New Sudan government will be civilian, says political military council head
Sudan’s ruling military council on Friday promised
the country would have a new civilian government, a day after the armed forces
overthrew President Omar al-Bashir after 30 years in power.
The council, which is now running Sudan under
Defence Minister Mohammed Ahmed Awad Ibn Auf, said it expects a pre-election
transition period it announced on Thursday to last two years at most or much
less if chaos can be avoided.
The council also announced that it would not
extradite Bashir to face allegations of genocide at the international war
crimes court. Instead he would go on trial in Sudan.
Friday’s announcement of a civilian government by
the head of the military council’s political committee, General Omar Zain
al-Abideen, appeared aimed at reassuring demonstrators who took to the streets
to warn against imposing army rule after Bashir’s overthrow.
Abideen pledged that the military council would not
interfere with the civilian government. However he said the defense and
interior ministries would be under the council’s control.
Not Greedy For Power
He said the military council had no solutions to
Sudan’s crisis and these would come from the protesters.
“We are the protectors of the demands of the
people,” he said. “We are not greedy for power.”
Earlier on Friday, thousands of Sudanese
demonstrators camped outside the defense ministry to push for a civilian
government, defying a curfew and calling for mass prayers.
Demonstrators who have been holding almost daily
anti-Bashir protests have rejected the decision to set up a transitional
military council and vowed to continue protests until a civilian government is
established.
Activists called for mass Friday prayers outside the
defense ministry compound, a focal point for protests.
At the compound, large tents were put up and people
brought in food and handed out water as the crowd swelled, a Reuters witness
said. Ahmed al-Sadek, a 39-year-old trader, said he had not slept at his home
since the sit-in began on Saturday.
Activists wearing yellow vests controlled traffic
around the compound on Friday morning and managed foot traffic to and from the
sit-in, a Reuters witness said. They also blocked a major bridge in central
Khartoum.
Bashir, 75, had faced 16 weeks of demonstrations
against him.
The political committee will meet political parties
and foreign diplomats during the course of Friday, state media reported.