http://www.marxist.com/sudan-joins-arab-spring.htm

 Sudan joins Arab spring - ‘Elbow Lick Friday’s’ rock the
regime<http://www.marxist.com/sudan-joins-arab-spring.htm>
Written by Jean Duval Thursday, 06 September 2012
[image: Print] <http://www.marxist.com/sudan-joins-arab-spring/print.htm#>

*Sudan until the recent secession of its southern part was Africa’s biggest
country. It is mostly known and in particular portrayed as such in the
world media, for its wars, genocides, organised famine, and ethnic,
religious and tribal strife. But revolutions tend to cut through the old
divisions fostered by the sitting dictators, old colonialist powers and new
imperialist forces. This is exactly what is happening today in Sudan since
the beginning of the ‘Sudanese spring’.*

[image: 
karthoumprotestburningtires]<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/sudan/karthoumprotestburningtires.jpg>On
the 18th of June, youth, workers and the lower middle classes from many
regions, villages, and different ethnic and religious background rose up en
masse. The revolt is directed against the heinous Islamist dictatorship of
Omar al Bashir and the ruling National Congress Party that has held power
since the coup in 1989.  This is the first revolt of this magnitude against
an Arab Islamist regime. As is often the case, it is the students that take
the lead, breaking the barrier of fear. They are clearly inspired by the
other revolutions in the Middle East, from which they borrow the tactics,
the organisational methods and slogans.
The youth revolts

This is what Jadaliyya reported at the end of the month of June:

“… street protests of a scale not witnessed for two decades continued into
their second week in Khartoum and other major Sudanese cities.
Anti-government protests, initially led by students from the University of
Khartoum, have inspired similar nation-wide demonstrations in al-Obeid,
Kosti, al-Gadaref, Port Sudan, Wad Medani, and Atbara. They began on June
16th with courageous female students at the University of Khartoum’s
downtown campus taking to the streets chanting ‘no, no to higher prices’
and ‘freedom, freedom.’

“The students initially protested the announcement of a thirty-five percent
hike in public transportation fees and called for the “liberation” of the
campus from the presence of the ubiquitous National Intelligence and
Security Services (NISS).  Since then, Khartoum and other cities have been
sites of daily protests driven by a widening political agenda. Echoing
calls heard in the uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt, and Syria, protesters
chanted ‘the people want the fall of the regime,’ ‘we will not be ruled by
a dictator,’ and ‘revolution, revolution until victory.’ Clearly mindful
(and no doubt apprehensive) of the protesters’ slogans referencing the Arab
uprisings as well as two previous popular intifadas that have removed
military regimes, President Omar al-Bashir quickly insisted that this is
‘no Arab Spring’.”

Since then many, especially in academic and media circles, have insisted on
Sudan’s “exceptionalism” and how it will not be affected by a revolutionary
upsurge of the people. This is an echo of the claims of “the robustness of
Arab authoritarianism”, a theme that is recurrent in academic studies on
the Middle East.

Something similar was said about Tunisia and later about the Egyptian
people. All those peoples were not supposed to revolt and overthrow the
existing regimes. The influential International Crisis Group (ICG)
similarly argued recently about Sudan that “years of subjugation at the
hands of the ruling National Congress Party (NCP) have yielded both
political apathy and a weak opposition.”

Jadaliyya continues:

“However, since they began, the protests have expanded in both their
geographic reach and their social profile. Moving beyond the middle class
campus of the University of Khartoum, protests now include more lower class
students from other universities, supporters and activists belonging to the
major opposition parties, civil servants, the unemployed, and workers in
the informal sector. Moreover, despite the use of teargas, batons and
sweeping arrests on the part of the State Security and Intelligence
Services, the protests have expanded to include residents in the populous
informal settlements and working class neighbourhoods of Buri, al-Ilafoon,
al-Gereif, al-Sahafa, al-Abbassiya and Mayo south of the capital. As the
protests continued with greater force into their tenth day security forces,
frustrated at not being able to stem the tide of the protests, entered the
dormitories of the University of Khartoum’s Faculty of Education and set
them ablaze. The students, responding to Bashir's public statement on June
24th describing the demonstrators as ‘saboteurs’, foreign ‘aliens’ and
'rogues' chanted, ‘we are not rogues, you will end up dead in a sewage
system’, referring to how former Libyan leader Moammar Ghadafi was caught
before he was killed.”
Widespread repression

After dismissing the uprising as “small groups of demonstrators”, the
regime has started to take it very seriously. The escalation of repression
is an indication of the loss of social control by the regime. Khartoum and
all the major cities were besieged by the police. Rubber bullets and
teargas were the first reaction, then they started to crackdown massively
on the protesters, arresting more than 1000 activists. They were carried to
“phantom houses” or undisclosed locations, where they are tortured and the
women raped by the infamous National Intelligence and Security Service
(NISS).

At the end of July the security forces bloodily repressed demonstrations in
Darfour. Radio Dabanga reported on the first of August:

“Yesterday morning dozens of people were killed and injured during protests
in Nyala, South Darfur. In addition, protesters burned a petrol station,
two police stations and the administration of education in north Nyala
county. Protests continued today and demonstrators consider it the most
violent since protests broke out in Sudan last June. Protesters are
complaining about the high prices of basic commodities and the rise of
transportation tariffs. They call for the fall of the regime chanting
‘Nyala revolts, revolts! Against the thief of Kafuri’, referring to Sudan's
president Omar Al-Bashir” .

Since the middle of August the movement seems to have receded, but sooner
rather than later it will surge up again. These were only the first
beginnings, the first exploratory steps of movement in the making, testing
the regime and testing itself.
Brutal austerity

The last large-scale student demonstrations erupted in 1995. Before that,
Sudanese revolts twice overthrew military presidents, in 1964 and again,
albeit briefly, in 1985. Actually social unrest has been brewing since last
summer. Smaller protests in 2011 were a reaction against the economic
policies resulting from the secession of the oil-rich South. Two thirds of
the country’s oil reserves were lost, leaving the North with a big budget
deficit, a weaker currency and rising costs for food and imports. The
situation worsened after South Sudan (with no direct access to the sea)
shut down its oil production in January after accusing Khartoum of charging
exorbitant transit fees for transport of its oil through Khartoum’s
pipeline.

Oil revenues fuelled unprecedented economic growth in the past. But this
financial prop has vanished, undermining the stability of the North, while
simultaneously eroding the patronage networks of the regime. Restrictions
on the outflow of foreign currency were imposed and some imports were
banned. State subsidies on basic commodities such as sugar and fuel were
reduced. The budget deficit nevertheless continued to soar. It is estimated
at 2.4 billion dollars.

On June 18th, the president-dictator imposed a new round of even more
draconian measures, lifting fuel subsidies and higher taxes on consumer
goods, telecoms and a large range of imported products.  70% of the
government’s budget is swallowed by military expenses, which are untouched
by the austerity measures. Meanwhile the ongoing wars in Darfur, Blue Nile
and Southern Kordofan cost $ 4 million a day!

People are fed up with this situation. As one demonstrator explained:
“Sudanese people die three times over: they die of poverty, die of illness
and die of war”. The economy will contract with 7 per cent this year
according to the IMF and inflation is 40 per cent high.  Hyperinflation
could be looming according to some economists.

[image: elbowout]
<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/sudan/elbowout.jpg>Omar
Al Bashir, pretends not be impressed by this movement. He told the
demonstrators overthrowing his regime was as difficult as ‘licking ones
elbow’, a Sudanese metaphor for an impossible task. Consequently, the days
of protest after Friday prayers are now known as  “Elbow lick Fridays”.
They used to be called “Sandstorm” days.

In honour to the leading role played by women in the Sudanese intifada, the
day of action of July 13th was coined “Kandake Friday.” "Kandake" in the
Kushitic language is a title for strong women. The term was used by the
Kushites to refer to their queens, a reference to the brave and
revolutionary women of Sudan.

The rapid deterioration of the social and economic conditions has ignited
this wave of protests. Nevertheless the scope of the protests indicates a
wider and deeper discontent with existing society and with the political
regime itself.
Overcoming the ethnic and religious divide

[image: map of 
sudan]<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/sudan/map_of_sudan.jpg>The
regime has stayed in power by fostering all kind of divisions in society.
The youth instinctively understand that strength comes from unity. This is
overcoming all the divisive heritage of the Bashir regime and of
colonialism. It is no accident that new organisations of young people have
sprung up in this revolution. All of the opposition parties are discredited
in the eyes of the revolutionaries fighting on the streets. So the Sudanese
Youth for Change (Sharara) declares: “The key factor for the success of
this revolution that it is for SUDAN and it is above partisan and regional
and sectarian strife’

Another resistance movement, Girifna, states in its program of demands:

“5- Put a stop to the use of religion to terrorize political opponents as
well as stop all atonement campaigns and accusations of treason.

11- Stop the war on our people of South Kurdufan, Blue Nile and Nuba
Mountains.

12- Ensure the freedom of mobility, residency, work and ownership to South
Sudanese residing in Sudan.

14- Put an end to the ethnic monopoly over power and permit the
participation of all marginalized peoples.”

Read more at (http://www.girifna.com/demands)

The‘Change Now’ movement is also very clear on this question. On its
website it defines itself clearly:

“We are the sons and daughters of Sudan. We descended from its various
regions, cities and villages; from its different religious, ethnic and
political groups and backgrounds. Having crossed paths previously, in
classrooms, football fields, workers' workshops and scaffolds"; we all
share the common dream of earning an honourable living, away from the
dooming spectre of unemployment, and were all deeply concerned about the
miserable state of affairs in our country,  which we witnessed in our
neighbourhoods and our deprived cities and villages;”

“Ending all forms of discrimination and exclusions, which have been
deepened by the present regime through its unilateral policies against
different regions and ethnicities of the Sudan, as well as stopping the
marginalization of Eastern Sudan, Kordofan, the Nuba Mountains, Darfur, the
Blue Nile and all other regions, and maintaining peace through realizing
social justice.” (https://sudanchangenow2012.crowdmap.com/page/index/1) .

This is extremely positive. The desire for unity in Sudan is very strong
after decades of intestine wars. But from the recent Syrian revolution we
know that it needs a politically conscious leadership to protect the
revolution against being corrupted and degenerated by imperialist
intervention and sectarian bigotry. In the absence of a mass organisation
and leadership based on CLASS unity (that is, to place the common interests
of the working class and the poor peasants above religious, ethnic and
tribal division) the very hopeful beginnings of revolutions can be derailed.

The reference to a Sudanese national feeling and consciousness, although
progressive in the light of the cynical fostering of ethnic and other
divisions, will in itself not solve the problem of unity. The feeble
Sudanese bourgeoisie was never able to unite Sudan and assume one of its
basic missions as a social class before history. It has always bowed before
foreign imperialist interests and has preferred to carve up the country
instead of uniting it.

The only road at the disposal of the Sudanese revolutionaries to fight
tribal divisions is the road of working class unity, together with the
support of the poor peasantry. It is surely no accident that the first
working class group in Sudan to massively join the Communist Party and
establish a powerful trade union was the railway workers whose professional
activity by itself united the whole of the country.
Sudanese women take the lead

[image: 
womeninsudan]<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/sudan/womeninsudan.jpg>It
is generally accepted that the women, girls and mothers lead the
revolutionary protests all over Sudan. It was the female students of the
University of Khartoum who started a spontaneous demonstration against the
sudden rise of the cost of living. They were rapidly followed by their male
counterparts.

The image promoted by the western media and imperialism of Moslem women as
helpless victims who needed to be saved and “empowered” by NGOs is
shattered. In the 19th century Orientalism represented women in the Middle
East as lascivious and passive objects of pleasure.  Both representations
imply that women in that part of the region cannot become active and
conscious participants in changing their lives, and both are false.

There is a good reason why Sudanese women are at the forefront of the
struggle to overthrow the Bashir regime. First of all, women are the ones
who are faced with the requirements of daily life, of feeding the children
and keeping the families together.  Secondly, they are the ones who suffer
most from the repressive laws of the regime. The state apparatus is
upholding a reactionary set of laws based on Islamic law (Sharia). The
penal code is really barbaric.

“Official police figures reveal that in Khartoum state alone in 2008,
43,000 public order offenses were allegedly committed by women. These
“offenses” are determined by the “public order” police at their own
discretion and may include wearing trousers or makeup and result in
punishments that vary from monetary fines to public lashings.” (1)

The very aggressive interpretation of the Sharia by the regime is a way of
terrorising the population, especially women who are known in Sudan for
their courage and fighting spirit.  Punishment ranges from crucifixion (!)
and “cross amputation” (cutting off the right hand and the left foot) to
public stoning and flogging (see the barbaric act of flogging in the
streets of Khartoum :
http://www.youtube.com/verify_age?next_url=/watch%3Fv%3DufT2lCUuckk)

But even imprisoned for protesting the flogging, Sudanese women are very
spirited and courageous, as this video taken clandestinely in prison
shows:  http://vimeo.com/18778956
United States hypocrisy

The United States like to portray itself now in the Middle East as the true
friends of democracy. After having given support to the dictators, they
realised their stooges were going to be overthrown and came out in favour
of “democracy”. This they did very reluctantly, after the beginning of the
Arab revolutions,  and only with the hope they could protect their
economic, military and strategic interests with weak bourgeois democracies.

Those are the real and only “values” and “ethics” guiding Washington’s
policies in the Middle East and throughout the world. In Sudan the US’s
hypocritical position is best articulated by its special envoy Princeton
Lyman. Here is an extract of an interview last year with the paper Asharq
Al-Awsat (March 2011)

“[Asharq Al-Awsat] The U.S. administration has welcomed the Arab Spring
which has overthrown a number of dictatorships in the Middle East and led
to free and fair elections being held. Are you calling for the Arab Spring
to encompass Sudan, as well?

“[Lyman] This is not part of our agenda in Sudan. Frankly, we do not want
to see the ouster of the [Sudanese] regime, nor regime change. We want to
see the regime carrying out reform via constitutional democratic measures.

“[Asharq Al-Awsat] The SPLM has said that it wants to bring the Arab Spring
to Sudan. Do you oppose this?

“[Lyman] We want to see freedom and democracy [in Sudan], but not
necessarily via the Arab Spring”. (March 2011).

So the US vision is that the brutal regime of Bashir must reform itself out
of existence! This is really as impossible as ‘licking one’s elbow’.  The
regime will never commit suicide. If it engages in reform it will only be
out of fear of a revolution from below. But those reforms will be aimed at
maintaining the political, military, social and economic status-quo behind
a facade of “change”. So the revolutionary youth can never trust the
reforms coming from the Bashir dictatorship.

No help can be expected from the United States, or from the so-called
“international community”. They are responsible for the actual mess in
Sudan. They are only interested in the oil, the natural resources and the
geostrategic position of Sudan. To spaek clearly, imperialism is not part
of the solution but part of the problem of Sudan.

The only realistic option must come from a mass uprising (mass
demonstrations, general strike), prepared by democratically organised
committees of struggle in the campuses, colleges, neighbourhoods,
workplaces, in the villages and in cities. The first demand must be the
establishment of a revolutionary constituent assembly which will place in
its hands all the necessary powers to change society.
The opposition parties and national unity

The Sudanese opposition parties, who never initiated the Sudanese intifada
and even denied the possibility of such an uprising, have now come together
and signed a Democratic Alternative Charter. They include representatives
the National Consensus Forces (NCF), an opposition coalition including the
National Umma Party (NUP) of Al-Sadiq al-Mahdi, the Popular Congress Party
(PCP) led by Hassan Al-Turabi, and the Sudanese Communist Party (SCP).

“”The text of the DAC adopts the use of “peaceful mass struggle” in the
forms of civil disobedience and popular uprising to topple the regime and
then establish an interim government in which all political forces will be
represented to rule the country for three years until a new constitution is
installed and elections are held. It then proceeds to describe the
principles that should guide the process of writing the constitution,
including that Sudan is “a civil democratic state” predicated on equal
citizenship rights. The DCA further calls for “the abolition of all
freedom-restricting laws”, “respect for the reality of diversity in Sudan”
and “safeguards against the use of religion in politics” It also calls for
responding to the demands of people in the Western region of Darfur through
various means including “compensations” and “accountability for the war
crimes and crimes against humanity” committed during the conflict in the
region. (2)
Prepare a real revolutionary leadership

In reality, this front of parties is a unnatural alliance of parties
representing different and antagonistic social forces. It is a front of
discredited bourgeois parties with a weak workers’ party, the Communist
Party. In other words, it is a front of class collaboration.

Although the CP does not have the forces it used to have it is still an
important point of reference for the left, the unions etc. It should never
have entered this front and should leave it immediately. The SCP should
become the political mouthpiece of the revolutionary youth.

Not to do so it will mean repeating the fatal mistakes of its policy of
alliances with the “progressive or national bourgeoisie”. This led to the
mass murder of its members in the 50’s and 60’s.  That policy has nothing
in common with communism but it is a rehash of the criminal policies of
Stalinism, which have led to bloody defeats in one country after another in
the Middle East.

A real revolutionary Marxist policy is one of complete class independence
in the struggle against the dictatorship, building alliances with the poor
peasantry and the revolutionary youth.

“National unity” between social forces which such antagonistic interests
are extremely dangerous and negative. How can there be unity between the
exploiters and the exploited? How can workers join with their bosses? How
can poor peasants find common interests with their landowners? How can the
revolutionary youth of Sudan have confidence in those parties who did
nothing to overthrow the regime but tamely accepted the role of  a
‘responsible opposition’ of the dictatorship? How can the victims of
repression trust their torturers! This is impossible. Along this road no
solution for can be found.

Behind the words “mass struggle” and “overthrowing the regime” there is no
serious strategy plan of revolutionary mass action. At best its campaign
will be a campaign of ‘pressure’ on the regime. As soon as the mass
movement develops independently with its own revolutionary methods as in
Egypt (mass strikes of the workers, mass demonstrations and direct
organised confrontation with the state apparatus) the parties of the DAC
will call on the youth to limit themselves to “responsible action”. They
will call for moderation and negotiation. But neither Mubarak of Ben Ali
was “negotiated out of power”!

The Sudanese youth has shown great courage and sacrifice in confronting
this brutal regime. But courage is not sufficient to guarantee victory. To
be victorious courage has to be matched by a revolutionary program and
strategy. Marxism represents a formidable arsenal of ideas, not only to
understand the world but more importantly to change it.

In addition to fighting in the streets, the revolutionary youth of Sudan
must study Marxism, form discussion groups and spread the ideas. Here you
will find the ideas, program and tactics necessary to win. In this way you
will prepare the revolutionary leadership the Sudanese revolution needs so
urgently.

The parties of the DAC will betray the democratic ideals of the Sudanese
Intifada. No confidence can be given to them. Capitalism and imperialism
(and the parties that defend them) can never bring democracy, social
justice and a harmonious coexistence of the different religions and
national groups in Sudan.

In reality the only democratic revolution in Sudan is a socialist
revolution. Socialism means, in the firat place, the nationalisation of the
natural resources and monopolies under the democratic workers control. It
means the expulsion of imperialism and the establishment of a genuinely
democratic state of the workers and poor peasants, established on the basis
of elected local, regional and national committees.

A socialist revolution in Sudan would rapidly spread to the whole of the
region and the entire African continent. Above all, a socialist revolution
in Nigeria and South Africa with their large industries and numerous and
powerful working class would transform the destinies of the whole
continent. This is the only solution for the people of Sudan.

1)
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/sep/04/sudan-woman-trousers-trial

2)    Sudan Tribune, july 4th , 2012
Videoreport of the clashes in Khartoum

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=1E0dmXRvTyI

Breaking the barrier of fear
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=-3ti4UKVdY0





And

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=49pkSTbcDAU

Protest music for the Sudanese revolution

‘System Down’

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=uDtw3RKU-F8

LA (Dictatorship)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=4P0qhpfZe6Q


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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