Ethiopian leader Abiy arrives in Sudan to meet head of ruling military council in mediation bid

Ethiopia’s prime minister arrived in Khartoum on
Friday to meet the chief of Sudan’s ruling military council in a bid to mediate
in the political crisis that has followed the overthrow of President Omar
al-Bashir in April.
“Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, together with his
delegation, arrived in Khartoum, Sudan, this morning for talks,” Abiy’s office
said on Twitter.
A diplomatic source said on Thursday that Ethiopia
planned to meet members of both the ruling Transitional Military Council headed
by Lieutenant General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and the opposition. Abiy’s exact
schedule for Friday was not known.
The Ethiopian initiative follows the worst bloodshed
in Sudan since Bashir was ousted by the military after four months of protests
against his repressive three-decade rule.
The opposition says 108 people were killed in the
storming of a civilian protest camp on Monday and a subsequent wider crackdown.
The government put the toll at 61 people, including three security personnel.
The African Union on Thursday suspended Sudan until
the establishment of civilian rule, intensifying global pressure on the military
leaders to stand down
Both sides had been in talks over a civilian-led
transition to democracy. But the already faltering negotiations collapsed in
the wake of the crackdown.
Abiy Ahmed, who took office in Ethiopia last year
and introduced political and economic reforms, has won wide praise for his
diplomacy skills, including brokering peace with his country’s neighbor and
long-time foe Eritrea.