Sudan’s military ousts President Bashir after 30 years in power

Eight years after the Arab Spring, protests have helped topple Algeria’s president, and now Sudan’s Bashir. A struggle over the aftermath remains.

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AP
Tens of thousands of Sudanese were making their way to the center of the country’s capital on Thursday, April 11, 2019, cheering and clapping in celebration as senior officials said the military had forced President Omar al-Bashir to step down after 30 years in power.

Sudan’s military ousted President Omar al-Bashir Thursday, ending his 30 years in power amid escalating popular protests.

The defense minister announced military rule for two years, but an emergency clampdown was imposed that risks enflaming protesters who have demanded civilian democratic change.

Mr. Bashir was deposed just over a week after similar protests in Algeria forced the resignation of that North African nation’s long-ruling, military-backed president, Abdelaziz Bouteflika. Together, they represent a second generation of street protests eight years after the Arab Spring uprisings against a number of long entrenched leaders around the Middle East.

But like those popular movements of 2011, the new protests face a similar dynamic – a struggle over the aftermath of the leader’s removal.

After the military’s announcement Thursday, protest organizers vowed to continue their rallies until a civilian transitional government is formed. Tens of thousands of protesters were massed Thursday at a sit-in they have been holding outside the military’s General Command headquarters in Khartoum.

The military’s coup brought an end to a president who came to power in a coup of his own in 1989, backed by the military and Islamist hard-liners, and who had survived multiple blows that could have brought him down.

In the course of his three decades in power, Mr. Bashir was forced to allow the secession of South Sudan after years of war, a huge blow to the north’s economy. He became notorious for a brutal crackdown on insurgents in the western Darfur region that made him an international pariah, wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes. The United States targeted his government repeatedly with sanctions and airstrikes for his support of Islamic militant groups.

Throughout, he maintained his swagger, famed for his on-stage appearances dancing with his cane before cheering crowds.

The protests that erupted in December proved the biggest challenge to his rule. Initially fueled by anger over the deteriorating economy, they quickly turned to demands for his ouster. They gained new momentum last week after Mr. Bouteflika’s resignation.

Word of Mr. Bashir’s removal first emerged Thursday morning. State TV announced that the military would make an “important statement” imminently, and that the nation should “wait for it.” Two officials high in the military and government told the Associated Press that Mr. Bashir had been ousted.

Thousands of protesters marched toward the center of the capital, Khartoum, cheering, singing, and dancing in celebration.

The announcement finally came hours later in the afternoon when Defense Minister Awad Mohammed Ibn Ouf appeared on state TV in military fatigues. He said the military had arrested Mr. Bashir.

“I the defense minister, the head of the Supreme Security Committee, announce the uprooting of this regime, seizing its head, after detaining him in a safe place,” he said. He denounced Mr. Bashir’s government, saying the military and security agencies had long been observing its “bad administration, systemic corruption, absence of justice, the blocked horizon for all people, especially the youth. The poor became poorer, and the rich became richer. Hope in equality has been lost.”

He also said Mr. Bashir’s heavy-handed security crackdown against protesters had risked cracking the security establishment.

Mr. Ibn Ouf said a military council decided on by the army, intelligence agencies, and security apparatus will rule for two years, after which “free and fair elections” will take place.

He also announced that the military had suspended the constitution, dissolved the government, declared a state of emergency for three months, closed the country’s borders and airspace, and imposed a night curfew for one month.

Protest organizers have feared the military would impose its control after removing Mr. Bashir. Earlier in the day, one main organizer, the Sudanese Professionals Association, urged protesters to remain in the streets to press for a civilian transitional government.

“We are not leaving. We urge the revolutionaries not to leave the sit-in,” the association said, warning against attempts to “reproduce the old regime.”

Sarah Abdel-Jaleel, a spokeswoman for the association, told the Associated Press they will not accept a military coup and will insist on an “unconditional stepping down of al-Bashir and his regime.”

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