Sudan’s Academics Join the Protests

Sudanese protesters gather in the capital Khartoum's twin city of Omdurman on January 25, 2019. (AFP)
Sudanese protesters gather in the capital Khartoum's twin city of Omdurman on January 25, 2019. (AFP)
TT
20

Sudan’s Academics Join the Protests

Sudanese protesters gather in the capital Khartoum's twin city of Omdurman on January 25, 2019. (AFP)
Sudanese protesters gather in the capital Khartoum's twin city of Omdurman on January 25, 2019. (AFP)

Hundreds of professors and academics from the University of Khartoum on Wednesday protested on campus and presented an initiative in which they proposed a transitional period.

The protest was the second that University of Khartoum professors have held since the outbreak of demonstrations in the country about a month and a half ago.

In this regard, Professor Mohammed Yousef Ahmed al-Mustapha, a member of the "Khartoum University Professors' Initiative", said the dean of the university rejected the initiative, describing it as biased.

More than 300 professors and lecturers from the university held a sit-in inside the campus, said witnesses, while 531 university staff members signed the "Professors' Initiative," listing a series of demands, including a transitional government be formed in Sudan.

In related news, security forces announced the release of the daughter of Sudanese opposition leader Sadiq al-Mahdi, Mariam, hours after her detention.

Two security vehicles arrived at Mariam’s home in Khartoum in the morning and took her away for questioning, a day after Sudan’s security chief ordered the release of dozens of detained protesters.

Mahdi said the arrest is an attempt to intimidate her and her children, asserting that this will not stop the protests.

Meanwhile, the Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA) announced the program of protests and demonstrations that will take place in various cities of Sudan Thursday, including Khartoum and Omdurman, saying protesters will march towards the presidential palace.

On the other hand, the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) renewed in a statement its support to President Omar al-Bashir saying it is ready to face those destabilizing the country, and stressing that it will not allow the Sudanese state to collapse or fall into chaos.

This came during a meeting between Sudan’s Defense Minister, Awad Ibn Ouf, and SAF’s Chief of General Staff Kamal Abdel-Marouf who briefed army officers in the ranks of Brigadier General and Colonel on the situation in the country.

The Defense Minister said that some parties have sought to provoke the Army in order to drag it into “illogical action that doesn’t fall in conformity with its history.”

Ibn Ouf added that the army would neither compromise the security of the country nor its leadership.

The Chief of General Staff stressed the SAF wouldn’t allow the country to collapse, saying those leading the protests are the same persons who remained hostile to Sudan and sought to distort its world image.

Ibn Ouf vowed to resort to the law and prosecute those who aim to tarnish the efforts of the SAF, saying the army wouldn’t hand over the country to the leaders of the rebellion or agents of the suspicious foreign organizations.

A wave of protests have shaken cities across Sudan since December 19, where demonstrators call for improving living conditions and the economic situation in the country. Protesters have also called for an end to Bashir’s three-decade rule.



Kurdistan Region Blames ‘Terrorist Group’ for Peshmerga Attack

Peshmerga forces during a celebration in Erbil, the capital of the Kurdistan Region, in 2023 (AFP)
Peshmerga forces during a celebration in Erbil, the capital of the Kurdistan Region, in 2023 (AFP)
TT
20

Kurdistan Region Blames ‘Terrorist Group’ for Peshmerga Attack

Peshmerga forces during a celebration in Erbil, the capital of the Kurdistan Region, in 2023 (AFP)
Peshmerga forces during a celebration in Erbil, the capital of the Kurdistan Region, in 2023 (AFP)

Five members of the Kurdish Peshmerga forces were wounded in two separate drone attacks targeting military positions in northern Iraq’s Duhok province, the Kurdistan Region Security Council said on Tuesday.

The council said the strikes occurred on Monday and Tuesday in the town of Amadiya, where surveillance posts were being set up. The attacks were carried out using drones, it added.

Kurdish intelligence sources suspect a splinter faction of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) was behind the strikes, suggesting the group aimed to disrupt ongoing peace efforts in both Türkiye and Syria.

“These are terrorist attacks,” the Security Council said in a statement, vowing to take “all necessary measures” against groups that threaten the region’s security and stability.

The PKK, which is considered a terrorist organization by Türkiye, the United States, and the European Union, has been engaged in a decades-long insurgency against the Turkish state and maintains bases in northern Iraq.

The Kurdistan Region Security Council said Tuesday that the recent drone attacks on Peshmerga forces may have been intended to derail ongoing peace efforts among Kurdish groups across the region, as well as political developments within the Kurdistan Regional Government.

The council suggested the twin strikes in Duhok province were connected to peace negotiations between Türkiye and the PKK, as well as intra-Kurdish talks in northeast Syria, where Kurdish factions are seeking unity under what is known as the “Kurdish Unity Conference.”

It also linked the attacks to the final stages of forming the Kurdistan Region’s new government, warning that “certain groups and factions are working to obstruct peace and stability in the region.”

The comments came days after Syrian Kurdish factions held what was described as a “historic conference” in the northeastern city of Qamishli, calling for a decentralized democratic state.

The event brought together Kurdish delegations from Syria, Iraq, and Türkiye, and was attended by a US delegation.

Kurdish expert Kifah Mahmoud has suggested that factions within the PKK were likely behind the recent drone attacks on Peshmerga positions in northern Iraq.

Mahmoud told Asharq Al-Awsat that the attacks were linked to the ongoing peace initiatives in the region, both within Kurdish territories and at a broader geopolitical level.

“These developments are related to the peace processes, whether in the Kurdish regions or at the regional level,” Mahmoud said.

“We have positive negotiations between Türkiye and the PKK, as well as the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) moving toward a peaceful stance with Türkiye. Most importantly, there’s a positive trajectory in relations between Baghdad and Erbil, along with ongoing regional negotiations between Washington and Tehran.”

Mahmoud believes that these efforts are not well-received by more hardline factions within the PKK. He pointed out that the PKK has long been divided into parallel wings operating under different names in various active regions, with some factions opposed to peace initiatives in Kurdish territories.

While some Kurdish officials have speculated that Türkiye may be indirectly involved in the attacks, Mahmoud dismissed this theory, instead attributing responsibility to the more radical PKK factions based in areas such as the Qandil Mountains and Sinjar, as well as near Amadiya.

He also rejected suggestions that the strikes were aimed at disrupting the formation of the Kurdistan Region’s new government, asserting that the main objective was to undermine the ongoing peace processes within Kurdish areas.