5 November 2024

Sudan Commences Nationwide Civil Disobedience

By artist Abu’Obayda Mohamed (OXDA) | @abuobaydamoe

The Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA) have called on a nationwide civil disobedience campaign beginning on Sunday, 9 June 2019, which will continue until the Transitional Military Council (TMC) transfers power to a civilian government.

The call for the open-ended nationwide civil disobedience campaign came on 4 June, a day after Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and other government forces began shooting at peaceful protesters in an attempt to disassemble the mass sit-in in Al Qeyada at the headquarters of the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), which has left at least 100 people dead and over 300 injured. At least 40 bodies were pulled of the Nile River where paramilitary forces disposed of dead bodies. In addition, residents reported rapes and robberies at the hands of paramilitary forces. Others have been arrested, brutally beaten and even urinated on. The ruling council has cut off almost all internet and phone services since the brutal raid, which took place on 3 June 2019 (the 29th day of the holy month of Ramadan).

On behalf the Alliance of Freedom and Change, SPA released a schedule for the first week of the civil disobedience, which states protesters will continue blocking roads, streets and bridges with barricades, in addition to the nationwide strike. However, government forces firing teargas and live bullets have been reported.

Local companies and organisations, shops, schools, universities, banks, clinics and more public and private institutions are expected to close as part of the national strike. Videos and images of empty roads and closed shops and  are already appearing on social media.

The nationwide civil disobedience campaign extends to the Sudanese diaspora as well as SPA called on Sudanese living abroad to refrain from cash transfers to Sudan or visiting Sudanese embassies.

Protests took place across Khartoum, Omdurman and Khartoum North over the weekend to remind people and bring more awareness to the civil disobedience campaign, and encourage more people to participate.

Prior to TMC halting negotiations and facilitating the ‘bloody massacre’, protesters took part in a successful two-day national strike on 28 and 29 May 2019 as a form of civil disobedience to pressure the TMC to continue negotiations and hand over power to a civilian government. Although TMC did not continue negotiations and instead broke the mass sit-in and facilitated the attack on peaceful protesters, the two-day national strike was deemed successful with the participation of at least 90% of the offices, banks, shops, schools, clinics, hospitals and even Khartoum International Airport, according to SPA and the Alliance of Freedom and Change.

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