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Khartoum Blames al-Bashir Forces for Turmoil


FILE: Security forces prepare to escort Sudan's ex-president Omar al-Bashir (not in the picture) from the National Prison in Khartoum, Sudan Taken Jun. 16, 2019.
FILE: Security forces prepare to escort Sudan's ex-president Omar al-Bashir (not in the picture) from the National Prison in Khartoum, Sudan Taken Jun. 16, 2019.

KHARTOUM - Sudan's main pro-democracy coalition said loyalists of former strongman Omar al-Bashir, who was ousted in a coup in 2019, were fueling a rift between the armed forces and a powerful paramilitary group that has jeopardized a transition to civilian government.

The army on Thursday warned of a possible confrontation between its troops and fighters of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), bringing long-bubbling disagreements to the surface.

A flurry of mediation offers quickly emerged, with local and international actors meeting army leader General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and RSF head General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, who have served as Sudan's head of state and deputy head of state since they took part in the coup that ousted the Islamist Bashir.

The RSF evolved from militias that fought in the early 2000s conflict in Darfur into a complex paramilitary group with considerable funds operating under its own chain of command.

Disagreements between the army and the RSF over the reform and integration of their forces have delayed the final signing of a political deal that would restore civilian government.

"The ongoing events are the plan of loyalists of the former regime, aiming to destroy the political process," the Forces of Freedom and Change (FFC), a coalition of pro-democracy parties, said in a statement.

The FFC had been in a power-sharing agreement with the military following Bashir's overthrow until another coup in 2021, when the army and RSF ousted civilians leaders and took control.

The FFC said it had held meetings last week with military leaders but "results were reached that had not been executed." They were still in communication, it said.

Its leaders have said that a major aim of a new civilian government would be to purge the civil service of Bashir loyalists, who have resurfaced since the October 2021 coup.

Under Bashir's three-decade rule, those with loyalties to his National Congress Party (NCP) were favored for positions in the government and military.

A leader of the now-outlawed NCP told Reuters this week the group was intensifying its action against the deal, which envisages elections in two years time.

"Sudan's military leaders must deescalate tensions, and stakeholders should engage constructively to resolve outstanding issues and reach a political agreement," U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Molly Phee said in a statement.

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