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Protesters end blockade as East Sudan governor resigns

  • Beja tribes of Sudan ended their sit-in protest against a 2020 peace deal which they demanded to be scrapped as the Red Sea state governor resigned
  • Army chief called the upcoming meeting with civilian groups a "historic opportunity" but the civilians have refused to take part
A coalition of tribes in East Sudan announced on Tuesday the end of a sit-in which blocked roads to the crucial Red Sea port, after the governor announced his resignation. The Port Sudan sit-in protested a 2020 peace deal the country’s Beja tribes say made too many concessions at the expense of their group, which has long complained of marginalization.Hundreds of protesters demanded the parts of the deal relating to their eastern region be scrapped and the dismissal of Red Sea state governor, whom they accused of supporting the deal.

Sudanese demonstrators pray before taking the streets in Khartoum on June 3, 2022. (AFP)

The governor announced his resignation in a statement Tuesday.

The coalition of Beja tribes then released their own statement declaring an end to “all the sit-ins in eastern Sudan, after the resignation of the Red Sea State governor was confirmed,” without reference to other demands.

The 2020 Juba Agreement was a landmark accord between rebel groups and a military-civilian transition government which came to power shortly after the April 2019 ouster of long-time autocrat Omar al-Bashir.

‘Determined’ 

But Sudan’s eastern Beja people, who number more than 4.5 million, have criticized the fragile peace agreement for not representing them, and intermittent protests have demanded parts relating to their impoverished region be scrapped.

In September last year, protesters from eastern communities led similar demonstrations against the same agreement.

The ensuing six-week blockade worsened Sudan’s already struggling economy by exacerbating fuel and wheat shortages, heaping pressure on the transitional government of then-prime minister Abdalla Hamdok.

Port Sudan, the country’s main seaport and vital trade hub, was reopened in November following a coup by army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan which upended Sudan’s fragile

Sudanese demonstrators take the streets in Khartoum on June 3, 2022 to demand justice. (AFP)

transition to civilian rule.

In December, Sudan’s sovereign council suspended parts of the 2020 peace deal relating to the east pending discussions, but protesters in Port Sudan told AFP on Monday their demands had not been met.

On Tuesday evening, Burhan sought to provide reassurances on the relaunch of the transition.

The UN, the East African regional organization IGAD, and the African Union (AU), from which Sudan is still suspended, have convened a “technical meeting” between the military and civilians for Wednesday.

Burhan called it a “historic opportunity” but the civilians have already said they will not take part.

The Umma party, one of the country’s longstanding political formations, said on Tuesday that it would not take part in the talks.

Burhan told state television that the military was “determined implement what comes out of the dialogue”.