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Asharq Al-Awsat
Asharq Al-Awsat
World
Asharq Al-Awsat

Sudanese March against Military Rule, Fear Return of Bashir-Era Officials

A person holds up Sudan's flag as protesters march during a rally against military rule in Khartoum, Sudan, January 6, 2022. (Reuters)

Thousands of Sudanese marched against military rule on Monday in Khartoum and other cities, a Reuters reporter said, with some voicing concern about the return to government of members of the ousted regime of ex-president Omar al-Bashir.

In the capital security forces firing repeated rounds of tear gas blocked protesters trying to reach the presidential palace, stopping them more than a kilometer away from the building, a Reuters witness said.

Some people were seen injured and bleeding, and others fainted, carried away on motorcycles.

"Kill, kill, we're not scared," some Khartoum protesters chanted. Others gathered in the nearby cities of Bahri and Omdurman, and regional capitals Madani, Kassala, and El Geneina.

Protesters were more numerous than in recent weeks in Khartoum and several other cities.

Huge crowds have regularly taken to the streets demanding a return to civilian rule since a coup on Oct. 25 coup ended a power-sharing arrangement that began in 2019. The protests have continued despite a crackdown that has killed at least 79 and injured more than 2,000, according to medics aligned with the protest movement.

Military leaders have said the coup was necessary as a corrective measure, that the right to protest is protected, and have called investigations on protester deaths.

Led by neighborhood resistance committees, protesters have demanded the military exit politics completely and accused the military of working with members of the Bashir's regime.

"We came out today to gain civilian rule and to stop the return of members of Bashir's party that (General Abdelfattah) al-Burhan re-appointed. They want to bring back Bashir's regime," said Hassan Ahmed, a 41 year old engineer.

Bashir was ousted by the army following a 2019 popular uprising and replaced by a military-civilian power-sharing arrangement which ended after the October 25 coup.

Since then the military has appointed some Bashir-era veterans to a caretaker government and begun to review the work of a taskforce that sought to seize regime assets and removing members from the civil service.

Fired employees have been reinstated at the country's foreign ministry, justice ministry, judiciary, and central bank.

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