Understanding the Travail of Change in Sudan
Understanding the Travail of
Change in Sudan
Amgad Fareid Eltayeb
Sudan
revolts. Many people have read this short sentence many times in the past few
years, but the fact is Sudan never stopped revolting since the coup of June
1989 that brought the ruling National Islamic Front party (later the National
Congress Party; NCP) and the current president Omar El Bashir to power. The
political struggle against the dictatorship of Bashir’s Islamic regime has
never stopped for a day. The regime continued to use its tyrannical security
apparatus to fight it, resulting in fuelling the civil war in the south further
to end with separation of South Sudan as an only solution, yielding another war
in the new South of the northern Sudanese country, and generating a new civil
war in the western region of Darfur. These civil wars witnessed the worst types
of violence against civilians, that included; the widest use of sexual violence
in Darfur, burning and indiscriminate bombing of civilian villages,
displacement of millions of Sudanese citizens and a very long list of war
crimes that led Bashir to have the honour of infamously being the first sitting
president to be wanted by the International Criminal Court.
In addition
to these war crimes, the urban areas of Sudan saw wide range of human rights
violations. The Gestapo-like National Intelligence and Security Service (NISS)
of the ruling National Congress Party (NCP)
became a terrifying political tool of terror that is used Bashir’s regime to
abduct, indefinitely detain, torture and kill political opponents with huge
authorities and complete impunity for its agents. Expectedly, this was
accompanied with an unprecedented
spread of corruption in Sudan in light of
the complete absence of the rule of law.
Fast forward to 2018, the demonstrators who stormed the
streets of different Sudanese cities had a clear sight of the scene. The
protests started in Atbra, a city well known for its labour movement history,
on December 19. Other cities witnessed protests in the same day including;
Qadaref, Nuhod, and Portsudan that was supposed to receive a presidential visit
from Bashir in the same day. Protests extended to other cities in the following
day; Dongla, Barbar, Sennar, Elobaid, and the capital Khartoum. The third day
saw the spread of protests to almost everywhere in Sudan. Protesters were very
focused on what and who is the reason behind their suffering. In most of the
protesting cities, citizens marched collectively to burn the premises of the
ruling National Congress Party. The ruling party’s center were not only symbols
of tyranny and dictatorship, but also a kleptocratic symbol of the grand
corruption encircling Sudan.
The protesters took up the streets, driven by the difficult
living conditions and the economic crisis, where the inflation reached 160%
with the full collapse of the value of local currency and a sharp rise in the
prices of essential necessities exacerbated by the lack of liquidity in banks
and market. However, this was merely a symptom of a political crisis of the
first order.
The corruption in the corridors of the state relates
directly and organically to the heads of the state and its extent and size are
directly proportionate with the height in the hierarchy of power. The giant cases of grand corruption that significantly
influence the Sudanese economy are linked to high-ranking officials who are
above the questioning of the law in the lawless state of Sudan.
Despite the structural deformity of the Sudanese economy
that is inherited since the independence, which is seen in its dependence on exportation
rather than production, which exacerbated by the Dutch Disease: “Increasing
dependence on the export of one natural resource with neglecting the rest of economic
sectors” during the years of oil exportation between 1998 to 2011, and the
great shock that hit the Sudanese economy after the independence of the
oil-rich South Sudan, but the current economic crisis is different. These economic
uncertainties have created money-hungry nacropaths of those have limitless
power and authority in Sudan, seeking to collect as much assets and money as
possible to protect and maintain their privileges.
The current lack of liquidity that was exacerbated
significantly by speculations on foreign exchange rates and the storage of
currency by the influentials, which was something the Sudanese Prime Minister
Moataz Mousa, complained of publicly. It was becoming obvious that the crisis
is political in nature.
The corruption in the banking sector, fake credit and
investment loans that are granted to senior members of the ruling party without
adequate guarantees and without productive returns ... and other corrupt
practices have led to the loss of confidence in the banking system by the
citizens. The loss of confidence in the banking system was aggravated by the shortsighted
decisions taken by the government to address the problem of liquidity by placing
a very small daily withdrawal ceiling from personal bank accounts. Amounts that
are not enough to meet the obligations of daily life in light of the rapid rise
of prices, provoking people to store money in their homes instead of Banks, aggravating the impact of the
liquidity scarcity and the corrupt practices of currency speculation. Untouchable
influentials including members of the presidential family (which includes
the prime minister himself who is the cousin of the president), senior
members of the ruling party and high-ranking government officials use these
practices to promote their
social status and protect themselves in the case of any change in a very fluid
political situation. Ignoring the fact that they are worsening their situation
and rising the possibilities of change by aggravating the suffering of the
people. A typical nacropathic behaviour. The anti-corruption tools and slogans
have become part of the battle of settling personal accounts among the regime's
masters, and have not reflected in any positive way on the Sudanese economy. This
made statements by the new prime minister and his tweets (and Muataz Moussa is fond
of the social media platform; Twitter in a Donald-Trumpian style), to a ridiculous
farce, trying to suggest the possession of economic solutions to a problem that
everyone knows it is political in nature.
On another
note, the regime does not help himself by any mean by its refractoriness in
dealing with the other aspects of the political crisis in Sudan. The ruling
National Congress Party continues to manipulate and obstruct all opportunities
for political solutions to end the civil war in its three volatile regions of
Sudan (Darfur, South Kordofan and Blue Nile) and allow for a minimum openness
that help reducing the political polarization in the country. Succeeding in
that with the help of its new status with the international mediators who needs
the regime to serve their different interests in the region. As well as the
weakness of the opposition political forces that, the regime invested in their destruction
over the years of his rule. Never the less, the NCP is digging its own grave
with this attitude. These civil wars, political polarization and lack of
democratic space keep it a permanent hostage to the bullying of foreign powers
who uses it to perform the tasks they want, but only support it by the extent
that keeps it hostage. Tyrants read from one book that does not teach them a
simple lesson; the only guarantor of any ruler is his people, not foreign
powers, whatever the degree of his service to them.
The
National Congress and General Bashir have been in power for 30 years depending
on the strength of their security services and their military militias to stay
in power and suppress the opposition movement. They did not hesitate to arm and
supply them and to create more diverse militias dedicated to protecting their
power. They directed the budgets of health, education and other social services
to be spent on what is generally called the sovereign and security sectors. Absurd
expenses that consume more than two thirds of the public budget. This reluctance
to direct public fund to social service sectors has made the economic crisis
even worse on the poorest groups, which now face their fate in a legendary
battle with no social protection net or any services from the public sector.
Those people are the ones who are taking the streets now, driven by their will
to live. They will not lose anything because the National Congress Party has
left them nothing to lose, but everything to gain ... their freedom, security
and decent living.
The regime
still not recognizing this, and continue to depend on its security measures to
address the crisis. The death toll of protesters reached several tens in three
days of protesting. Live ammunitions are being used heavily in the different
cities of the country. The scenario of September 2013 protests, when the
security forces killed over 200 protesters in the streets who were demonstrating
for similar reasons is likely. The NCP masters who seem to learn nothing from
it celebrated this massacre as a success in putting out demonstrations. Security
solutions won’t work and never did. However, with the national wide political
fatigue another terrifying scenario emerges: an internal coup within the NCP. The
chief of NISS; Salah Quosh, who returned to his position in the beginning of
this year after the humiliating expulsion in 2012 and even his detention and
accusation of planning a coup, publicly blamed the cabinet on the economic
crisis and how it dealt with the protests. Quosh ambition to succeed
Bashir is not a secret and was the reason for his expulsion in 2011. However,
he is not the only one with such ambitions. Old-guard Islamists are also
looking forward for the throne. The Islamists hardliner group headed by the
previous presidential aide Nafie Ali Nafie, who disagreed on Bashir’s will to
rerun for 2020 elections as NCP candidate for presidency, are prepared for a
battle. Unrest within the army also creates potentials for a Sisi’s style coup
d'etat. What is terrifying in all these scenarios is that it will not provide
any solutions, and keep the same kelptocracy in power with some superficial
changes on hierarchy. Hence, people suffering will continue with the replacement
of an old fatigued dictator with a fresh euthanistic one. Let alone, the most
terrifying possibilities of blood bath in Khartoum resulting from the clash
between the numerous militias of the NCP; the Rapid Support Forces, the
Security Forces and Army, whose allegiances are scattered among the different
wings of Islamists and will have to pick a side in such scenario. People and normal citizens will also be part of
such clash. Those who are sacrificing their life in the streets now will not
accept being a silent watcher.
The only peaceful
way to end this would be for the NCP to understand and see that its game is
over. It is time to hand over power to a broad national political alliance and
face the consequences of 30 years of corruption and mismanagement instead of
taking the country in such dangerous pathways. What is happening now in Sudan
is the labor of a complete comprehensive change ... a genuine revolution born
of the suffering of a patient people. The only objective of any sane politician
should be to end this suffering.
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