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Hundreds rally in Sudan against coup, tribal violence

By AFP - Jul 26,2022 - Last updated at Jul 26,2022

Sudanese protesters lift national flags during an anti-coup demonstration in the Bashdar station area in southern Khartoum, on Tuesday (AFP photo)

KHARTOUM — Hundreds of protesters rallied on Tuesday against last year's military coup in Sudan and a recent spike in tribal violence which killed more than 100 people, AFP correspondents said.

Sudan's main civilian group, the Forces for Freedom and Change (FFC), which was ousted in the coup, had called for mass demonstrations with hashtags urging co-existence and a "unified nation".

In the capital Khartoum, demonstrators were seen carrying the Sudanese flag while chanting "Sudan is a nation for all people!"

Protesters also chanted "No to tribalism and no regionalism!" while others called on the military "to go back to barracks", according to an AFP correspondent.

Senior civilian politicians including Mohamed Al Fekki and ex-minister Khaled Omar Youssef, were seen at the demonstrations.

The two men, key leaders of the FFC, were among civilian officials who have been removed from power since the coup.

Some pro-democracy activists and protesters were opposed to the FFC's participation, saying the rallies should not be overshadowed by partisan motives, AFP correspondents said.

Near-weekly protests and deepening turmoil have rocked Sudan since army chief Abdel Fattah Al Burhan led the coup last October, upending a transition to civilian rule following the 2019 ouster of president Omar Al Bashir.

Sudan has since reeled from a spiralling economic crisis and a broad security breakdown which has seen a spike in ethnic clashes in its far-flung regions.

On July 11, tribal clashes over a land dispute erupted in southern Blue Nile state, leaving at least 105 people dead and 291 wounded.

The clashes between members of the Berti and Hausa ethnic groups have since triggered furious protests in several cities, with Hausa members taking to the streets including in Khartoum to demand justice for comrades who were killed.

On July 4, Burhan pledged to step aside to make way for Sudanese factions to agree on a civilian government, but the FFC dismissed his move as a “ruse”.

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