Sudanese police fired tear gas Monday to disperse hundreds of protesters who rallied near the presidential palace in Khartoum demanding civilian rule, this is according to witnesses. It was the latest rally in recent weeks by Sudanese opposed to a military-dominated government in the country where top general Abdel Fattah al-Burhan seized power in an October coup.
Monday’s protesters in Khartoum waved Sudanese flags and chanted “civilian is the people’s choice”. Witnesses added that protests were also underway in parts of eastern Sudan, including Kassala and Gadaref states
“Protesters are in the centre of the city and are chanting ‘no to military rule’,” Kassala resident, Mohammed Idriss, told journalists.
Speaking from Gadaref, a resident, Amal Hussein, said around 600 protesters rallied there, where they chanted slogans demanding civilian rule.
A pro-democracy doctors’ union says that following the October 25 coup, previous protests were met by a violent crackdown that left 44 people killed and hundreds wounded, mostly by bullets. On that day Burhan seized power and detained Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok but reinstated him in a deal signed on November 21 after international condemnation and mass protests. Critics criticized the agreement, with pro-democracy activists vowing to maintain pressure on the military-civilian authority.
Burhan has insisted that the military takeover was “not a coup” but a step “to rectify the transition” towards full democracy, that started with the 2019 ouster of autocratic president Omar al-Bashir. He has pledged to lead Sudan to “free and transparent elections” in July 2023.