The Sudanese are bracing for the worst.
The crisis is worsening day in day out and the clashes between two generals are threatening to descend into an all-out civil war that could last for many years to come. If Africa’s history of deadly civil wars is any indication, then it’s quite possible that this horrific scenario could unfold in Sudan.
So far neither man in the new conflict appears to be taking the initiative to stop the war in a continent that has seen multiple conflicts that lasted for 15-20 years, on average.
The concern among the lay people isn’t about whether General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, the de factor ruler of Sudan since a coup in 2019, or General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo (aka ‘Hemedti’) will emerge victorious in the end.
“Both of them are losers,” says Nader Abdel Rahman, a 27-year-old activist, who has been protesting against the military’s takeover of power in Khartoum. The real concern, however, is about the hijacking of Sudan by tribal politics and greed for supremacy at the expense of long-awaited democracy and civilian rule, he adds.