The Brotherhood trying to use the current demonstrations in Sudan to return to power
The Muslim Brotherhood in Sudan is still dreaming of a return to rule and political life in the country, despite the heavy blows it has suffered since the fall of the regime of Omar al-Bashir.
Informed sources revealed that the Muslim Brotherhood tried to exploit the June 30th Million Revolution, which was launched by several political forces aiming to fish in troubled waters by calling for the overthrow of the government in Sudan under the name of the overthrow of the military coup in the country.
This comes in light of the continued sit-in in front of Aljawda hospital in southern Khartoum for the second day running, in addition to the demand to hold new demonstrations to the presidential palace in the capital Khartoum, in order to demand the presence of a full civil authority in the country.
According to the sources, the group is trying to jumpstart the demands of the Sudanese by exploiting the Sudanese anger and demonstrations to demand reform and a return to the rule of Sudan, in order to demand the creation of a full civil authority to run the country’s affairs.
The co-ordinators of the Khartoum City Resistance Committees announced the staging of new demonstrations by designating the Quality Hospital as a gathering point for the “Million 2 July” demonstrations, while the Sudanese authorities closed down 3 bridges and a number of roads leading to the general command of the army in Khartoum, out of a desire to ensure the peaceful nature of the demonstrations and not to carry out waves of violence and tension between several parties in the country.
All this in light of the demand of the United Nations to conduct an independent investigation on the death of demonstrators in Sudan, as a result of the deaths of nine demonstrators that took place in demonstrations that broke out last Thursday, after the Sudanese police and security forces dispersed the crowds of angry in the Sudanese capital Khartoum, after mass demonstrations organized by political forces in the last hours.
However, some parties have been implicated in causing chaos in the demonstrations by two organizations called “Kings of Engagement” and “Angry Without Borders” attacking Sudanese security forces, damaging water pushcarts in a suicide way by climbing vehicles, and setting fire to parks and car tires east of the White Nile Bridge next to hotels and the mosque, in an attempt to make everyone believe that the police are responsible for the bloodshed during the protests.
The sources clarified that the Brotherhood is moving in another direction by trying to launch a new political party that includes former Brotherhood leaders affiliated with the regime of Omar al-Bashir, in the hope that that new party will ally with the political forces present in the current period, with the aim of circumventing the return of a new dress to the rule of Sudan, amid Sudanese resistance to the Brotherhood’s plan.