04-14-2019, 02:15 PM
** 14-Apr-2019 Omar al-Bashir ousted in Sudan
Omar al-Bashir was ousted by the military after months of massive
anti-government protests across the nation. This was a "velvet coup"
or "bloodless coup" occurring during a generational Awakening era.
The military says that it will stay in charge until new "free and
fair" elections are held in three months. Also, the military promises
"reforms." Anti-government activists are saying that nothing has
changed, with an army general now in charge. They also say that, with
the military overseeing the election, the military will guarantee that
they're man will become the leader, so nothing will change after the
elections.
Societies all follow the same pattern in the decades following a
generational crisis civil war. The military will not give up power
under any circumstances, and after a while they'll no longer tolerate
the civilian protests, and start dispersing them with arrests,
beatings, jailings, rapes and torture.
(04-12-2019, 06:01 AM)pbrower2a Wrote: > A very bad leader, Omar al-Bashar of Sudan, is overthrown:
> On the evening of 10 April 2019, Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir was removed from power by the Sudanese Armed Forces amidst the 2018–19 Sudanese protests.[1] The Sudanese military dissolved the cabinet and the National Legislature, and announced a 3-month state of emergency, to be followed by a 2-year transition period.[2] Ahmed Awad Ibn Auf, who was both Sudan's defense minister and vice-president declared himself the de facto Head of State, announced the suspension of the country's constitution, and imposed a curfew from 10 pm to 4 am, effectively ordering the dissolution of the ongoing protests. State media reported that all political prisoners, including anti-Bashir protest leaders, were being released from jail.[3] al-Bashir's National Congress party responded by announcing that they would hold a rally supporting the ousted president.[4] Soldiers also raided the offices of the Islamic Movement, the main ideological wing of the National Congress, in Khartoum.[5]
> Several officials have been reportedly detained: Prime Minister Mohamed Taher Ayala, Ahmed Haroun (the head of the ruling National Congress Party), member of the National Congress Awad Al-Jaz, former defense minister Abdel Rahim Mohammed Hussein, and former vice presidents Bakri Hassan Saleh and Ali Othman Taha.[6]
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2019_Sudan...7%C3%A9tat
Omar al-Bashir was ousted by the military after months of massive
anti-government protests across the nation. This was a "velvet coup"
or "bloodless coup" occurring during a generational Awakening era.
The military says that it will stay in charge until new "free and
fair" elections are held in three months. Also, the military promises
"reforms." Anti-government activists are saying that nothing has
changed, with an army general now in charge. They also say that, with
the military overseeing the election, the military will guarantee that
they're man will become the leader, so nothing will change after the
elections.
Societies all follow the same pattern in the decades following a
generational crisis civil war. The military will not give up power
under any circumstances, and after a while they'll no longer tolerate
the civilian protests, and start dispersing them with arrests,
beatings, jailings, rapes and torture.