KHARTOUM,
Sudan's army ruler
General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan said Tuesday the country's military
rulers had decided to cancel what they had previously agreed with
protesters about the country's transition and called for elections
within nine months.
It came the after Sudan's military
forcefully broke up a weeks-long sit-in outside Khartoum's army
headquarters calling on the country's ruling generals to hand over to
civilian rule, leaving more than 30 dead.
"The Military
council decides on the following: cancelling what was agreed on and
stopping negotiating with the Alliance for Freedom and Change, and to
call for general elections within a period not exceeding nine months,"
Burhan said in a statement broadcast on state television early on
Tuesday.
Burhan added the election would take place under "regional and international supervision".
The
Transitional Military Council ousted president Omar al-Bashir in April
after months of protests against his authoritarian rule.
3-YEAR TRANSITION
It had
agreed a three-year transition period for transferring power to a
civilian administration and that parliament be composed of 300 members
for the transition, with around two-thirds from the protest alliance and
the rest drawn from other political groups before talks broke down on
May 20.
Thousands of people remained camped outside the
military headquarters calling for the generals to cede power before
security forces used force to break up the sit-in, leaving some 30
people dead and hundreds wounded, according to doctors close to the
protesters.
It drew sharp international criticism, with both the US and the UN condemning the breaking up of the sit-in.
The
UN Security Council will meet behind closed doors on Tuesday to discuss
Sudan, after Britain and Germany requested the talks, diplomats said.
The
Alliance for Freedom and Change had announced "the end of all political
contact and negotiations with the putschist Council" following the
deaths.
Burhan said that the military council would order an investigation into it.
Burhan said that the military council would order an investigation into it.
"The
military council promises an investigation into today's events and
invites the general prosecutor to take that over," he said in the
address.
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