Burhan, Hemedti Stress Commitment to Protecting Sudan’s Democratic Transition

Burhan meets with Feltman in Khartoum. (SUNA)
Burhan meets with Feltman in Khartoum. (SUNA)
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Burhan, Hemedti Stress Commitment to Protecting Sudan’s Democratic Transition

Burhan meets with Feltman in Khartoum. (SUNA)
Burhan meets with Feltman in Khartoum. (SUNA)

Head of Sudan’s sovereign transitional council, General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, and his deputy, Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, known as Hemedti, stressed on Thursday the commitment of the military to the country’s democratic transition.

Burhan and Hemedti met with US envoy for the Horn of Africa Jeffrey Feltman in the Sudanese capital Khartoum.

Burhan hoped that the US would continue to support the transitional government, stressing the importance of allowing political parties that believe in the democratic transition to take part in the transitional political process.

The two sides underscored the importance of the cooperation between the civilian and military components of the transitional authority.

Burhan stressed that the armed forces were keen on protecting the transition and ensuring the success of the democratic transformation.

For his part, Feltman praised the major efforts carried out by the military and civilian authorities in protecting the transition and defeating last week’s coup attempt.

The US will continue to support the interim government and Sudanese people so that they can hold free and transparent elections and form a civilian government that meets their aspirations, he added.

Meanwhile, thousands of people protested in Khartoum and other cities in support of the civilian-led transition to democracy on Thursday following the failed coup.

The attempt, which officials blamed on soldiers loyal to the previous regime of Omar al-Bashir, laid bare divisions between military and civilian groups sharing power during a transition that is meant to run to 2023 and lead to elections.

Many protesters came from outside Khartoum by bus and train from the cities of Atbara and Madani, as they did during protests against military rule just after Bashir’s removal.

Some of the thousands waiting for the trains chanted “the army is Sudan’s army, not Burhan’s army”.

In the days and hours after the coup attempt, civilian officials accused the military of overstepping its bounds, while generals criticized civilian management of the economy and political process, and said their forces were neglected and disrespected.

The military removed Bashir in April 2019 after months of popular protests triggered by an ongoing economic crisis. It then signed a power-sharing deal with the civilian Forces of Freedom and Change coalition.

The FFC supported Thursday’s demonstrations, which were converging on the central Khartoum headquarters of a task force working to dismantle the Bashir regime.

On Sunday, the military rescinded its protection of the task force. Its leaders responded by saying their headquarters would be a war room for any upcoming showdown.



Sources to Asharq Al-Awsat: Collective Command Will Lead Hezbollah Until End of War

Head of Hezbollah's political council Ibrahim Amin al-Sayyed. (Sayyed's website)
Head of Hezbollah's political council Ibrahim Amin al-Sayyed. (Sayyed's website)
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Sources to Asharq Al-Awsat: Collective Command Will Lead Hezbollah Until End of War

Head of Hezbollah's political council Ibrahim Amin al-Sayyed. (Sayyed's website)
Head of Hezbollah's political council Ibrahim Amin al-Sayyed. (Sayyed's website)

Reports have emerged that Ibrahim Amin al-Sayyed, the head of Hezbollah's’ political council, may be named successor to the Iran-backed party’s Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah who was killed in an Israeli strike on Beirut’s southern suburbs in late September.

Sayyed’s name emerged after the presumed death of Hezbollah executive council leader and potential Nasrallah successor Hashem Safieddine in an Israeli strike on the suburbs on Thursday. Hezbollah has yet to confirm his death.

Informed sources categorically denied that Sayyed was being viewed as a successor.

“No one is currently nominated to succeed Nasrallah,” they said. “The party is now being led collectively.”

In a statement on Saturday, Hezbollah’s media relations office refuted the “false reports and baseless rumors” about the organization of the party, saying such reports were part of a “psychological war against the resistance.”

Hezbollah critic Ali al-Amin ruled out that the party would name a new secretary general given Nasrallah and Safieddine’s fate.

“Any candidate, regardless of who they are, is a candidate for death,” he stressed.

“The party is in a state of confusion and loss and cannot take such a step right now. Naim Qassem is serving as acting secretary general anyway given his role as the party’s deputy leader.”

Who is Sayyed?

Sayyed was born in Lebanon’s eastern Bekaa region in 1955. He pursued intense Shiite religious studies before joining Hezbollah in the first years of its formation in the early 1980s.

He helped develop the party’s political and military movement. He rose up the ranks in the group until he became head of its political council where he is responsible for managing Hezbollah’s general policies and communication and relations between Lebanese and international political forces.

According to Amin, Sayyed served as the Amal movement’s envoy to Iran before the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in the 80s. He then joined Hezbollah and read out the party’s statement that announced its official establishment, meaning he was its official spokesman in February 1985.

Sayyed is close to Lebanese MP Jamil al-Sayyed. He was head of Hezbollah's Loyalty to the Resistance parliamentary bloc from 1992 to 1996.

Amin remarked: “The fact that Sayyed is approaching 70 years of age doesn’t make him a suitable candidate for the position of secretary general, especially in these circumstances.”

He therefore dismissed reports that he was a possible candidate, adding that Sayyed had been “effectively marginalized and semi-retired for the past 15 years. The only news we hear about him as of late are his visits to the Maronite Patriarchate.”

“Moreover, he is not seen as a core leading member of the party, whose major leaders have been assassinated” by Israel, he noted.