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Anti-coup protesters march against the military regime in Khartoum, Sudan, Thursday, March 24, 2022 – Marwan Ali/Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. |
The U.N. envoy for Sudan warned Monday the east African nation is heading for “an economic and security collapse” unless it addresses the political paralysis following Octoberโs military coup and moves toward resuming a civilian-led transition.
Volker Perthes told the U.N. Security Council that the militaryโs โviolent repressionโ of protests against the October coup is continuing and the absence of a political agreement on returning to a transitional path has already led to a deteriorating economic, humanitarian and security situation in the country.
The coup upended Sudanโs democratic transition after a popular uprising forced the military to remove autocratic President Omar al-Bashir in April 2019.
The aim, he said, is a โreturn to constitutional order and (a) transitional path, with an empowered civilian-led government to steer the country through t
To give these talks a chance of succeeding, he said, โfavorable conditions must be createdโ including an end to violence, ensuring the right to demonstrate peacefully, the release of political detainees, and โa firm commitmentโ to phase out the militaryโs current state of emergency in the country.
He said women demonstrators have been subjected to violence and intimidation by members of the security forces and 16 women have reportedly been raped during protests in the capital of Khartoum as of March 22, though the figure could be higher due to under-reporting.
Intensive phase of talks
Over the last two weeks, Perthes added, three organizations have been working on a common approach and consulting key Sudanese parties, many of them emphasizing “the urgency of the situation”.
โWe expect to start an intensive phase of talks in the next couple of weeks, fully recognizing that this will be during the (Muslim) holy month of Ramadan,โ Perthes said. โWe anticipate that the stakeholders will participate in the monthโs spirit of peace and forgiveness.โ
The U.N. envoy said that โthe stakes are highโ and the aspirations of the Sudanese people โfor a prosperous, civilian-led, democratic future are at risk.โ โUnless the current trajectory is corrected, the country will head towards an economic and security collapse, and significant humanitarian suffering,โ he said.
There have been disturbing reports of increased tensions among Sudan’s different security forces, Perthes added. This has sparked concerns in some quarters โthat if a political solution is not found, Sudan could descend into conflict and divisions as seen in Libya, Yemen or elsewhere, in a region already beset by instability,โ he said.
Perthes also warned that the combination of conflict, economic crisis and poor harvests โwill likely double the number of people facing acute hunger in Sudan to 18 million people by September 2022.โ
In the absence of a political solution, he said, crime and lawlessness are rising and intercommunal conflicts in the vast western Darfur region have intensified, with farmers forced off their land by violent attacks, villages burned, and homes looted.
AP