(25 May 2019) Sudan's protest leaders on Saturday issued a call for a two-day general strike next week, in a bid to press the ruling military council to transfer power to a civilian-led authority.
The Sudanese Professionals' Association, which spearheaded the protests that led the army to oust President Omar al-Bashir last month, has now set a nationwide strike for Tuesday and Wednesday.
The SPA called on people to go to work but abstain from any activity, then head to various marches and sit-ins across the country.
The days of protest are set to culminate in mass rallies on Thursday, the SPA said.
It has threatened civil disobedience if the military council doesn't hand over power to civilians.
Talks between protesters and the army reached an impasse Tuesday, after both sides had agreed to a three-year transitional period but were split over the makeup and leader of the sovereign council that would run the country in the transition.
Protesters say they want a civilian leader and "limited military representation", but say the ruling generals have refused to relinquish power over the council.
The Forces for the Declaration of Freedom and Change, which represents the protesters in the negotiations with the military council, said Friday that they have been forced to stage the general strike.
The group said there was no other way "to rectify the course of the revolution and achieve its goals".
The military and protest leaders have held several rounds of talks since the army overthrew al-Bashir on April 11, ending his 30-year reign.
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