@csrf
Military

03.01.2022 stories Army Takes Full Control of Sudan as Prime Minister Resigns Amid Protests

Published 3rd Jan, 2022

By Emmanuel Uti

Abdalla Hamdok, Sudan’s prime minister, has resigned in the face of continuing protests in the capital, Khartoum.

This followed mass demonstrations against Hamdok’s recent agreement to share power with the army, which launched a coup in October.

Protesters, according to Arab News, chanted “power to the people” and demanded the restoration of genuine civilian control. However, armed authorities carried out another bloody crackdown, killing two civilians.

Hamdok’s choice to resign gives the army complete control. This is another setback for Sudan’s tenuous transition to democracy after the removal of its long-serving authoritarian President Omar al-Bashir in 2019.

Mr Hamdok said, in a televised speech, that the nation was at a dangerous crossroads that threatened its very existence.

READ ALSO: ‘Another Civil War Looming?’ — Sunday Igboho’s Yoruba Secession Controversy

He said that he had done all possible to keep the nation from “sliding towards disaster”, but that “despite everything that has been done to reach a consensus…, it has not happened”.

After the army attempted a coup on October 25 and originally put Minister Hamdok under house arrest, civilian and military officials reached an uneasy power-sharing deal.

According to the November deal with Mr Hamdok, the reinstated prime minister was to oversee a technocratic ministry until elections were conducted. However, it was unclear how much authority the new civilian administration would have, and protesters expressed dissatisfaction with the military.

On Sunday, thousands of people took to the streets of Khartoum, the country’s capital, and Omdurman, screaming and pleading with the military to stay out of politics.

READ ALSO: 3 Days After IGP’s Warning to Senior Officers, Gunmen Kill 2 Policemen in Anambra

According to the pro-democracy Sudan Central Doctors’ Committee, more than 50 people have been murdered in protests since the coup, including at least two on Sunday.

Gen Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, the coup commander, justified last October’s coup, claiming that the army intervened to avert a civil war that was likely to break out. Sudan, he said, is dedicated to civilian governance, with elections scheduled for July 2023.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Published 3rd Jan, 2022

By Emmanuel Uti

Advertisement

Our Stories

REPORTER’S DIARY: I Got International Passport 3 Months After Application — And Not Without Greasing NIS Officers’ Palms

Scam

ALERT: Scammers Using Online Tasks, Commissions to Lure Nigerians

Lagos Journalist Escapes One-Chance Robbery by a Whisker

VIDEO: Lagos Boats Use Inaccurate Manifests, Risk Fraud, Passenger Safety

‘5 Persons Killed’ — How a Bet Started Intertribal Clash in Lagos’ Ile-Epo

‘For Marrying Off Underage Daughter’, Anambra Man Lands in Police Custody

First Bank

For 4 Months, First Bank Denies Customer Access to His N360,000

After FIJ’s Intervention, Tizeti Refunds Customer’s N73,500

Full List: ICPC’s 39 Most Wanted Persons

Sex Education, a Crucial Tool for Druze Women to Balance Health and Tradition

Advertisement