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| Sudanese TV shows General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, the new chief of Sudan's ruling military council, as he addresses the nation (AFP Photo) |
Khartoum
(AFP) - Sudan's second new military leader in as many days vowed Saturday to
'uproot' deposed president Omar al-Bashir's regime and release protesters, in a
bid to placate demonstrators demanding civilian rule.
"I
announce the restructuring of state institutions according to the law and
pledge to fight corruption and uproot the regime and its symbols," General
Abdel Fattah al-Burhan said, a day after he was sworn in to head Sudan's new
ruling military council.
He also
ordered the release of all prisoners jailed by special emergency courts and the
immediate lifting of a night-time curfew imposed by the council earlier this
week.
Career
soldier Burhan took the helm of Sudan's transitional military council on Friday
when his predecessor General Awad Ibn Ouf -- a close aide of ousted veteran
president Bashir -- quit after little more than 24 hours in power.
Burhan also
pledged Saturday that individuals involved in the killing of protesters would
face justice.
His initial
announcements indicated he wanted to show the tens of thousands of protesters
on the streets that he is not part of the regime's old guard and was genuinely
committed to reform.
The new
leader also on Saturday accepted the resignation of the head of the feared
National Intelligence and Security Service, Salah Abdallah Mohammed Salih --
widely known as Salih Ghosh -- the military council announced.
Salih Ghosh
had overseen a sweeping crackdown led by NISS agents against protesters taking
part in four months of mass demonstrations that led to the toppling of Bashir
in a palace coup by the army on Thursday.
Demand
for civilian rule
Dozens of
protesters were killed and thousands of activists, opposition leaders and
journalists arrested.
The police
said Friday that 16 people had been killed in live fire in Khartoum alone over
the previous two days as NISS agents led a desperate last stand for Bashir
before the army intervened.
A
photograph published by state news agency SUNA had shown Burhan talking with
protesters outside army headquarters on Friday, before his elevation to the top
job.
Khartoum
erupted with joy when Ibn Ouf tendered his resignation on Friday night barely
24 hours after taking the oath of office.
Car horns
sounded as jubilant crowds streamed out of their homes chanting: "It fell
again, it fell again".
But the
organisers of the mass protests called on demonstrators to keep up their
week-old vigil outside army headquarters.
Ibn Ouf had
served as Bashir's defence minister right up to the president's downfall, after
three decades of iron-fisted rule.
A former
military intelligence chief, Ibn Ouf remains under US sanctions for his role in
the regime's brutal response to an ethnic minority rebellion which erupted in
the western region of Darfur in 2003.
Bashir
himself came to power in a 1989 Islamist military coup, which toppled an
elected government led by Sadiq al-Mahdi.
Burhan is a
career soldier who comes with less baggage from Bashir's deeply unpopular rule
than Ibn Ouf.
The
Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA), whose grass-roots membership of
doctors, teachers and engineers have spearheaded the nationwide protests,
hailed Ibn Ouf's departure as "a victory of the people's will".
But it
demanded that Burhan swiftly "transfer the powers of the military council
to a transitional civilian government".
"If
this does not happen we will continue with our sit-in in front of the army
headquarters and other towns," the SPA said in a statement.
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A Sudanese
trader peddles national flags during the ongoing sit-in at the army
headquarters on Saturday (AFP Photo/AHMED MUSTAFA)
|
'Violating the constitution'
Bashir
remained in custody and his National Congress Party on Saturday called on the
military council to release arrested personnel.
"We
consider (the) taking of power by the military council as violating the
constitution's legitimacy," the NCP said in a statement.
"The
NCP rejects the detention of its leaders, among them its acting president"
Ahmed Harun, it added, calling for their immediate release.
Outside the
Middle East, the formation of a military government to replace Bashir has met
with widespread criticism.
The African
Union said Bashir's overthrow by the military was "not the appropriate
response to the challenges facing Sudan and the aspirations of its
people".
The
European Union urged the army to carry out a "swift" handover to
civilian rule.
Former colonial
ruler Britain said that the two-year transition announced by the military
"is not the answer."
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Sudanese
protesters keep up their sit-in outside army headquarters in Khartoum
demanding
an immediate handover to civilian rule (AFP Photo/MOHAMMED HEMMEAIDA)
|
"We
need to see a swift move to an inclusive, representative, civilian
leadership," said Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt.
Members of
the military council have sought to reassure foreign diplomats about its
intentions.
"This
is not a military coup, but taking the side of the people," the council's
political chief Lieutenant General Omar Zain al-Abdin told Arab and African
diplomats at a meeting broadcast on state television on Friday.
The
International Criminal Court (ICC) has long standing arrest warrants against
Bashir for suspected genocide and war crimes during the regime's brutal
campaign of repression in Darfur.
But the
military council has said it would never extradite him or any other Sudanese
citizen.
The ousting of Sudan president Omar al-Bashir by the army brought the curtain down on 30 years of iron-fisted rule in the northeastern African nation but failed to quell the anger of protesters who remain encamped outside army headquarters https://t.co/PjlQ9GbE1b— AFP news agency (@AFP) 15 april 2019





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