And coinciding with the arrival of the US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, Molly V, to discuss the Sudanese crisis; The US embassy in the Sudanese capital said that Molly will engage in direct meetings with the Sudanese parties to urge them to find a quick solution.
Mauli’s visit comes in light of a state of tension prevailing in the Sudanese street, in the wake of the army commander Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan’s move to form a new Sovereignty Council, and millions took to the streets on Saturday to express their rejection of Al-Burhan’s decisions.
Meanwhile; The Sudanese Professionals Association affirmed in a statement that it will not be part of any settlement with the military; He pointed out that the only way to resolve the current crisis in the country is to “overthrow the army’s authority and establish a full transitional civilian national authority emanating from the revolutionary forces that adhere to the goals of radical change and the December revolution.”
The assembly, which led the December revolution that overthrew the Brotherhood regime led by ousted Omar al-Bashir in April 2019; Any calls for a settlement are “a despicable betrayal of the people’s revolution and aspirations.”
The assembly called for the formation of “a broad revolutionary front to overthrow the military council coup and establish a transitional civilian national authority that is exclusive of the revolutionary forces.”
This comes as reports suggested the imminent appointment of the academic Indian Abia Kafod as prime minister instead of Abdullah Hamdok, who is being held under house arrest, who completely refused to negotiate with the army about any situation before returning to before the twenty-fifth of October, the date on which Al-Burhan declared a state of emergency. The Council of Ministers and the Sovereignty were dissolved, and the subsequent arrests of ministers in Hamdok’s government and more than 400 party leaders, politicians and young revolutionaries.
Despite the excessive use of force in the face of the participants in the “million anger” that swept several Sudanese cities on Saturday, which witnessed the killing of 7 protesters and the injury of more than 300; The forces of the Sudanese revolution called for a new march on Wednesday in protest against the decisions
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