the protesters and have called for a general strike to be held on Wednesday.</p> <p>One of Africa’s longest-serving leaders, al-Bashir has remained in power since assuming the presidency in a 1989 military coup.</p>

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