KHARTOUM: Sudanese mediators have proposed two transitional bodies in a bid to break a deadlock in talks on a power handover from the military rulers to civilians, a protest leader said Sunday.
The army and protesters are wrangling over how to replace the existing 10-member military council that took over after the generals ousted president Omar Al-Bashir on April 11.
The two sides agreed on forming a joint military-civilian last week, but have failed to hammer out the details on the makeup of the body.
Now a group of mediators including businessmen, journalists and other prominent figures from Sudanese society are trying to come up with other solutions.
“There is a proposal to have two councils, one led by civilians and the other by the military,” said Omar Al-Digeir, a senior opposition leader and member of the umbrella protest group the Alliance for Freedom and Change.
He told AFP the body headed by the military would also include civilian representatives and focus on “issues concerning the security aspects of the country.”
The “exact job description” of both the councils has yet to be decided, he said. “No final decision has been taken yet.”
Thousands of protesters remain camped outside the army headquarters in Khartoum, demanding the generals transfer power to a civilian administration.
The military has so far rebuffed calls to step aside and it remained unclear if both sides would agree to the new idea.
The military council’s spokesman Lt. Gen. Shamseddine said it had not received any proposals from the mediators.
He said the council will respond Monday to propositions on broader future power structures put forward earlier by the protesters.
The military and protest leaders have been at odds over the composition of any joint ruling body — with each party pushing to have a majority.
Digeir said the mediators have proposed an overall package that includes not just the proposed two councils, but also how executive and legislative bodies would work in a post-Bashir era.
But within the protest camp there was opposition to the new plan if it meant the generals maintaining a major role in running the country.
“We are completely against this idea. We only want a symbolic sovereign council with military representation,” said Siddig Youssef, head of the Sudan Communist Party, part of the protest movement.
“We want a parliamentary system with the authority in the hands of parliament and the cabinet,” he told AFP.
“The military should be confined only to a body tasked with matters related to security and defense.”
Protests initially erupted in Sudan on December 19 in response to a government decision to triple the price of bread, and quickly turned against Bashir’s thirty-year rule.
Despite the toppling of the iron-fisted leader protesters have stayed put around the army headquarters in Khartoum to keep up pressure on the military.
While there are deep divisions over the way forward, the economic problems that brought people out onto the streets against Bashir remain pressing.
On the eve of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan Sunday hundreds of people formed long queues at petrol stations and bank machines in Khartoum.
“For more than a week now, there’s been no cash even in the ATMs installed in our company premises,” an employee of a leading industrial corporation in the capital told AFP.
A driver with a private tour operator said he got his car partially filled after waiting for an entire day at a Khartoum petrol station.
“People at fuel stations are really angry. They have to wait for six to seven hours in this hot sun to get fuel,” he said without giving his name.
Khartoum’s Arab allies Saudi Arabia and the UAE, which have backed the military council, last month announced three billion dollars (2.7 billion euros) in financial aid for Sudan, including providing food, medicine and petroleum products.
Sudan mediators propose two transition councils to break deadlock in power transfer talks
Sudan mediators propose two transition councils to break deadlock in power transfer talks
- Proposal is to have councils each led by civilians and military
- The two sides agreed on forming a joint military-civilian last week, but have failed to hammer out the details on the makeup of the body
Syria accuses Hezbollah of firing shells into its territory
- “The Syrian Arab Army will not tolerate any aggression targeting Syria,” the army said in a statement to SANA
DAMASCUS: Syria said Iran-backed Hezbollah had fired artillery shells into its territory from Lebanon overnight, state media reported on Tuesday, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Lebanese Shia movement.
Syrian army officials said artillery shells fired from Lebanon landed near the town of Serghaya, west of Damascus, the state news agency SANA reported on Tuesday.
The army accused Hezbollah of targeting Syrian army positions, telling the news agency it observed Hezbollah reinforcements at the Syrian-Lebanese border.
“The Syrian Arab Army will not tolerate any aggression targeting Syria,” the army said in a statement to SANA.
Lebanon was drawn into the Middle East war last week when Hezbollah attacked Israel in response to the killing of Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei during US-Israeli strikes.
Hezbollah and Israeli forces have clashed in eastern Lebanon in recent days, and Israel has carried out strikes across Lebanon, including on the capital Beirut.
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun accused Hezbollah of working to “collapse” the state, while the head of the group’s parliamentary bloc said it had “no other option... than the option of resistance.”
Hezbollah provided military support to former Syrian president Bashar Assad, who was overthrown in December 2024 by an Islamist coalition hostile to the pro-Iranian Shia movement.
Since then, its supply routes from Syria have been cut off, and Lebanese and Syrian authorities are trying to combat smuggling across the porous border between the two countries.










