Sudan Crisis: Three Top Generals Agree to Quit as Protests Continue

Three of the
most controversial figures of Sudan's ruling Transitional Military Council have
offered their resignations - one of the key demands of the protest movement.
The three
generals were seen as staunch Islamists and allies of deposed President Omar
al-Bashir.
It follows
talks between the military council and protest leaders.
A
"million-strong march for civilian rule" has been called later to
maintain the pressure for democratic reform.
Thousands of
protesters have arrived in the capital, Khartoum, by train from various cities
to take part in the event.
"What
we are hoping to do today is to continue our peaceful resistance," said Dr
Sara Abdelgalil, of the Sudanese Professionals Association, the main group
behind the protests.
She told the
BBC: "Regime members and the NCP [the ousted president's party] are trying
to show themselves as being legitimate to continue ruling the transitional
period."
Protest
leaders have been calling on the Transitional Military Council to hand over to
a civilian administration.
At a press
conference on Wednesday, military spokesman Lt-Gen Shamseddine Kabbashi said
the two sides had reached agreement on most of the demands, and that they
decided to set up a joint committee to bridge their differences.
The three
generals stepping down are Omar Zain al-Abideen, Jalal al-Deen al-Sheikh and
Al-Tayeb Babakr Ali Fadeel.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-africa-
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