Thousands of Sudanese defy tear gas

AFP , Thursday 3 Feb 2022

Sudanese security forces fired tear gas on Thursday to disperse thousands of demonstrators demanding justice for 79 people killed following last year's military power grab, an AFP correspondent said.

Sudanese demonstrators
Sudanese demonstrators take part in a rally to protest against last year s military coup, in the capital Khartoum, on January 30, 2022. AFP

In the capital Khartoum, protesters used rocks to build makeshift barriers blocking roads, while across the Nile river in North Khartoum, crowds of over 2,000 people chanted slogans against the security forces.

In Omdurman, the capital's twin city, some 5,000 people gathered outside the home of 27-year-old Mohammed Yussef, a protester who died after he was shot in the chest during rallies on Sunday.

More than three months after the October 25 takeover led by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan in the troubled northeast African country, defiant mass rallies demanding a restoration of the transition to civilian rule show few signs of abating.

The power grab, one of several in Sudan's post-independence history, derailed a fragile power-sharing arrangement between the army and civilians that had been painstakingly negotiated after the 2019 ouster of longtime autocrat Omar al-Bashir.

At least 79 people have been killed and hundreds wounded in the crackdown on anti-power grab demonstrations, according to the independent group of medics.

In central Khartoum, Burhan on Thursday met with United Nations special representative Volker Perthes, with the envoy urging him "to end the violence that accompanies the demonstrations", according to state media.

The UN, which has launched talks between factions in a bid to resolve the crisis, has constantly warned the authorities against using force to stop political protests.

'No warning'

Sudan's authorities have repeatedly denied using live ammunition against demonstrators, reporting scores of security officers have been wounded and a police general was stabbed to death.

However, the authorities said they had recently "confiscated" rifles from some officers who were seen using them in videos circulating on social media.

But Human Rights Watch on Thursday said that security forces at rallies last month had "used live ammunition against unarmed protesters", reporting that anti-riot police had also "fired tear gas canisters directly at protesters at the front of the march."

HRW said it had detailed violence that took place on January 17 when at least eight protesters were killed, the second deadliest day since the power grab.

Six witnesses told HRW they had seen a "militarised police unit" open fire on protesters "at multiple locations throughout the day", while other "regular police beat and arrested peaceful protesters".

One 26-year-old protester told HRW how police fired the metal tear gas canisters into the crowds, which can cause severe injury.

"As we retreated to find cover from the tear gas, I was hit in the back by a canister," the protester told HRW. "I also saw two other protesters being hit in the head and chest."

Another protesters reported that "there was no warning nor provocation from our side" before police opened fire.

Sudan, which was already in the grip of a dire economic crisis before the power grab, has seen vital foreign aid cut as part of the international community's condemnation of the takeover.

Washington, which suspended $700 million in assistance to Sudan after the power grab, has warned that a continued crackdown by the authorities would have "consequences".

On Tuesday, US Assistant Secretary of State Molly Phee said she had "made clear to military leaders, we in concert with our partners are prepared to apply additional costs should the current pattern of violence continue".

The United States was "reviewing the full range of traditional and non-traditional tools at our disposal to further reduce the funds available to Sudan's military regime", she added.

Sudan's military controls vast business enterprises, ranging from poultry farming to construction, and Phee said the US planned "to isolate its military-controlled companies, and to increase the reputational risk for any who choose to continue to engage in 'business-as-usual' with Sudanese security services".

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