The African Union said on Thursday it had suspended Sudan until a
civilian government was formed, intensifying international pressure on
the country’s new military rulers to give up power.
Ethiopia meanwhile will launch a mediation effort on Friday, diplomatic sources in Khartoum said.
The moves take place after security forces cleared protesters from a
sit-in camp in central Khartoum on Monday, killing dozens of people in
the worst violence since President Omar al-Bashir was removed by the
military in April after four months of generally peaceful protests.
The opposition had been in talks with an interim military council
over a civilian-led transition to democracy, but the negotiations
faltered and this week’s crackdown marked a turning point in the power
struggle.
The United Nations and several foreign governments have condemned the bloodshed.
The African Union’s Peace and Security Council, in a meeting in Addis
Ababa on Thursday, decided to suspend Sudan from all AU activities
until a civilian government has been formed. Suspension is the African
Union’s normal response to any interruption of constitutional rule in
one of its members.
Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed was due to visit Khartoum on
Friday to try to mediate between the military and an opposition
alliance, a diplomatic source at the Ethiopian embassy in Khartoum said.
(Reuters)
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