Western nations urge swift Sudan accord to install civil rule

The United States, Britain and Norway called for a
swift agreement between Sudanese protesters and generals on installing civilian
rule, saying it would be harder for them to work with any other new authority.
Talks between protest leaders and army generals who
seized power after ousting longtime leader Omar al-Bashir last month have
stopped since late Monday following disagreement about who should lead a new
ruling body - a civilian or a soldier.
The Western troika, which has previously been
involved in mediation in Sudanese conflicts, said the country “urgently needs
an agreement” to end the period of uncertainty, according to a joint statement
released late Tuesday.
“Any outcome that does not result in the formation
of a government that is civilian-led, placing primary authority for governing
with civilians, will not respond to the clearly expressed will of the Sudanese
people for a transition to civilian rule,” it said.
“This will complicate international engagement, and
make it harder for our countries to work with the new authorities and support
Sudan’s economic development,” added the statement, which was posted on the
Facebook page of the US embassy in Khartoum.
Washington has consistently called for civilian rule
in Sudan since al-Bashir was ousted by the army on April 11 after months of
nationwide protests against his iron-fisted regime of 30 years.
It has also suspended talks with Khartoum for
removing Sudan from the US list of state sponsors of terrorism, a key factor
which for decades has made foreign businesses wary of investing in the
northeast African country.
Sudanese protest leaders are now preparing plans to
call for a general strike to build pressure on the generals to cede power.
The ruling military council has been pushing for its
chairman General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan to head the new sovereign body but
protest leaders want a civilian.
The new ruling body when finalized is expected to
install a transitional civilian government for three years after which the
first post al-Bashir election would be held.