Sudan’s revolutionary protesters must fight on

مرحبا Guest
اخر زيارك لك: 05-05-2024, 02:54 AM الصفحة الرئيسية

منتديات سودانيزاونلاين    مكتبة الفساد    ابحث    اخبار و بيانات    مواضيع توثيقية    منبر الشعبية    اراء حرة و مقالات    مدخل أرشيف اراء حرة و مقالات   
News and Press Releases    اتصل بنا    Articles and Views    English Forum    ناس الزقازيق   
مدخل أرشيف للعام 2020-2023م
نسخة قابلة للطباعة من الموضوع   ارسل الموضوع لصديق   اقرا المشاركات فى شكل سلسلة « | »
اقرا احدث مداخلة فى هذا الموضوع »
01-27-2021, 12:50 PM

زهير عثمان حمد
<aزهير عثمان حمد
تاريخ التسجيل: 08-07-2006
مجموع المشاركات: 8273

للتواصل معنا

FaceBook
تويتر Twitter
YouTube

20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Sudan’s revolutionary protesters must fight on

    11:50 AM January, 27 2021

    سودانيز اون لاين
    زهير عثمان حمد-السودان الخرطوم
    مكتبتى
    رابط مختصر




    Nima Elbagir YESTERDAY

    The legacy of any revolution is unfortunately, and inherently, one of disappointment. The passion and poetry of resistance will give way to the necessities of pragmatism and the realities of compromise — and that is if you are lucky. 

    In Sudan, that rude awakening has come in many forms. The presence of former President Omar Al-Bashir’s army inspector, General Abdel Fattah Burhan, at the head of the Transitional Sovereign Council (TSC) was not likely to fill the protesters’ hearts with joy, but it was seen as tolerable. 

    The presence, though, of Lt Gen Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, aka Hemeti, in the number-two slot in the TSC, in spite of the fact that his troops were not only credibly accused of human rights violations in Darfur but also of involvement in the June 3 2019 massacre of protesters at the sit-in site in Khartoum, was a deep blow. 

    Add to that the fact that almost two years on, there have been no credible prosecutions for the June 3 massacre, which occurred after Bashir was forced to step down as Sudan’s leader, and it all starts to feel a little hollow for many activists. 


    US secretary of state Mike Pompeo with Gen. Abdel Fattah Burhan in 2020: Sudan’s removal from the US state sponsors of terrorism list has come at a price © AP
    There is also a deep sense of abandonment; that a world which once cheered them on stood by as Sudan, still without a working parliament, was forced by the Trump administration to agree a normalisation deal with Israel. That was in spite of the fact that Sudanese law demands the legislative body ratify international agreements. 

    Recommended
    Yousra Elbagir
    Sudan’s protest camp echoes the revolution of 2019

    The deal did open the way for Sudan’s removal from the US state sponsors of terrorism list, which will eventually allow the country to secure debt relief and access to global lending mechanisms. But for many Sudanese it is an unpopular move, which at one point looked likely to trigger anti-government protests, further destabilising the country. 

    That experience left many Sudanese with a sense of hurt. A sense they and their country had been held hostage to a geopolitical calculus that assigned to them very little worth.

    Sudanese friends and family members asked me whether Sudan’s shaky democratic transition was really so irrelevant in the global scheme of things. Do our nascent freedoms mean so little to the world that they can be risked in order to secure the outgoing US president some sense of legacy؟ 

    These were not Islamists — who, by and large, are people who are anti-Israel on principle. These were people who worried that what remained of Bashir’s Islamists and their fundamentalist allies could use this move to foment anti-government sentiment. 

    Disappointment and heartbreak for those who were lost — the legacies of this revolution

    Many would argue that this was the Trump administration being the Trump administration — a chauvinistic and self-interested entity — but it plays into a larger discourse in Sudan.

    Where is the help the world once promised؟ The response for many Sudanese seems to be: “OK then, we will just do it ourselves”. 

    The world stood largely silent after the first iteration of the TSC included few women, even though it was women who led and organised many of the marches. Women’s rights activists lobbied until they were heard.

    They similarly worked to suspend public morality laws and wrest a long sought-after commitment to end child marriage and female genital mutilation. They are the same activists who spent the holy month of Ramadan fasting peacefully in searing heat at a sit-in site in Khartoum. They are the same activists who continue to demand prosecutions for the June 3 massacre.

    More from this report
    Sudan: hard road to democracy after euphoria of revolution

    Sudanese citizens lose patience as economy falters

    Three men hold Sudan’s fate in their hands

    Fragile Sudan seeks to stabilise foreign relations

    Sudan loses out on gum arabic wealth

    Sudan aims to ‘turn the desert green’

    Sudan pins tourism hopes on archaeological treasures

    In spite of the risks involved in agitating against Hemeti, one of the most powerful and wealthy men in the country, they continue to call for credible prosecution of former regime officials, and to demand justice for the blood spilled by Bashir in his three-decade rule.

    The disappointment is still there. In Africa, Sudan’s inflation rate is second only to Zimbabwe’s, and its devastated economy has been burdened further by a spillover of refugees from Ethiopia’s Tigray region into the east. The fuel queues, water and bread shortages are not what people hoped would unfold when they took to the streets in their millions two years ago. 

    Disappointment and heartbreak for those who were lost — those are the legacies of this revolution. But the bigger lesson؟ Persistence. The same persistence that kept the protests peaceful and steadfast in the face of Bashir’s forces, with their bullets and brutality. This is the persistence fuelling the activists who continue the fight to be heard, to continue the fight to shape Sudan’s future.

    Will they succeed؟ We cannot know that yet but, despite the odds, they continue to hope and fight.

    The writer is a Sudanese journalist and senior international correspondent
    at CNN.






                  


[رد على الموضوع] صفحة 1 „‰ 1:   <<  1  >>




احدث عناوين سودانيز اون لاين الان
اراء حرة و مقالات
Latest Posts in English Forum
Articles and Views
اخر المواضيع فى المنبر العام
News and Press Releases
اخبار و بيانات



فيس بوك تويتر انستقرام يوتيوب بنتيريست
الرسائل والمقالات و الآراء المنشورة في المنتدى بأسماء أصحابها أو بأسماء مستعارة لا تمثل بالضرورة الرأي الرسمي لصاحب الموقع أو سودانيز اون لاين بل تمثل وجهة نظر كاتبها
لا يمكنك نقل أو اقتباس اى مواد أعلامية من هذا الموقع الا بعد الحصول على اذن من الادارة
About Us
Contact Us
About Sudanese Online
اخبار و بيانات
اراء حرة و مقالات
صور سودانيزاونلاين
فيديوهات سودانيزاونلاين
ويكيبيديا سودانيز اون لاين
منتديات سودانيزاونلاين
News and Press Releases
Articles and Views
SudaneseOnline Images
Sudanese Online Videos
Sudanese Online Wikipedia
Sudanese Online Forums
If you're looking to submit News,Video,a Press Release or or Article please feel free to send it to [email protected]

© 2014 SudaneseOnline.com

Software Version 1.3.0 © 2N-com.de