Just A Matter Of Time Before Omar Al-Bashir Follows Mugabe As Protests Intensify
8 April 2019
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Omar Al Bashir

Own Correspondent|Political observers are expecting that Sudanese President Omar Al-Bashir will be stepping down “soon,” in a typical Robert Mugabe way as pressure from citizens and the army against him mounts.

According to online observers it is only a matter of time before the army decides who will be the transitional leader of the Arab African ‎country, which has been witnessing massive protests for the past four months.‎

Informed sources in Sudan who talked to African online media said ‎that after Sunday’s meeting of the National Defence and Security Council headed by ‎Al-Bashir, “it has become clear that the army has picked its side.”

After the meeting, the council ‎said in a statement published by the Sudanese official news agency that “the protesters ‎represent a segment of society that must be heard.” ‎

However, according to two different sources, a large faction in the army insists that the ‎Sudanese Minister of Defence Awad Ibn Ouf, who is also the president’s deputy, cannot be ‎the one to lead the transitional period after Al-Bashir steps down.

“The council is ‎currently looking for someone with a military background, respected by middle and high ranking‎ officers, and with no political affiliations. Someone not wanted by the International ‎Criminal Court,” one source added. ‎

Among the names that are being circulated behind closed doors at the moment, according ‎to observers, is retired Armed Forces Chief of General Staff Lieutenant-General Emad Al-‎Din Mustafa Adawi. ‎

Meanwhile, Sudanese soldiers intervened to protect demonstrators on Monday after ‎security forces tried to disperse a sit-in by thousands outside the defence ministry in ‎central Khartoum that started on 6 April, the anniversary of the military coup ‎that forced Jaafar Nimeiri to step down in ‎1985 after massive protests.‎

Sudanese activists shared videos showing the army’s intervention to stop police violence ‎against protesters while demonstrators chanted “one people, one army.”