Clashes in Khartoum Leave Several Dead
They
were killed in gunfire at a sit-in outside military HQ where demonstrators are
demanding full civilian government. Dozens have also been injured.
Protesters
said soldiers were responsible, but the army blamed it on "unidentified
elements".
Sudan
has been ruled by a transitional military council since last month's toppling
of President Omar al-Bashir.
It
is unclear exactly what happened but activists have been talking about how they
were targeted by a gunman.
"He
shot a bullet at me, he was 20 metres away from me, at most," Raed Mubarak
told the Reuters news agency.
"He
saw me, and he meant to shoot me. It was intentional. He did not even shoot at
my leg or up in the air, he shot at my chest, at the left, intending to hit the
heart. He meant to kill me."
The US embassy in
Khartoum has said actions by the military council resulted in the violence.
"The
tragic attacks on protesters yesterday... were clearly the result of the
Transitional Military Council (TMC) trying to impose its will on the protesters
by attempting to remove roadblocks," it said on its Facebook
page.
"The
decision for security forces to escalate the use of force... led directly to
the unacceptable violence later in the day that the TMC was unable to
control."
Demonstrators have
been occupying the square in front of the headquarters since 6 April, five days
before the president was overthrown by the military.
Initially,
talks between the ruling generals and the protest organisers had shown little
sign of progress.
However,
just before Monday night's violence, both sides announced they had agreed on
the structure of a new administration.
The gunfire on the
streets may point to a division within the military and an attempt to
destabilise this process, says the BBC's Alastair Leithead.
Some
generals may feel frustrated that the sit-in continues despite major
concessions from the military, while demonstrators feel they cannot leave the
streets until they get what they want, our reporter adds.
The
transitional military council pointed the finger at people trying to sabotage
talks.
"Behind
this are groups that... are working hard to abort any progress in
negotiations," it said, Reuters reports.
In December,
protesters started demonstrating against a government decision to triple the
price of bread. The protests soon morphed into widespread anger against the
president's 30-year rule, led by doctors.
Five
weeks into the protests, on 17 January, witnesses said state forces fired live
ammunition at protesters and killed a doctor.
He
had been treating injured protesters in his home in Khartoum when police fired
tear gas into the building.
A
witness told the BBC that the doctor had walked out with his hands in the air,
told the police he was a doctor and was instantly shot.
He
is one of dozens of people killed during the anti-government protests.
The
protesters later staged a sit-in outside the military headquarters to demand
the military force the president out.
A
military council assumed power of the country on 11 April, but demonstrators
are insisting that it hands over to a civilian administration.
An opposition
coalition and the ruling military council announced on Monday that they had
reached a breakthrough agreement on a power structure to see the country
through the transition.
"At
today's meeting we agreed on the structure of the authorities and their
powers," protest movement spokesman Taha Osman told the AFP news agency.
"The
authorities are as follows - the sovereign council, the cabinet and the
legislative body," he said.
The
military council also confirmed that a deal on a transitional power structure
had been reached.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-africa-
No comments