Sudan to Form Partisan Power-Sharing Government

Sudan is expected to form the new transitional government after a nearly six-month standstill over differences between political parties.
The delay in forming the new
government has exacerbated living, economic and security conditions in the
country.
The government has been accused of
failing to hold former regime figures accountable, bring those accused of
killing protesters to trial and complete forming the transitional government
institutions.
The Forces of Freedom and Change
(FFC) have held technocrats responsible for these failures.
Accordingly, the ruling coalition
announced nominating politicians to become members of the new cabinet.
FFC members have been disputing
for months over power-sharing, leading to the delay in government formation.
Following popular demands, the
ruling coalition and its peace partners announced the cabinet will be formed on
Feb. 5. It also announced the appointment of state governors and reshuffle the
Sovereign Council on Feb. 11, in addition to the completion of the formation of
the Legislative Council (transitional parliament) on Feb. 25.
The FFC nominated 51 candidates
for 17 portfolios, three for each ministry for Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok to
choose one.
The Sudanese Revolutionary Front
(SRF) nominated seven candidates for its seven portfolios, provided that the
military members in the Sovereign Council choose the defense and interior
ministers.
The National Umma Party received
the highest share in the new government, which is expected to be announced on Sunday.
Since August 2019, a transitional
government -- comprised of civilians and military officials -- has taken over
the reins of power in Sudan.
The government was formed under a
39-month power-sharing agreement between the military and civilian groups,
following the removal of long-time president Omar al-Bashir.
The Transitional Military Council
(TMC) and the FFC signed the agreement, which provided for the establishment of
a joint civilian-military sovereign council that would rule Sudan while elections
are organized.
A military leader would head the
11-member Sovereign Council for the first 21 months, followed by a civilian
leader for the next 18 months, the declaration read.
According to the agreement, the
opposition coalition is allowed to choose five members of the council and the
military another five, with the two sides jointly choosing a civilian as an
eleventh member.
The constitutional declaration
also gave the FFC the power to form the government and choose 67 percent of the
300 members of the Transitional Legislative Council.
The country also has a civilian
cabinet of technocrats led by Hamdok, in response to popular demands to refrain
from forming a partisan power-sharing government during the transitional period.
However, many ministers were
slammed and faced popular demands to be dismissed for failing to carry out
their duties during the transitional period.
In July 2020, Hamdok replaced
seven senior cabinet post-holders as part of a sweeping reshuffle.
He named interim replacements to
lead these ministries until the FFC, which is the current political reference
of the interim government, appoints new ministers.
Nevertheless, many parties
postponed naming these ministers, pending the peace partners who signed the
Juba Peace Agreement in October 2020.
The peace agreement was signed by
the government and several armed groups affiliated with the SRF.
Under the agreement, armed
movements will be granted 25 percent representation in the cabinet, two
portfolios (defense and interior) to be headed by the military component, 17
seats for the FFC, and three seats were agreed to be allocated to the
Transitional Sovereign Council, while the Transitional Legislative Council was
granted 75 percent representation.
Therefore, the new cabinet is expected to include 26 ministries instead of 20.