Sudan on the brink of abyss: Bloody clashes in Khartoum, experts confirm time for negotiations is over
Late last year, the Sudanese parties signed the Framework
Agreement between the civil and military components in Sudan.
It was expected that the Framework Agreement would
constitute a starting point for a transitional phase and would serve as a
political agreement that would put an end to the crisis raging in Sudan since
2019, specifically since the fall of the Omar al-Bashir regime.
The Framework Agreement set a clear roadmap and a specific
timetable for its implementation through several stages, the first of which is
the handover of power to civilians, the formation of a government, the
development of a new constitution, and the dismantling of the remnants of the
terrorist Brotherhood and its old regime.
The most important and dangerous clause of the Framework
Agreement was the army’s complete distancing from politics and the merging of
the Sudanese army, led by Lieutenant General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, and the
Rapid Support Forces (RSF), led by Lieutenant General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo
Hemedti, under the name of the Sudanese Armed Forces.
The Framework Agreement seemed satisfactory to all parties
in Sudan, as it constituted the lever that would lead Sudan out of crises to a
major economic breakthrough and a stable political scene.
Military parties and the beginning of the crisis
However, there were doubts and fears about the possibility
of implementing some provisions, especially with regard to the agreement
regarding the unification of the army and the RSF, as the two parties are now
dreaming of the presidential chair, in light of the domination of the army over
the joints of the state and its vision that it is more deserving and qualified
than the political parties to lead the country.
Now, verbal skirmishes and heated statements have evolved
into bloody battles that have claimed dozens of lives and material losses in
the billions. No voice in Khartoum is louder than the sounds of gunshots and
artillery tremors.
The move brought the crisis between the army and the RSF
back to square one and disregarded the Framework Agreement, destroying with it
the hopes of the Sudanese for stability and economic renaissance, or at the
very least a way out of a state of collapse and disintegration.
The clashes between the armed parties affected all parts of
Khartoum, and even the airport and air base of the city of Merowe were not
spared from the armed clashes with the participation of military aircraft,
tanks and various armored military units.
These violent clashes bring the differences between the two
parties to an unprecedented point of security tension, which illustrates the
depth of the crisis between the Sudanese parties that has been going on for
several years.
Khartoum’s streets are empty
Meanwhile, former Information Minister Faisal Saleh said
that the official government media in Sudan is completely absent from the scene
and does not have the ability to move, while Sudanese television is far from
any direct coverage of the events.
He explained that there were bombings in the vicinity of the
TV building, so the broadcast was interrupted for a while, meaning foreign
channels and social media were resorted to by observers to see the developments
in Sudan.
Regarding the situation on the ground, Saleh told the
Reference that the areas in central Khartoum that witnessed clashes are
completely devoid of people, and there is no movement in the streets, with only
military equipment and armored vehicles in most of the streets of the capital.
Meanwhile, Rashid Mutasim, a researcher at the Khartoum
Center for Dialogue, said that Khartoum is witnessing violent battles, and the
Sudanese people hoped that matters would not reach the use of weapons.
Time for negotiations is over
Mutasim explained that the Sudanese state is greatly
suffering economically and politically, and the Sudanese army has the ability
and expertise to control matters in Khartoum and all of Sudan, while the Rapid
Support Forces are mainly members of the Sudanese army.
He pointed out to the Reference that there is a national
consensus to support the armed forces, and under these circumstances everyone
abandons his affiliations and supports the armed forces. He added that whatever
the differences with the armed forces, this is the right time to support the
armed forces to unify Sudan again, restore peace and security, and stop
fighting.
Mutasim expects that there will be no negotiations between
the parties, and now there is a battle that must be resolved, with either
victory or defeat, as the state has two heads, which is rejected by the
Sudanese people. The presence of a national army that follows a certain line
and the presence of other militias that walk another line is completely rejected
by all of Sudan.