Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

World Mena

UAE hails Sudan transition deal

Sides 'agreed on a sovereign council' with rotating military and civilian presidency



African union envoy to Sudan Mohamed al-Hacen Lebatt (L) sits next to Sudan's deputy chief of the ruling military council General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo as he shakes hands with an army general following a press conference in Khartoum in which they announced ruling generals and protest leaders have reached an agreement on the disputed issue of a new governing body on July 5, 2019.
Image Credit: AFP

Dubai: The UAE on Friday expressed backing for a power-sharing agreement reached by Sudan's ruling military council and opposition leaders, according to Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Dr Anwar Gargash.

After weeks of violent impasse, the Sudanese sides agreed to take turns in leading a sovereign council to lead the country's transition.

"We congratulate brotherly Sudan on the agreement that lays the foundation of an auspicious political transition," Dr Gargash said in a tweet. He added that the UAE sides with Sudan "in weal and woe", saying that dialogue was the key to the milestone accord.

"We hope that the coming phase will witness the establishment of a firm constitutional system that will consolidate the role of institutions," the minister added.

Advertisement

The UAE is a key backer of Sudan and has repeatedly called for a peaceful transition in the country since the army deposed longtime president Omar Al Bashir in April after months of street protests.

 Leaders of Sudan's pro-democracy movement welcomed on Friday the power-sharing agreement with the ruling military council as a victory for their "revolution," raising hopes for an end to the three-month standoff with the generals and deadly violence.

"Today, our revolution has won and our victory shines," read a statement posted early Friday on the Facebook page of the Sudanese Professionals' Association, which has spearheaded the protests.

The emerging deal could break the political impasse that has gripped the country since the military ousted the longtime autocrat Omar al-Bashir in April, amid an uprising against his rule.

In the following months, protesters stayed in the streets demanding the generals handover power to a civilian leadership. Talks collapsed when security forces razed a protest camp outside the military headquarters in Khartoum on June 3 leaving more than a hundred killed, according to protesters.

Advertisement

The African Union and Ethiopia made intensive efforts to bring the generals and the protesters back to the negotiating table.

Sudanese protesters celebrate victory.
Image Credit: AFP

Negotiations resumed earlier this week, after tens of thousands of demonstrators flooded the streets of Sudan's main cities over the weekend, in the biggest show of numbers since the razing of the protesters' sit-in camp. At least 11 people were killed in clashes with security forces, according to protest organizers.

When news of the deal broke around dawn on Friday, hundreds of protesters returned to the streets dancing, singing and waving Sudanese flags, while passing drivers honked.

The military-controlled Al-Sudan television channel played national songs. It also reran excerpts of the press conference announcing the agreement, held jointly by protest and military leaders, which it subtitled "Congratulations to the Sudanese people."

Advertisement

"We hope that the formation of transitional institutions marks the beginning of a new era," said Omer El-Digair, a leader of the Forces for the Declaration of Freedom and Change, a political coalition representing the protesters, at the joint press conference with the military and African mediators following the conclusion of the deal. "We hope it is an era where we can shut off the sound of pistols and destroy for good prisons of arbitrary detention."

Sudanese celebrate
Image Credit: AFP

The two parties agreed to form a joint sovereign council to lead the country during a transitional period of three years and three months, said the SPA statement.

The council will include five civilians representing the protest movement and five military members. An eleventh seat will go to a civilian chosen by both parties.

A military member will preside over the council during the first 21 months, followed by a civilian member after, according to the statement.

Advertisement

This suggests a significant concession on the part of pro-democracy forces, which had insisted that the sovereign council have only a civilian president. However, the deal did secure another key demand, that protest leaders select the members of a technocratic Cabinet to be formed independently from the generals.

The two parties also agreed to launch "a national independent investigation" into the killings of protesters since al-Bashir was ousted on April 11, according to the statement.

Advertisement