Commanders
Burhan and Hemeti accuse political forces of undermining the military and
pushing the country into instability
Sudan's
top military leaders Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and Mohamed Dagalo on Wednesday
blamed repeated coup attempts on Sudanese politicians, a day after the military
said it had foiled plans by associates of the old regime to overthrow the
government.
Burhan,
army commander and head of the sovereign council, accused Sudan’s political forces
of "ignoring the suffering of citizens and focusing on insulting the armed
forces".
"We
will not accept being dominated or insulted by any political force whose only
preoccupation is to fight for power,” he said in a televised speech.
On
Tuesday morning, Sudan's Prime Minister Abdallah Hamdok said they had thwarted
an attempted coup involving military officers and civilians linked to the
ousted regime of former president Omar al-Bashir.
“We
reiterate that our forces were the ones who foiled the coup attempt,"
Burhan said, adding that the military has no desire to seize power.
Burhan
also criticised an initiative announced by Hamdok in June aimed at unifying the
civilian and military factions leading Sudan under a power-sharing
administration, as he warned of fractures within both the military and among
pro-democracy activists.
“We
have been excluded from the prime minister's initiative and no party can lead
the country alone,” he said, adding that there are “those who seek to sow
discord in the armed forces".
Burhan
stressed that he wants to end the transitional period and establish a civilian
state that values the role of the military through elections.
Reports
and rumours have been circulating in Sudan about movements to oust civilian
leaders led by people linked to Bashir and a deep state within the army.
In
his address to the nation, Hamdok said that associates of the deep state from
inside and outside the military were involved in attempts to sow insecurity,
especially in the east of Sudan, in order to undermine the country's democratic
transition.
However,
on Wednesday the powerful paramilitary commander Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, widely
known as Hemeti, accused politicians of leaving the country exposed to
instability in their preoccupation with fighting over the division of power.
"The
latest coup attempt was not the first, and we have thwarted a number of other
attempts during the transitional period,” he said, also adding that the
military has arrested the plotters.


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