Analysis-Sudan transition needs reset after civilian leader's exit puts
military back in driving seat
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[January 06, 2022]
By Nafisa Eltahir and Aidan Lewis
KHARTOUM (Reuters) - The resignation of
Sudan's prime minister puts the military firmly back in control of the
country but facing a population angry that its hopes for democratic rule
have been set back yet again.
Unless a new course towards a transition and credible elections can be
charted, more instability within and beyond Sudanese borders is likely,
analysts and diplomats say.
After his government was dissolved in a coup in October, Abdalla Hamdok
had returned in a bid to salvage a transitional power-sharing
arrangement between the military and civilians that was struck following
Omar al-Bashir's overthrow in a 2019 uprising. The autocratic Bashir had
ruled Sudan for three decades.
Hamdok departs leaving the country cut off from international economic
support , jolted by frequent anti-military protests, and threatened by
resurgent violence and displacement in the western region of Darfur.
His efforts towards a transition fell apart due to the withdrawal of
promised support from some political factions and his inability to halt
violence against protesters, said a Sudanese mediator involved in talks
before and after Hamdok's return.
Most of the fractured civilian coalition that agreed to share power
based on a 2019 constitutional declaration says publicly that it will
not negotiate with the military.
"The only thing we have to say to them is go back to your barracks,"
said a member of a local resistance committee in Khartoum.
That could leave the military to appoint loyalists to a new
administration, building on nominations of Bashir era veterans that it
made after its takeover and that Hamdok partially rolled back.
"The military will name a government unless the civilians get it
together and meet with them," said the mediator, speaking on condition
of anonymity. "I think in the end people will sit together, and go back
to the constitutional declaration, and see how they can adjust it."
The military said after the coup that it wanted elections in 2023. It
says it is committed to a transition towards democracy.
But the takeover deepened distrust of the military among civilian
parties, while the protest movement led by the resistance committees has
always opposed any political role for the army.
A crackdown on nationwide rallies against the coup that has left nearly
60 people dead and protesters arrested has sharpened anger. Intelligence
services have been given restored powers.
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Protesters march during a rally against military rule following last
month's coup in Khartoum, Sudan December 30, 2021. REUTERS/Mohamed
Nureldin Abdallah
FOREIGN FUNDING ON HOLD
Western powers, which still hold some leverage because of several
billion dollars of economic assistance paused after the coup, are
trying to steer the military away from pressing ahead on its own.
They urged immediate dialogue on Tuesday, warning they would not
support any government without the involvement of a broad range of
civilian groups. A unilateral approach risked plunging Sudan into
renewed conflict, they said.
"The military cares very much because they know that the country
will not continue without economic support," said one European
diplomat. "If Sudan implodes, that has serious ramifications in a
lot of geostrategic issues," he said, citing instability in
neighbouring Ethiopia and Libya.
The United Nations mission in Sudan has offered to facilitate
dialogue, though diplomats say it remains unclear how such talks
could take shape and that powers such as Saudi Arabia or the United
States may need to step in.
"I think certainly trying to reset the transition in the mould that
it existed beforehand is unlikely to work now," said Ahmed Soliman,
a research fellow at Chatham House, a London-based think-tank.
"There needs to be a different arrangement, a different political
way forward in order to start to reestablish some measure of trust."
Reaching a deal that sets a new path towards democratic elections
appears harder than in 2019, several Western diplomats said. But the
exit of Hamdok, a consensus-building former U.N. official, could
clear the way for a reckoning.
"Some viewed Hamdok remaining in the post as a fig leaf, and his
resignation may allow for a more substantial conversation among the
international community, and it also pushes the civilian groupings
to seek common ground," said Lauren Blanchard, a Sudan specialist at
the U.S. Congressional Research Service.
"It makes clear that a mediation mechanism is needed. Hamdok wasn't
able to bridge the gap."
(Reporting by Nafisa Eltahir in Khartoum and Aidan Lewis in Cairo;
Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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