Military dictator in Sudan finally bowed to public pressure and reinstated the Prime Minister Hamdok today.
Military dictator Gen. Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan signed a deal with PM Hamdok on Sunday to reverse the military takeover in Sudan, nearly a month after the countryโs top general ousted the prime minister.

The agreement, which comes after crisis talks involving Sudanese, UN, African and Western players, stated that Gen. Abdel Fattah Al-Burhanโs decision โto relieve the transitional prime minister (of his duties) is canceled.โ
It said all political detainees would be freed and formally relaunched the fragile transition process toward full democracy that started after the 2019 ouster of former President Omar Bashir.
Thousands of demonstrators rejected the deal and held fresh protests, shouting โno to military powerโ and demanding the armed forces fully withdraw from government.
A 16-year-old boy was shot in the head and fatally wounded in Khartoumโs twin city Omdurman, according to medics, who reported โnumerousโ other people with gunshot wounds after clashes with security forces.
Saudi Arabia praised the agreement, saying the Kingdom โaffirms the steadfastness and continuity of its position in support of everything that would achieve peace and maintain security and stability in Sudan.โ
It expressed hope that the deal would โcontribute to achieving the aspirations of the Sudanese people in a manner that preserves political and economic gains and protects unity among all components.โ
The African Union welcomed it as โan important step toward the return to constitutional order,โ encouraging all sides to โimplement it inclusively and effectively.โ
Gen. Al-Burhan appeared at the presidential palace in Khartoum for a televised ceremony with a haggard looking Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, emerging from weeks of house arrest.
The 14-point deal they signed officially restores the transition to civilian rule that had been derailed by the Oct. 25 putsch in the poverty-stricken African country.
Hamdok praised the people power โrevolutionโ that brought him to government and declared the top priority now was to โstop the bloodshed in Sudan before anything else. โWe leave the choice of who rules Sudan to its mighty people,โ he said.
Gen. Al-Burhan thanked Hamdok for his service and vowed that โfree and transparent electionsโ would be held as part of the transition process.
However, outside the presidential palace and in cities across Sudan, thousands again rallied, confronted in the capital by security forces who fired tear gas โ the latest of a series of protests that, medics say, have cost 41 lives.
The main civilian bloc which spearheaded the anti-Bashir protests and signed the 2019 power-sharing deal with the military strongly rejected Sundayโs agreement.

