KHARTOUM, Aug. 29, (Xinhua/GNA) — General Commander of the Sudanese Armed Forces, (SAF) Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, on Monday started running state affairs, in his other capacity as chairman of the Transitional Sovereign Council from Port Sudan, the capital city of the Red Sea State in eastern Sudan, amid increasing speculations that he intends to form a caretaker government, or a war government.
In his first speech since the armed clashes broke out between the SAF and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in mid-April, Al-Burhan closed the door to any political settlement with the RSF.
Addressing the soldiers of Flamingo naval base in the military area of the Red Sea region on Monday, Al-Burhan said “there will be no agreement with any party that betrayed the Sudanese people, and the efforts will be focused on defeating the enemy.” Al-Burhan’s remarks came as if in response to an initiative proposed by the RSF Commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo on Sunday.
Dagalo calls for reaching a long-term cease-fire agreement, and forming a democratic, civil government on the basis of fair and free elections at all levels. Sudanese media on Monday expected that Al-Burhan would issue a decision to form a war government, in place of the current interim government.
Sudan Today News portal, on Monday quoted informed sources as saying that Al-Burhan, is heading to form “a war government,” which is expected to be announced in the coming days and headquartered in Port Sudan.
Meanwhile, Sudanese politicians and analysts have expressed different opinions regarding the establishment of a war government. While some regarded the move as practical, others believed it would further complicate the situation. “There are about 14 safe and stable Sudanese states, and therefore, there must be a government to run the country’s affairs under the current situation,” Abdel-Rahim Al-Sunni, a Sudanese political analyst, told Xinhua on Monday. “The impact of the war, the collapsed economic situation, and the current security condition, require a war government of competence and experience,” he added.
Amjad Farid, the Sudanese politician and advisor to former Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, said millions of Sudanese people remained in the country, and needed an effective body to run their health, education, food and security affairs. “This proposed government to be formed is not a political government, but a government of a technical nature,” Farid said on the social media platform X, previously known as Twitter.
In contrast, the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement and the opposition coalition Forces of Freedom and Change (FFC), warned that forming a new government would deepen national divisions, cautioning that it would lead to the establishment of another parallel authority.
Ibrahim al-Mirghani, a leading figure in FFC, further suggested on his X page that “all parties should work to stop the clashes first, before seeking to form a government.”
In the meantime, Mohamed Kabbashi, a professor of political science at Alzaiem Alazhari University in Khartoum, on Monday told Xinhua that the time is not suitable to form an emergency government, citing “complications created by the war that cannot be surpassed by forming a war government.” Sudan has been witnessing deadly armed clashes between the SAF and RSF in Khartoum and other areas since April 15, which left over 3,000 people killed and more than 6,000 injured, according to the Sudanese Health Ministry.
More than 4.5 million people have been displaced inside and outside Sudan due to the conflict, according to the latest update by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
GNA