Sudanese Politics for English Speakers

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Sudanese Politics for English Speakers News and discussions on Sudanese Politics and Economy in English

30/04/2023

Analysis: Sudan risks long conflict as entrenched rivals struggle for control. No one knows who is winning but clearly the people of Sudan are on the losing side.

30/04/2023

LONDON, April 30 (Reuters) - Britain has arranged an extra evacuation flight from Port Sudan in eastern Sudan which will depart on Monday, the government said on Sunday, adding that it has evacuated 2,122 people so far from the country.

The government confirmed that it was no longer running evacuation flights from Wadi Saeedna airfield, near Khartoum, due to a decline in demand by British nationals, and as the situation on the ground remains volatile.

21/04/2023

I started this page for Sudanese people who do not speak Arabic or prefer English, I would prefer to have this page as a forum where anyone can post and discuss. Our country is in a bad place and there is not much any of us can do about it, one day the villains will be crowned heros !

22/11/2021

Nov 22 (Reuters) - Sudan's military has announced a deal to reinstate Abdalla Hamdok as prime minister, just under a month after dissolving his government in a coup.
The agreement faces opposition from protesters who previously saw Hamdok as a symbol of resistance to military rule but viewed his signature of the deal as a betrayal.

WHAT'S IN THE AGREEMENT?
The agreement signed on Sunday says Hamdok will lead a government of technocrats during a political transition expected to last until 2023, and that all political detainees are to be freed.
It is meant to be based on an earlier deal struck between the military and civilian political forces in the wake of the overthrow of Omar al-Bashir in 2019, under which they agreed to share power until elections - though that partnership was halted by the coup.
It provides for the investigation of casualties during recent demonstrations, and for the completion of a peace process signed by some Sudanese rebel groups in Juba last year.

WHAT'S CHANGED?
The military says its takeover was a "correction" to move beyond political infighting, and that the transition towards elections can now continue.
Opponents argue the agreement provides legal cover for the coup and allows the military to bolster its position by replacing democrats with loyalists in positions of authority, thereby subverting the transition and the goals of the 2019 uprising that toppled Bashir.

HOW DID WE GET HERE?
Sudan's power sharing arrangement had come under increasing strain as civilians pressed for reform of the military, justice for protesters killed in 2019, and the delivery of Bashir and others wanted over crimes in Darfur to the International Criminal Court.
The military accused political factions of incitement against the army, while civilian groups said the military was manoeuvring to grab power. On Oct. 25 it did so, arresting its most prominent critics and placing Hamdok under house arrest.
Much of the international community condemned the coup and pro-democracy groups in Sudan began a campaign of mass rallies and civil disobedience. Local mediation efforts backed by the United Nations sought a return to power sharing as the military moved to consolidate its position.

HOW MUCH SUPPORT DOES THE DEAL HAVE?
Hamdok, who had resisted military pressure to dissolve his government immediately before the coup, said he signed the deal in order to prevent further bloodshed after a crackdown left several dozen protesters dead.
The military has the support of some former rebel factions that signed the Juba peace deal and social leaders prominent under Bashir. The United Nations, the Arab League, the African Union and Western states cautiously welcomed the agreement.
However, the Forces of Freedom and Change (FFC) political coalition that had been sharing power with the military, as well as pro-democracy activists who have led protests since the 2019 uprising, have rejected it.
Angered by the coup and protester deaths, they are demanding that the military exit politics and be held to account in the courts, raising the prospect of continued demonstrations.

WHY DOES IT MATTER?
The fate of the deal will determine the balance of power in Sudan, a country of 46 million people in which a popular uprising had carved a way out from decades of autocracy, internal conflict and economic isolation under Bashir.
Hamdok's government had secured agreement for relief on more than $56 billion in foreign debt - a step thrown into doubt by the coup. It had carried out painful economic reforms that it said were starting to bear fruit against a backdrop of shortages and widespread poverty.
It had also agreed to take steps to follow other Arab states in normalising ties with Israel.
Sudan's course will have a bearing on a volatile region bordering the Sahel, the Red Sea and the Horn of Africa where international powers are vying for influence. The conflict in Ethiopia's Tigray region sent tens of thousands of refugees into Sudan one year ago, and renewed tensions over farmlands on the neighbours' disputed border.

21/11/2021

Nov 21 (Reuters) - Abdalla Hamdok led Sudan's transitional government until the military dissolved his cabinet and placed him under house arrest on Oct. 25.
The head of the Umma Party told Reuters on Sunday that the military plan to reinstate Hamdok following weeks of unrest. Fadlallah Burma Nasir said Hamdok will form an independent cabinet of technocrats, and all political detainees will be released under an agreement between the military and civilian political parties. nL8N2SC02P

WHO IS HAMDOK?
- Before becoming prime minister, Hamdok worked for the U.N. Economic Commission for Africa, the African Development Bank and as a special advisor at the Trade and Development Bank in Ethiopia. He studied economics at the universities of Khartoum and Manchester.
- He was named prime minister in August 2019 by the Sovereign Council, a ruling body of civilians and the army that was set up to oversee a transition towards democracy after long-serving ruler Omar al-Bashir was toppled.
- Upon taking office, he said his priorities included solving a deep economic crisis, addressing a suffocating public debt burden, and achieving peace in a country long fractured by civil wars.
- He quickly started talks with International Monetary Fund and World Bank to discuss restructuring Sudan's crippling debt.
- He also opened talks with the United States to have Sudan removed from its list of states that sponsor terrorism, a designation that had isolated Sudan from the international financial system since 1993. Sudan was removed from the list in 2020.
- On his watch, the IMF accepted Sudan into the Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative based on the country's commitment to macroeconomic reforms. This meant Sudan could finally access debt forgiveness and new funds.
- The major economic reforms he promoted included the removal of fuel subsidies that cost several billion dollars a year, and the devaluation and floating of the Sudanese currency. He also sought to bring under government control firms owned by the security forces.
- The reforms led to rapid IMF approval for relief on more than $56 bln in debt and IMF funding of $2.5 bln over three years.
- A few weeks before he was removed from office, he acknowledged the hardship arising from reforms but expressed hope that their positive impact would be felt on the ground very soon. "The Sudanese people have borne a very high cost of the reforms and we cannot take their patience for granted," he said.
- He is a firm supporter of Sudan's transition to civilian-led rule. As tensions grew between the army and civilians in the power-sharing administration in September, Hamdok presented a roadmap out of crisis while adding: "I am not neutral or a mediator in this conflict. My clear and firm position is complete alignment to the civilian democratic transition."
- His stance has won him support among the population. During rallies against the coup, protesters carried photos of Hamdok and hung banners featuring him from billboards.

21/11/2021

KHARTOUM, Nov 21 (Reuters) - Sudan's military plans to reinstate ousted Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok following an agreement reached in the late hours of Saturday, Fadlallah Burma Nasir, the head of the Umma Party, told Reuters.
Hamdok will form an independent cabinet of technocrats and all political detainees will be released under the agreement between the military and civilian political parties, Nasir said on Sunday.

16/11/2021

SUDAN

16-Nov-2021 4:52:18 AM


By Mawahib Abdallatif
Sudan's deputy leader of the Transitional Sovereign Council, which was named last week after the October military takeover, has declined to take up the lead role of a key reform committee set up to break the country from the regime of ousted president Omar al-Bashir.
Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, also known as Hemedti, who leads the feared paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, on Monday turned down the offer to head the Empowerment Removal Committee.
In his "regret" submission to the de facto ruler General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan on Monday, Dagalo did not give his reasons.
Following the October 25 coup, Burhan declared a nationwide state of emergency and dissolved the Transitional Government led by Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, including all the steering committees in state institutions, trade unions and professional associations.
He later reinstituted the Empowerment Removal Committee to be led by Dagalo and charged to review the work done by the previous team members.
After the ouster of Bashir in April 2019, the Hamdok-led government established the committee to dismantle the system he had built during his nearly three decades in power and seize assets and companies held by his National Congress Party.

16/11/2021

CAIRO, Nov 16 (Reuters) - Qatar Al Jazeera TV said on Tuesday that Sudanese authorities had released its Khartoum bureau chief, El Musalmi El Kabbashi.
The Qatar-based news channel reported on Sunday that Sudanese security forces had raided El Kabbashi's home and arrested him, a day after street protests across Sudan against a military takeover.

14/11/2021

Didn’t the same happen in Egypt?

SUDAN

13-Nov-2021 11:39:42 PM

CAIRO, Nov 14 (Reuters) - Qatar's Al Jazeera TV network said on Twitter on Sunday Sudanese security forces had raided the home of its Khartoum bureau chief, El Musalmi El Kabbashi, and arrested him.
The network did not provide further details.
Five protesters were killed on Saturday as huge crowds defied gunfire and tear gas in Sudan's capital Khartoum and other cities to demonstrate against a military takeover, witnesses and medics said.

13/11/2021

UPDATE 3-Protesters face tear gas and bullets to oppose Sudan coup - Reuters News
13-Nov-2021 13:12:21
Protests follow appointment of new ruling council
Coup last month upended post-Bashir transition
Western states have condemned military takeover
Updates death toll, estimates of protest size, police statement, other details

KHARTOUM, Nov 13 (Reuters) - Five protesters were killed on Saturday as huge crowds took to the streets in the Sudanese capital Khartoum and other cities to demonstrate against a military takeover, defying efforts by security forces to disperse them with tear gas and gunfire, witnesses and medics said.

The protests come two days after military leader Abdel Fattah al-Burhan announced the formation of a new ruling council that excludes the civilian coalition the military had been sharing power with since 2019.

Sudanese pro-democracy groups condemned the move and vowed to continue their campaign of civil disobedience and protests against the Oct. 25 coup.

As protesters began to gather in the early afternoon around the capital, security forces moved quickly to try to disperse them, firing tear gas and chasing demonstrators down side streets to prevent them reaching central meeting points, witnesses said.

"People were surprised that they fired the tear gas so early," said one protester in Omdurman across the Nile from central Khartoum, adding that demonstrators retreated, barricaded streets, and then reassembled.

Witnesses estimated the number of protesters around Khartoum to be in the tens of thousands, with large crowds in other cities bringing the total nationwide to hundreds of thousands.

"The revolutionaries have nothing but peacefulness and are calling for democracy and bringing back civilian rule which was taken away by Burhan," said Mohamed Hamed, a protester in Khartoum.

During previous rallies, including on Oct. 30 when hundreds of thousands also turned out, security forces had waited until later in the day before trying to disperse protesters.

The Central Committee of Sudanese Doctors, which is aligned with the protest movement, said demonstrations were "facing excessive repression using all forms of force including live bullets in several areas of the capital Khartoum".

'HOSPITAL STORMED'

In Khartoum and its twin cities of Omdurman and Khartoum North four people were killed by live fire from security forces and one after suffocating from tear gas, the committee said. It said access to hospitals was difficult and that security forces had stormed Al Arbaeen hospital in Omdurman, beating medical staff and arresting injured protesters.

Sudanese police said in a statement they did not use fi****ms during the protests, which they said began peacefully but went off track. Some 39 policemen were injured and stations were attacked, they said.

There was no immediate comment from the military, but Burhan has previously said peaceful protests are allowed and the military does not kill protesters.

In Wad Madani, south-east of Khartoum, large crowds gathered, chanting slogans including: "Down, down with military rule," a witness told Reuters. Protesters in other cities, including Al Gadarif and Kosti, were also met with tear gas, witnesses said.

The military takeover upended a transition towards democracy that began after the uprising that toppled autocrat Omar al-Bashir in April 2019. Security forces detained senior officials appointed under a power-sharing arrangement between the military and civilian groups and Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok was placed under house arrest.

On Saturday, protesters carried pictures of Hamdok, now a symbol of resistance to military rule, while chanting against Burhan and his deputy Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, commander of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.

INTERNET CUT

Mobile internet services have remained cut in Sudan since the coup, despite a court order to restore them, and phone coverage has been disrupted, complicating efforts by the protest movement.

However, local resistance committees energised by the nomination of the new ruling Sovereign Council used flyers and organised smaller neighbourhood protests in recent days.

Despite widespread opposition from political groups in Sudan and pressure from Western powers that backed the transition, Burhan has pushed to consolidate the military's position. Burhan has denied staging a coup, saying the army moved to correct the transition and accusing civilian groups of inciting unrest.

Malik Agar, one of three rebel leaders named in the Sovereign Council, whose position on the military takeover had been unclear, told Sky News Arabia on Saturday that he considered it a coup and that it faced "many challenges".

Western states and the World Bank have suspended economic assistance designed to help pull Sudan out of decades of isolation and a deep economic crisis.

The United States and other Western powers expressed grave concern at Burhan's appointment of the ruling Sovereign Council and warned against unilateral action. (Full Story)

Reacting to Saturday's rallies, the U.S. mission in Khartoum said: "The U.S. Embassy deeply regrets the loss of life and injuries of dozens of Sudanese citizens demonstrating today for freedom and democracy, and condemns the excessive use of force."

13/11/2021

CAIRO, Nov 13 (Reuters) - Two more protesters died from gunshots fired by security forces during demonstrations against military rule in Sudan on Saturday, raising the total number of protester deaths to five, the Central Committee of Sudanese Doctors said.

10/11/2021

SUDAN

10-Nov-2021 3:00:28 PM

Adds TV, pictures
CAIRO, Nov 10 (Reuters) - Sudan's main civilian political coalition rejected any negotiation with the military on Wednesday, holding to its position at its first press conference since a coup on Oct. 25 led by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan.
A statement read at the press conference attributed to spokesman Alwathiq Elbereir said the Forces of Freedom and Change, which had signed a 2019 power-sharing agreement with the military following the ouster of dictator Omar al-Bashir, rejected the coup and had not met with the military.
The coalition said it supported Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who is under house arrest, but had not met with him, and joined him in demanding a return to pre-coup conditions.
"We did not break the partnership ... and we must return to the constitutional document," said another FFC spokesman, adding that the coup happened after civilians brought certain contentious issues to the table.
"The coup does not represent the military institution," the spokesman added, saying the coalition would not accept the return of Burhan in the head of state position he held before the coup.
Several civilian politicians and officials were arrested following the coup, and Elbereir said they were facing pressures that were endangering their lives.
Mediation attempts since the takeover have stalled, and while lower-level appointments have been made, neither a cabinet or head of state Sovereign council have been named.
Burhan has said he is committed to the democratic transition and elections in July 2023.
Burhan is under international pressure to reverse his actions. The U.N. Security Council will be briefed on Sudan by U.N. special envoy Volker Perthes during a closed-door meeting on Thursday, diplomats said.
Resistance committees have called for "marches of millions" on Nov. 13 and 17 which the FFC said it supported. The committees are organising under the slogan: No negotiations, no partnership, no legitimacy.
The committees, although struggling under an internet blackout, brought out hundreds of thousands of people in an anti-military protest on Oct. 30. They have also threatened a campaign of general strikes and civil disobedience.
The Coordinating Committee for Refugees and Displaced People announced that camp residents in Darfur and southern regions of the country would be joining the Nov. 13 protests.
On Wednesday, the Sudanese Teachers Committee said 13 teachers had been arrested in South Darfur, joining others arrested earlier this week in Khartoum.

07/11/2021

CAIRO, Nov 7 (Reuters) - Sudan's army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan said he will not participate in any government that comes after a transitional period, Al Jazeera channel reported on Sunday.
He also denied the army was responsible for the deaths of protesters: "The Sudanese army does not kill citizens, and there are investigation committees to reveal what happened."

07/11/2021

SUDAN

07-Nov-2021 6:29:58 AM

KHARTOUM, Nov 7 (Reuters) - Sudanese pro-democracy groups launched two days of civil disobedience and strikes on Sunday in protest at last month's military coup, though participation appeared to be limited by continuing interruptions to internet and phone connections.
Local "resistance committees" and the Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA), which led demonstrations in the uprising that toppled then-president Omar al-Bashir in April 2019, are organising a campaign of protests to try to reverse the military takeover.
On Sunday morning people were out on the streets in the centre of the capital, Khartoum, though there was less traffic than usual, residents said. In Khartoum North, security forces patrolled major streets carrying sticks and tear gas grenades.
A teachers' union said security forces used tear gas at the education ministry building for Khartoum State to break up a sit-in staged to oppose any handover to military appointees. Five people were arrested, it said.
Some hospitals and medical staff were working normally while others were on strike.
"A number of people did not know about the call for civil disobedience because of the internet cut," said one resident in central Khartoum who asked not to be named.
Internet services have been badly disrupted since the Oct. 25 coup, and phone coverage remains patchy. Though daily life came to a near standstill, shops, roads, and some banks have since reopened.
The coup halted a power-sharing arrangement between the military and civilians that had been agreed after Bashir's overthrow and was meant to lead to democratic elections by late 2023.
Top civilians including several ministers were detained, and Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok was placed under house arrest.
Since the coup, mediation efforts involving the United Nations have sought the release of detainees and a return to power sharing, but sources from the ousted government say those efforts have stalled. nL1N2RX0CS
Activists demanding that the military exit politics have announced a schedule of protests leading up to mass rallies on Nov. 13 under the slogan "No negotiation, no partnership, no compromise".
Hundreds of thousands took to the streets against military rule in two demonstrations before and after the Oct. 25 coup.
Western powers have paused economic assistance to Sudan and say that relief on tens of billions of dollars of foreign debt is at risk unless there is a return to democratic transition.

02/11/2021

Mediation efforts to resolve Sudan crisis underway, UN envoy reports - PR Newswire
02-Nov-2021 11:23:32
PR Newswire

NEW YORK, 01 November 2021

NEW YORK, 01 November 2021 / PRN Africa / -- Speaking from the capital, Khartoum, Mr. Perthes said the situation on the ground is “stable but very tense” in the wake of the takeover.

Last Monday, the Sudanese army dissolved the power-sharing transitional government and detained civilian Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok and his cabinet.

The UN was quick to condemn the coup, and the arrests, and call for the restoration of constitutional order.

“Many of the interlocutors we are speaking with in Khartoum, but also internationally and regionally, are expressing a strong desire that we move forward quickly to get out of the crisis and return to the steps of normalcy, to the steps of political transition, as we viewed it before 25 October, on the basis of the Constitutional Declaration,” said Mr. Perthes.

Prime Minister ‘not free'

The UN envoy has met several times with Prime Minister Hamdok, who is no longer detained but under house arrest at his residence. Though physically well, “he is not free”, said Mr. Perthes.

The coup took place as Sudan was progressing along a democratic path following the ouster of longstanding leader, President Omar al-Bashir, in April 2019.

Deadly protests

On Saturday, scores of citizens took to the streets in nationwide mass demonstrations against the coup, billed as the “march of millions”, though exact numbers are unknown.

Several protesters were reportedly killed, and Mr. Perthes deplored the loss of life, as well as the use of teargas and other measures.

Meanwhile, multiple negotiations are ongoing in the capital to resolve the crisis.

Broad engagement

“There is a lot of shuttling between the General Command in the Prime Minister's residence, and other places where other officials are located,” he reported.

Mr. Perthes listed some participants, who include the Forces of Freedom and Change, the main opposition coalition, and armed groups from the volatile Darfur region who signed an historic peace deal with the transitional authorities in October 2020.

The UN continues its good offices role in Sudan and is supporting some of the talks.

“In essence, we're engaging with all Sudanese across a very broad political spectrum,” said Mr. Perthes, who is also head of the UN Integrated Transition Assistance Mission in Sudan (UNITAMS).

“This political spectrum is broader than that that was represented in the transitional set-up. And, of course, it includes people who would not necessarily want us to mediate, or are not in favour of restoring the civilian-military partnership.”

Hopes for resolution

The UN is also engaging with the African Union (AU) and other regional and international bodies.

Mr. Perthes said he is in contact with countries such as the United Arab Emirates, as well as South Sudan and other African states, and nations from outside the region, including members of the UN Security Council.

He expressed hope that the “contours of a package” will emerge in the coming days.

SOURCE UN News Centre

31/10/2021

I hope by releasing Ibrahim Ghandour they are not about to make him the Prime Minister

31/10/2021

Shame on you Burhan

KHARTOUM, Oct 31 (Reuters) - Ibrahim Ghandour, head of Sudan's former ruling National Congress Party and a former foreign minister under deposed President Omar al-Bashir, has been released from prison, a family source told Reuters.

30/10/2021

SUDAN

30-Oct-2021 9:35:45 AM

News : SUDAN'S DOCTORS COMMITTEE SAYS TWO SHOT DEAD IN OMDURMAN


Triggered 30-Oct-2021 9:35:45 AM
Source Reuters News

News : Social Media:   TEAR GAS FIRED AT ANTI-ARMY PROTESTERS IN SUDAN CAPITAL, WITNESSES SAY | Confidence: 95%Here are ...
30/10/2021

News : Social Media: TEAR GAS FIRED AT ANTI-ARMY PROTESTERS IN SUDAN CAPITAL, WITNESSES SAY | Confidence: 95%

Here are some of the tweets that formed the headline(s) above:

AFP News Agency 6:38:47 AM EDT 30-Oct-2021
Anti-coup protests begin in Sudan's city of Omdurman: witnesses https://t.co/ErWTbVMnbI
Most Credible

Colombo Morning Star 5:29:56 AM EDT 30-Oct-2021
RT : Tear gas fired at anti-army protesters in Sudan capital, witnesses say https://t.co/ugnppFeKt8

“ Tear gas fired at anti-army protesters in Sudan capital, witnesses say”

30/10/2021

SUDAN

29-Oct-2021 9:27:56 PM

CAIRO, Oct 30 (REUTERS) - U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Saturday that Sudan’s security forces must respect human rights and that any violence against peaceful demonstrators is "unacceptable".
He said in a Twitter post that the United States continues to stand with "Sudan’s people in their nonviolent struggle for democracy".
Opponents of a military coup in Sudan have called for nationwide protests on Saturday to demand the restoration of a civilian-led government to put the country back on a path to democracy after decades of authoritarian rule.

29/10/2021

Sudan's ousted PM wants coup reversed before talks, sources say


29-Oct-2021 12:58:46 PM

Ousted PM says wants dialogue on condition coup reversed
Burhan says trying to persuade ousted PM to take job again
Egypt in mediation bid over new government, Egyptian source says
Opponents planning big protest for Saturday
Recasts story with sources speaking on Hamdok's position
By Khalid Abdelaziz
KHARTOUM, Oct 29 (Reuters) - The prime minister ousted by the Sudanese army this week is ready to negotiate on the formation of a new government on condition that the military reverses its coup and releases detainees, sources who met with him said on Friday.
Coup leader General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan had appeared to leave the door open for Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok to lead a new government in comments broadcast on Thursday, saying he would be free to form the cabinet of his choice.
The sources who met Hamdok said he wants dialogue but on condition the situation be returned to the way it was on the eve of Monday's coup, which derailed Sudan's transition to democracy after decades of authoritarian rule.
The conflicting positions point to the difficulty of reaching any mediated way out of the crisis: the army told mediators it would only release detainees who were not facing criminal charges, the sources said, echoing remarks by Burhan this week.
Western states have cut off hundreds of millions of dollars in desperately needed aid to Sudan since Burhan dissolved Hamdok's cabinet and soldiers rounded up government ministers on Monday, demanding the civilian-led cabinet be reinstated.
Opponents of the coup have called for mass protests on Saturday under the slogan "Leave!". At least 11 protesters have been killed in clashes with security forces so far this week, and residents say they fear a full-blown crackdown.
"I am scared that this country will catch fire. We're scared these people will kill our children. There's been enough death," said a Khartoum woman in her 70s on condition of anonymity.
A senior U.S. State Department official said the protests would be a test of the military's intentions going forward and urged the army to refrain from any violence towards protesters.
Washington was relieved to see that Hamdok has been allowed to return home but he was still under house arrest and unable to resume his work, said the official, who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity.
Several mediation efforts emerged on Friday, including one by neighbouring Egypt, but there has been no sign of progress.
In Khartoum, a committee of national figures has been formed to mediate and has met with both the army and civilians, a member told Reuters.
But a Western diplomat said it would be difficult for the public to accept a compromise that returns to the pre-coup status quo.
"It may be the reasonable way out, maybe even the only way out that doesn't involve a higher level of violence. But would it last and would it be accepted? My personal thought is no on both counts."
A European diplomat also said that Western states are not looking to engage with the military or mediate any negotiations until detainees are released and the military shows a commitment to power sharing as set out in the transitional constitutional declaration.
The transition was meant to steer to elections in 2023, after long-serving ruler Omar al-Bashir was toppled two years ago. The U.N. Security Council has called for the restoration of civilian rule.

BURHAN HOPES FOR NEW PM WITHIN A WEEK
In a speech on Thursday night, Burhan said Hamdok had been offered a chance to return as prime minister. "We told him that we cleared the stage for you ... he is free to form the government, we will not intervene in the government formation," he said in the remarks broadcast on Al-Jazeera TV.
One minister in Hamdok's ousted government, speaking on condition of anonymity, said cabinet members were not opposed to standing aside for a new government, provided it is led and chosen by Hamdok, and the transitional agreement is restored in full.
Burhan has said he moved to avert civil war after civilian politicians stoked hostility to the armed forces.
He says he is still committed to a democratic transition, including elections by 2023, but favours a government that would exclude partisan politicians.
In comments to Russia's Sputnik news agency published on Friday, Burhan said a new government would be led by a technocrat who could be chosen within a week and would be permitted to select a cabinet.
Egyptian officials including intelligence chief Abbas Kamel have been spoken with Burhan and General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, another top Sudanese commander, in the last two days in a bid to restore calm and mediate over the formation of a new government, a security source at Egyptian intelligence said.
Since becoming de facto head of state in 2019, Burhan has developed good ties with Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, U.S.-allied Arab states all happy to see the downfall of Bashir, whose Islamism they opposed.
The coup has led donors to freeze assistance badly needed in a country where more than half the population is in poverty and hardship has fuelled instability and civil wars.
Speaking to Reuters, Burhan's media advisor Brigadier Altahir Abuhaja rejected Western criticism that the takeover was a betrayal of the Sudanese people.
"What happened in Sudan is not a betrayal or a coup but a righting of the path of the revolution. General Burhan is the most concerned with the democratic transition."

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