Protesters Killed in Sudan on Day Seen as a Test for the Military
Three people were killed and more than 100
were injured in Sudan on Saturday, a doctors’ group said, as pro-democracy
crowds flooded the streets ,in defiance of a military coup this week that
ushered in a new era of uncertainty for one of Africa’s largest countries.
Activists called for a “march of millions”
days after Lt. Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, the military chief, dissolved the
joint civilian-military government that took shape after the 2019 ouster of
Omar Hassan al-Bashir, Sudan’s longtime dictator. On Monday, General al-Burhan
ordered the arrests of the prime minister and other top civilian leaders,
imposed a nationwide state of emergency and said the military would establish a
new government. He promised elections in July 2023.
The moves led to widespread demonstrations
through the week, as protesters in the capital, Khartoum, and other Sudanese
towns and cities called for a return to civilian rule. Security forces
responded with violence, killing at least seven people before Saturday’s
demonstrations and injuring 170 others, according to the pro-democracy Central
Committee of Sudanese Doctors.
Professional and trade unions called for
civil disobedience, many banks, schools and shops closed their doors and many
federal and state government workers stayed home.
Sudan’s military has a history of bloody
crackdowns, and analysts said the protests on Saturday, and the security
forces’ response to them, would be a test of the military’s willingness to turn
a page. Many Sudanese vividly remember
June 3, 2019, when security forces violently dispersed protests in the capital,
raping and killing dozens of people and dumping some of the bodies in the Nile.
“The military is promising to build a
democratic, civilian state while stepping over the bodies of dead innocent
people,” said Dr. Sara Abdelgalil, spokeswoman for the Sudanese Professionals
Association, a pro-democracy coalition of trade unions. “We cannot allow this
military takeover to become a successful story.”
The doctors’ group said in a Facebook post
that two of the dead had been killed in Omdurman, the twin city of Khartoum.
Security forces there fired live bullets on protesters, the doctors’
group said, hitting one in the head and the other in the stomach.
The group provided no details about where
the third person was killed, but reported dozens of injuries in Bahri city near
the capital and in Gedaref state in the east. Demonstrations continued into the
night, with protesters still marching in the streets.
The deaths and injuries came despite
repeated calls by American and United Nations officials for peaceful protests
to be permitted.
On Friday night, the United Nations special
envoy for Sudan met with Gen. Mohamed Hamdan, known as Hemeti, who leads the
dreaded paramilitary Rapid Support Forces that
played a role in the latest coup. The envoy, Volker Perthes, said on
Twitter that he emphasized to the general the need to “avoid any confrontation”
with protesters.
The U.S. special envoy to the Horn of
Africa, Jeffrey Feltman, said he had spoken with General al-Burhan and other
top officials on Friday and warned against a violent response to the planned
rallies.
“The Sudanese people must be allowed to
protest peacefully this weekend, and the United States will be watching
closely,” Mr. Feltman’s office tweeted.
Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken
reinforced that message. “The United States continues to stand with Sudan’s
people in their nonviolent struggle for democracy,” he tweeted. “Sudan’s
security forces must respect human rights; any violence against peaceful
demonstrators is unacceptable.”
Some within Sudan’s military have been
surprised by the degree of public resistance to the coup, and rivalries among
the generals are beginning to emerge, said Ed Hobey-Hamsher, the senior Africa
analyst at Verisk Maplecroft, a global risk intelligence company based in Britain.
“The fate of the coup still hangs in the
balance,” he said.
Pro-democracy groups have rejected the
possibility of recognizing or negotiating with a military government, instead
demanding the release of all civilian leaders, including Prime Minister Abdalla
Hamdok, who is now under house arrest. The U.N. envoy, Mr. Perthes, said in a
statement that he was in contact with all sides and was trying to mediate
“toward a peaceful solution to the current crisis.”
Speaking to Al Jazeera television on
Saturday, Mariam al-Sadiq al-Mahdi, the foreign minister of the now-dissolved
Sudanese government, said the military must respect the democratic yearnings of
the Sudanese people. She said she remained concerned about the welfare of Mr.
Hamdok.
“The Sudanese people have spoken clearly
today,” she said. “We must humbly and respectfully submit to the ideas of the
Sudanese people.”
Tensions over the possibility of a coup had
been brewing for months, as civilian groups accused the military of wanting to
cling to power and resisting efforts to hold commanders accountable for
corruption and human rights atrocities under Mr. al-Bashir, the ousted dictator.
Amid a nationwide internet blackout on
Saturday, protesters carrying Sudanese flags gathered at noon in neighborhoods
in Khartoum and Omdurman before marching to major streets and bus stations.
Demonstrators could be heard chanting, “The
people are stronger and the revolution will continue.” Others carried banners
reading, “No to military rule.”
Security remained tight around the military
headquarters in the capital, with main bridges closed and the road to the
airport blocked at one point, according to witnesses.
In El Fasher, a town in the North Darfur
region in northwestern Sudan, the army closed the market and sent people home,
according to an aid official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to
minimize any potential risk to his organization’s operations.
The cities of Geneina in West Darfur and
Gedaref in the east also had a heavy military and police presence, the official
said. In some cities, military officers cleared blockades of bricks, slabs and
tree branches that protesters had placed across roads to stop them from gaining
access to neighborhoods.
On Saturday, protests took place not only
in Sudan but in cities around the world with substantial Sudanese populations.
Demonstrators against the coup took to the streets in Australia, Indonesia,
Italy, Lebanon, Norway and the United States.
“We have been in shock about what’s been
happening in Sudan,” Elhussein Yasin, a board member of the Sudanese Diaspora
Roundtable in Britain, said by telephone. He said protesters had come out in
major British cities including London and Birmingham to urge British lawmakers
to press the Sudanese generals to give up power.
“We are protesting to say no to a military
coup and yes to democracy,” Mr. Yasin said.
The coup and the ensuing protests are the
latest signs of instability in the northeast African nation, which has been
hobbled by rising economic hardships, the coronavirus pandemic and shortages of
medicine and fuel. This week, the United States froze $700 million in direct
assistance to Sudan’s government, the World Bank suspended all disbursements to
the country and the European Union threatened to follow suit.
The African Union suspended Sudan, and the
generals have been condemned by leaders and governments around the world.
President Biden said he “admired the courage of the Sudanese people in
demanding their voices be heard.”
On Friday, Amnesty International called on
Sudanese generals to investigate the killings of protesters earlier in the week
and to prosecute those involved.
Deprose Muchena, Amnesty International’s
regional director for east and southern Africa, said the military leaders “must
make no mistake about it: The world is watching and will not tolerate further
bloodshed.”