Overview
of recent history of Sudan
Asif Haroon
Raja
General
spectrum
Sudan had remained a
colony of the British for 56 years after which it gained independence on
January 1, 1956. Located in northeastern Africa, it shares border with Egypt to
the north, Libya to the northwest, Eritrea and Chad to the east, Central
African Union to the southwest, and Chad to the west. Red Sea is in the
southeast. After independence of South Sudan in 2011, that part has also become
its 7th neighbor in the south. Sudan has had troubled relations with
many of its neighbors. Internal security situation of all the neighbors of
Sudan is far from satisfactory.
Sudan is a huge country
between Northern and Central Africa which, prior to the independence of South
Sudan, was the continent's largest country. Its position has long drawn the
attention of outsiders, and once facilitated the birth of powerful empires and
city-states. Since declaring independence from the United Kingdom, Sudan has
struggled to manage its expansive territories and ethno-regional divisions.
Khartoum, the country's capital, can be viewed as a relatively isolated
city-state that must command the vast spaces and people that surround it. Such
a mentality helps explain Khartoum's disastrous management of the country's
various rebellions and insurrections.
Until recently, the
country's leadership has preferred to adopt a belligerent approach to dealing
with the country's many outstanding conflicts. Since Sudan's borders do not
fully align with its various ethnic groups, its internal ethnic conflicts have
fueled regional conflict as well. Ethnic groups in the western Darfur region
spill over into neighboring Chad, driving the two countries to wage proxy
warfare against each other for years by arming and financing rebels’ intent on
revolution.
Sudan's
proximity to the Middle East -- as well as application of Sharia by Jafar
Numeri and its cultural and religious makeup -- allowed it to build ties with
powers there. After Osama bin Laden was banished by Saudi Arabia, he had stayed
in Sudan under Gen. Omer Al-Bashir before shifting to Afghanistan in early
1991. Thereon Sudan was kept under close watch. Sudan has
been viewed by USA and Egypt as extremely important to their interests in
Africa and Middle East.
First military rule.The
British Parliamentary democracy in Sudan lasted until November 17, 1958, after
which a group of army officers, headed by Lt Gen Ibrahim Abid established a
military regime and dissolved all political parties. This regime was overthrown
in the wake of October 21 Revolutionin 1964. The new government reverted to
multi-party system, but this arrangement lasted for only five years.
Rule of Jafar Numeri
Once
again a group of 9 military officers led by Col Jafar Numeri proclaimed a new
revolution on May 25, 1969 and outlawed all political groups. He ended the
civil war in South Sudan raging since 1955 after he conceded measure of
autonomy to the southern province in 1972. Southern Sudan with its capital at
Juba, populated by animists and Christians held a grievance that it was
marginalized by North Sudan.Christian Churches and Monks in South Sudan treated
the animists as Christians and kept up with their efforts to Christianize them.
Once oil was discovered in 1978 in South Sudan, Numeri hastened to redraw
provincial boundaries so as to place oilfields under the effective control of
Central Government.
Economic
heart burnings of the Southerners against Northerners, Sharia laws,abolishing of
South Sudan’s autonomy and redrawing of boundaries by Numeri led to second
civil war in South Sudan in 1983. Col John Garang belonging to South Sudan and
a Christian, led the SPLM insurgency. Neighboring Ethiopia extended support and
sanctuaries to SPLA and became a conduit for supply of arms to the rebels
wanting to make oil-rich South Sudan independent.
Numeri
was deposed in a coup in April 1985 by Defence Minister Gen. Abdul Rahman. He
was also C-in-C armed forces and had been appointed by Numeri a month earlier.
He went into exile to Egypt and returned in 1999 to take part in 2000
presidential elections but lost. He died on May 30, 2009.
Rule of Gen Omar El-Bashir
Gen
Omar Bashir seized power in 1989 after he led a successful coup against Gen Rahman and the elected, but
increasingly unpopular, prime minister of the time, Sadiq al-Mahdi.(Mahdi had served as elected PM from 1966 to 1967, and 1986
to 1989). The country ruled by Gen Bashir remained at war in the South for over
two decades and also had to contend with foreign supported tribal war inwestern
state of Darfur in 2003 and the two southern states of Kordufan and Blue Nile in
2011.
Division of Sudan
Peace
agreement with SPLM ended the civil war in South Sudan in 2005. Autonomy was
granted and a pledge for holding referendum on independence in next 6 years was
given. John Garang was sworn in as Vice President and a new constitution
framed. However, Garang couldn’t enjoy the fruits of power and he died in a
plane crash in August 2005. SalvaKiirMayardi succeeded him. In October that
year, an autonomous government was formed in South Sudan with Juba as its
capital. In the referendum held in January 2011, the southerners opted for full
independence.
With
lingering rebellion in the three states, together with Gen Omer al-Bashir
getting indicted for war crimes against humanity by the International Court of Justice (ICJ)
in Darfur had left little room for Bashir to obstruct or delay the division of
the county in July 2011.
Sudan's
economy. It
became weaker after Omer al-Bashir ascended to
power. The economy became increasingly turbulent following the secession
of South
Sudan
in 2011, which, up until then, had represented an important source of foreign
currency, because of its oil output. The devaluation of the Sudanese pound in October 2018 led to
wildly fluctuating exchange rates and a shortage of cash in circulation. Removal
of wheat and electricity subsidies at the behest of IMF hit the lower classes
badly. Long queues for basic goods such as petrol, bread, as well as cash from
ATMs became a common sight. Sudan has around 70% inflation, second only to
Venezuela.
Downfall of Gen. Omer al-Bashir
On 19 December 2018, a series of demonstrations broke out in
several Sudanesecities, due in part to rising costs
of living and
deterioration of economic conditions at all levels of society. The
protests quickly turned from demands for urgent economic reforms into demands
for President Gen. Omer
al-Bashir to step
down.
In January 2018, large protests started on the
streets of Khartoum, Sudan's capital, in opposition to the rising
prices of the basic goods including bread. The protests grew quickly and found
support from different opposition parties. Youth and women's movements also
joined the protests.
In August 2018, the National Congress Party (NCP) backed Gen. Bashir's 2020 presidential
run, despite his increasing unpopularity and his previous declaration that he
would not run in the upcoming elections. These measures led to rising
opposition from within the party calling for respect of the constitution, which
prevented Gen. Bashir from being reelected. Sudanese activists reacted on
social media and called for a campaign against his nomination.
On 22 February 2019, Gen. Bashir declared a yearlong state of national emergency and dissolved the national and regional governments,
replacing the latter with military and intelligence-service officers. The next day he appointed his chosen successor, Mohamed Tahir Ayala, as Prime Minister and former intelligence chief and
Defence Minister AwadMohamed Ahmed Ibn Auf as first Vice President.
Amid Sudan’s ongoing economic crisis, President Bashir
reshuffled the government twice and the ruling NCP endorsed him to run for
another term in 2020. Sudan made no meaningful measures to provide
accountability for past or current abuses in conflict zones or other serious
human rights violations. It didn’t cooperate with biased ICC which had levied charges
against the president and four other men, of genocide, crimes against humanity
and war crimes committed in Darfur.
The protests reached a climax on 6 April, when demonstrators
occupied the square in front of the military's headquarters to demand that the
army force the president out.
On the weekend of 6–7 April, there were massive protests for
the first time since the declaration of the state of emergency. On 10
April, soldiers were seen shielding protesters from security forces, and
on 11 April, the military removed Gen. Bashir from power in a coup d'état after his 30 years rule.
Takeover by Transitional Military Council (TMC)
Following Gen. Bashir's removal from power, and takeover by a seven-member TMC led by Lt Gen Awad Ibn Aufon 11 April, 2019,street protests organized by the Sudanese
Professionals Association (SPA)
and democratic opposition groups continued, calling on the ruling TMC to
"immediately and unconditionally" step aside in favor of a
civilian-led transitional government, and urging other reforms in Sudan. Negotiations
between the TMC and the civilian opposition to form a joint transition
government took place during late April and in May, but stopped when the dreaded
Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and other TMC security forces carried out a
massacre in capital city of Khartoum on 3 June. Unrest in Northern Sudan engulfed almost
the whole of the country in turmoil.
Chain of events after April 11, 2019
On the evening of 12 April, 2019, Aufannounced
his resignation following intense protests. He handed over his seat to Lt.Gen. Abdel Fattah Al Burhan, the army's inspector-general, to succeed him.
The protesters were "jubilant" upon hearing this announcement as he
was one of the generals who reached out to the protestors during the
sit-in.
On 13 April, talks between the military and
the protestors officially started. This came following announcements that
the curfew imposed by Auf was lifted, that an order was issued to complete the
release of those who were jailed under emergency laws issued by al-Bashir. It
was also announced that National Intelligence and Security Service (NISS) Chief Salah
Gosh had
resigned. Amnesty International asked the military coalition to investigate his
role in protesters' deaths.
On 14 April it was announced that TMC had
agreed to have the protestors nominate a civilian Prime Minister and have
civilians run every Government ministry outside the Defense and Interior
Ministries. Another announcement was made that Auf had been removed as
Defense Minister and that Lt. Gen. Abu Bakr Mustafa had succeeded Gosh as chief
of NISS.
On 15 April, TMC announced that "The
former ruling NCP will not participate in any transitional government,"
despite not being barred from future elections.
It was also announced that the TMC was
undergoing restructuring, which began with the appointments of Col. Gen. Hashem
Abdel Muttalib Ahmed as army chief of staff and Col. Gen. Othman al-Hussein as
deputy chief of staff.
On 16 April, the TMC announced that in response
to the demands of the protestors, the nation's three top prosecutors had been
sacked.
On 17 April, ousted president Gen.Bashir was
transferred from house arrest in the Presidential Palace to solitary
confinement at Kobar prison in Khartoum, a prison notorious for holding
political prisoners during Gen. Bashir's time in power. Two of Gen. Bashir's
brothers, Abdullah and Al Abbas, were also arrested.
On 18 April, crowds numbering in the hundreds
of thousands demonstrated to demand civilian rule. The demonstration was the
largest since Gen. Bashir was deposed. Protest leaders also announced
plans to name their own transitional council in two days' time if the military
junta refused to step aside.
On 20 April, it was reported that officials
had found suitcases full of Euros, US dollars, and Sudanese Pounds in Gen. Bashir's
home (totaling around $6.7 million). Parliament Speaker Ibrahim Ahmed Omar was
placed under house arrest. The secretary general of the Islamic movement
Al-Zubair Ahmed Hassan and former parliament speaker Ahmed Ibrahim al-Taher
were also among those arrested in relation to these suitcases.
On 21 April, head of TMC promised to hand over
power to the people. Nevertheless, protest leaders broke off talks with
the military authorities the same day—saying that the military junta was not
serious about transferring power to civilians and that the junta was composed
of remnants of al-Bashir's Islamist regime—and vowed to intensify
demonstrations.
Meanwhile, as a result of strikes at oil
companies in Port Sudan, landlocked South
Sudan's oil exports were paralyzed.
On 27 April, an agreement was reached to form
a transitional council made up jointly of civilians and military, though the
exact details of the power-sharing arrangement were not yet agreed upon, as
both sides wanted to have a majority.The military also announced the
resignation of the three TMC membersLt. Gen. Omar Zain al-Abideen, Lt. Gen.
Jalal al-Deen al-Sheikh and Lt. Gen. Al-TayebBabakr Ali Fadeel, who had
submitted their resignations on 24 April.
On 7 May 2019, 21 former officials who served
in al-Bashir's National Democratic Alliance (NDA) in South Darfur were arrested after attempting to flee
the country.
The
military and protesters agreed on 15 May to a three-year transition periodto civilian rule.The protest movement insisted
a transition period of at least three years was needed to wash away the effects
of Bashir’s rule and to ensure free and fair elections.
The two sides also agreed on the structure of a new government -
including a sovereign council, a cabinet and a legislative body. But soon
after, TMC scrapped all of these agreements on 3 June and said fresh elections
would be held within nine months.
The TMC's head said they had decided to "stop negotiating
with the ‘Alliance for Freedom and Change’(AFC) and to cancel what had been
agreed on".
Negotiations collapsed when a military
crackdown on 3 June left dozens of protesters dead. 118 people were
killed, 70 were raped and hundreds were injured in the Khartoum
massacre as a result of Sudanese armed forces storming a camp and
opening fire on protesters. Security forces also opened fire on protesters
inside medical facilities. Security forces dumped bodies of some of the
killed protesters in the river Nile.Much of the country was then shut down
by an open-ended strike called by the opposition.
On 8 June, the SPA warned of a wide
campaign by the TMC of arresting and disappearingpolitical
activists or threatening to kill them. The SPA called for activists to strictly
follow the methods of nonviolent resistance in their campaign of civil
disobedience and workplace strikes.
A 3-day general strike and nationwide civil
disobedience campaign was carried out from 9–11 June. The SPA estimated
60–95% pupils' and teachers' absences from primary and high schools; 67–99%
closure of municipal and national bus transport; 84–99% blocking of flights;
98–100% blocking of rail transport; 64–72% bank closures; 86% closure of retail
markets; 60–94% closure of electricity, heating, oil and gas stations; 57–100%
non-publication of newspaper publishing; 47–90% of medical services were
closed, but free emergency medical care was provided; 90–100% of private and
state legal services were shut down. Internet was shut down. Women were at the forefront of the demonstrations and one
named Kandaka, meaning Nubian queen, led the chants.
On 12 June, the TMC agreed to release
political prisoners and the FCA agreed to suspend the general strike. The two
sides also agreed "to resume talks soon" about forming a civilian
government. The FCA prepared a list of eight civilian members for a 15-member
transitional governmental council, including three women.
On 13 June, TMC spokesperson stated that
"some" security force members had been arrested over the 3 June
massacre and that eighteen persons belonging to two different groups planning
coups against the TMC, had also been arrested.
On 29 June, TMC security forces raided the
headquarters of the SPA.
On 30 June, the 30th anniversary of Gen. Bashir's
coup d'état, twenty thousand people protested in Khartoum and elsewhere around
Sudan to call for civilian rule and justice for the 3 June massacre. Ten people
were killed during the demonstrations and 181 people injured among which 27
suffered gunshot wounds. Tear gas, live
ammunition and stun grenades were used against protestors in Khartoum. 10 security personnel were also wounded. Military seemed
reluctant to hand over power to civilians.
On July 01,three bloodstained bodies were
found in Omdurman.
International response
The violence of the government's reaction to peaceful
demonstrations sparked international concern.
Most
African and western countries backed the protesters.
The governments of Saudi Arabia and the UAE
pledged $3 billion in aid to the military authorities, which was not
welcomed by the protestors.Former urged discussions between the two sides, but not directly
condemned military violence.Along with UAE and Egypt, Riyadh perhaps feared the
protests could inspire similar events to take place on home turf.
The TMC's Vice President, Mohamed HamdanDagolo, flew to Saudi
Arabia last month to meet the crown prince Mohamed Bin Salman, promising to
stand with the kingdom against threats and continue sending Sudanese troops to
help the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen.
The African Union (AU) suspended Sudan from its membership until
a civilian led transitional authority was established.
The UN started removing all non-essential staff from Sudan but
China and Russia blocked moves to impose sanctions.
The US National Security Advisor, John Bolton, condemned the
Khartoum violence, calling it "abhorrent".
Ethiopian PM Abiyand AU made an effort to
mediate a truce by suggesting 5-member civil majority government for a 3-year
transition period. Finally, mediation of Ethiopia and AU succeeded in brokering
a deal on July 5.
Landmark deal
On July 5, a landmark deal was signed between
ruling TMC and the protest leaders to put an end to months of political unrest
that had cost 136 lives since June 3, and had paralyzed life in the capital
city. After two days of negotiations, the power sharing deal was brokered by
the mediating Ethiopia and AU. The two sides agreed to establish a sovereign
council with a rotating military and civil presidency for a period of 3 years
and 3 months. Final draft will be inked on 8 July. The ruling body would include
six civilians including five members from the protest group, and five from the
military. During the transition period, the first 21 months will be presided by
the military and the next 18 months by the civilians. The deal sparked
celebrations and the people took to the streets to rejoice the deal. The deal
has been welcomed by UAE.
Other
troubled areas
Civil war in South Sudan
Just two years after
gaining independence in 2011, South Sudan got engulfed in power struggle which claimed
lives of tens of thousands of the population. According to the UNHCR, over 2.3
million got displaced. It has become Africa’s
biggest refugee crisis. It accounts for 14 percent of the total number of
displaced persons, second only to Syria which accounts for 40 percent.
The
conflict began as a feud between forces loyal to President SalvaKiir and to
then-Vice President Riek Machar. It soon spiraled into fighting among several
factions, engulfing the country in ethnic violence and eventually producing a
devastating humanitarian crisis.
Hunger and disease racked the country and millions fled to
neighboring countries. Human rights abuses, mass rape and potential war crimes
have been documented on both sides of the conflict.
An estimated 383,000 people have died as a result of five
years of civil war in the world’s youngest country.The death toll was highest
in 2016 and 2017 after a power-sharing agreement brokered in 2015 fell apart.Another
peace agreement was signed in September 2018, but South Sudan is still the most
dangerous country where aid workers dread to step in. The conflict has damaged the country's
economy, contributing to soaring inflation and there is risk of famine.
Conflict
in Darfur
The War in
Sudan's western region Darfur, is a major armed conflict that began in February
2003 when the Sudan Liberation
Movement (SLM) and the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) rebel groups began fighting the government of Sudan. A decade after the disastrous
war, there is no end in sight. The intensity of the conflict has diminished since its
early years, but most of Darfur is still extremely dangerous. There
are 2.5 million displaced persons in camps and 2 million affected by the
conflict, all dependent upon international humanitarian assistance.
Since
early 2003, Sudanese government forces and militias called “Janjaweed” have
been engaged in an armed conflict with rebel groups SLM and JEM. Sudanese government
forces and the Janjaweed militias have waged a systematic campaign of “ethnic
cleansing” against civilians who are members of the same ethnic groups as the
rebels.Hundreds of villageshave been burnt and destroyed, causing tens of
thousands of civilian deaths, displacing millions of people, and raping and
assaultingtens of hundreds of women and girls.
Sudanese forces blocked UN-AU Hybrid Operation in Darfur,
UNAMID, peacekeepers and aid groups’ access to displaced people and
conflict-affected areas on several occasions.
For more than two years, the government and
JEM and SLM declared a unilateral cessation of hostilities in Darfur mediated by
AU. However, after the beginning of the nationwide protests against the Gen. Bashir’s
regime, they declined to engage with the government and voiced their support
for the popular uprising.In a meeting
facilitated by Chadian President Idris Deby, the TMC and two armed groups
agreed to uphold a ceasefire in Darfur.
Conflict in Kordofan and Blue Nile States
War erupted in the two southern states in 2011 soon after the
independence of South Sudan. Fight is going on between RSF and Nuba mountains
based rebels of Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-N) that are
better armed and adept in fighting. There are little prospects of peace. The
conflict has displaced 230,000 people to relief camps and caused heavy
casualties.
Over
seven years into the armed conflict in Southern Kordofan and Blue Nile, the
government and armed opposition have failed to agree on modalities for
supplying life-saving aid to civilians in need.
Refugees
Sudan hosts refugees and
migrants from the region and received nearly 200,000 more refugees from South
Sudan, bringing the total over 770,000. Authorities have deported Eritreans,
often without giving them an opportunity to apply for asylum. Hundreds of
thousands of Sudanese refugees from Darfur, Southern Kordofan and Blue Nile
live in camps in Chad, South Sudan and Ethiopia.
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