Khartoum: Four Sudanese protesters and an army major were shot dead Monday in the capital, hours after protest leaders and the ruling generals reached a breakthrough agreement on transitional authorities to run the country.
The latest developments came as the prosecutor general’s office said ousted president Omar al-Bashir had been charged over the killings of protesters during anti-regime demonstrations that led to the end of his rule last month.
The major and a protester were killed at a sit-in outside the army headquarters here. Thousands of protesters have remained camped for weeks in front of the headquarters, demanding that the army generals who took power after ousting Bashir step down.
Three soldiers and several protesters and civilians were also wounded when ‘unidentified elements’ fired shots at the Khartoum sit-in, the ruling military council said.
A doctors’ committee linked to the protest movement later said three more protesters had been shot dead, but did not specify if they were actually killed at the sit-in.
The umbrella protest movement, the ‘Alliance for Freedom and Change’, said Monday’s violence was to ‘disturb the breakthrough in the negotiations’ with army generals as it blamed the bloodshed on the former regime’s militias.
Earlier Monday, the generals and the protest movement said a breakthrough had been reached in their talks over handing of power to a civilian administration.
“At today’s (Monday) meeting, we agreed on the structure of the authorities and their powers,” Taha Osman, a spokesman for the protest movement, told this agency. “The authorities are as follows – the sovereign council, the cabinet and the legislative body,” he added.
Osman said another meeting would be held Tuesday ‘to discuss the period of transition and the composition of the authorities’.
The military council confirmed that an accord had been reached. “We agreed on forming the transitional authority on all three levels – the sovereign, the executive and the legislative,” council spokesman Lieutenant General Shamseddine Kabbashi told reporters.
The generals however, are insisting that the transitional period should be two years, while protesters want it to be four.
The crucial talks between the two sides follow a deadlock in negotiations. The apparent breakthrough came as Sudan’s acting prosecutor general Al-Waleed Sayyed Ahmed said Bashir ‘and others have been charged for inciting and participating in the killing of demonstrators’.
The charges form part of an investigation into the death of a medic killed during a protest in the capital’s eastern district of Burri, his office said in a statement.
Ninety people have so far been killed in the unrest which erupted in December, 2018.
AFP