Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir |
Sudan's President Omar
al-Bashir who is facing the country’s biggest popular protests since he came
to power 30 years ago has declared a one-year state of emergency on Friday. He has also called on parliament to postpone constitutional amendments that
would allow him to seek another term in a 2020 presidential election.
In a televised speech, Bashir said he would dissolve the central government as well as state governments.
“Firm
economic measures should be taken in a new government”, Bashir said,
adding that he would assign that task to a qualified team.
To the opposition. he said, “I extend a sincere invitation to the
opposition forces, who are still outside the path of national
reconciliation … to move forward and engage in the dialogue regarding
the current issues of our country”.
In a subsequent decree, Bashir
set up a caretaker administration comprising a senior official from
each ministry, but kept the defense, foreign and justice ministers in
place.
The anti-government demonstrations began on Dec. 19,
triggered by price increases and cash shortages, but quickly developed
into protests against Bashir’s rule.
Following Bashir’s speech, angry
protests erupted in the city of Omdurman with chants of “Freedom!” and set fire to
tyres while others blocked a main road, a Reuters witness said. Police
there fired tear gas and chased protesters through small streets.
The
National Consensus Forces, one of Sudan’s main opposition groups, said
the response to Bashir’s declaration of a state of emergency should be
more protests.
“(T)he regime declared a state of emergency to
counter our popular revolution, which will not stop, God willing, before
we achieve our goals and topple the regime”, the group said in a
statement.
Two weeks before the protests broke out, a majority of
lawmakers had backed proposed amendments to the constitution that would
allow Bashir to run for another term. But last Saturday, the
parliamentary committee tasked with amending the constitution said it
would indefinitely postpone a meeting to draft these changes.
Ahead
of Bashir’s speech, security forces fired tear gas to disperse at least
200 protesters in the capital, Khartoum, eyewitnesses said.
The Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA), the main protest organizer, issued a call for additional demonstrations.
“The
demands of this revolution are clear … foremost that this regime and
its head step aside, including its repressive institutions”, the SPA
said in a statement.
Bashir, an Islamist and former army officer,
came to power in 1989 after a military coup. He won elections in 2010
and 2015 after changes in the constitution following a peace agreement
with southern rebels, who then seceded to form South Sudan.
Bashir
had previously blamed the protests on foreign “agents”, and challenged
his rivals to seek power through the ballot box. He had shown no sign
that he was prepared to concede any power.
But earlier this month he softened his tone dramatically, saying the protesters are mostly young people with poor prospects.
Even
then Bashir warned against destabilising the Sudanese state, saying,
“You can look at what happened in Libya”, which has been in a state of
turmoil since a 2011 civil war led to the overthrow of longstanding
dictator Muammar Gaddafi.
Activists say nearly 60 people have been killed during the protests, while authorities put the death toll at 32, including three security personnel.
Security
forces have used tear gas and live bullets to disperse protesters, and
have made hundreds of arrests, including of opposition party members,
activists and journalists.
Bashir is wanted by the International
Criminal Court over charges of masterminding genocide in the Darfur
region, which he denies. He has been lobbying for Sudan to be removed
from a list of countries which Washington deems state sponsors of
terrorism.
The listing has blocked the investment and financial
aid that Sudan was hoping for when the United States lifted sanctions in
2017, economists say.
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