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Khartoum massacre

The Khartoum massacre occurred on 3 June 2019, when the armed forces of the Sudanese Transitional Military Council, headed by the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), the immediate successor organisation to the Janjaweed militia,[6] used heavy gunfire and tear gas to disperse a sit-in by protestors in Khartoum, killing more than 100 people,[7] with difficulties in estimating the actual numbers.[8][9][10] At least forty of the bodies had been thrown in the River Nile.[11] Hundreds of unarmed civilians were injured, hundreds of unarmed citizens were arrested, many families were terrorised in their home estates across Sudan,[12][8] and the RSF raped more than 70 women and men.[3][4] The Internet was almost completely blocked in Sudan in the days following the massacre, making it difficult to estimate the number of victims.[13][14]

Khartoum massacre
Part of Sudanese Revolution
Khartoum
Khartoum (Sudan)
LocationKhartoum, Sudan
Date3 June 2019
TargetSudanese protesters
Attack type
Mass murder
Deaths128+[1]
Injured650+ injured[2] and 70 raped[3][4]
PerpetratorsRapid Support Forces (RSF),[5] Janjaweed militias[4] and TMC security forces[4]
MotiveDispersing sit in camp
Khartoum City

In October 2019, during the 39-month planned transition to democracy, an official Khartoum massacre investigation commission was created as required under Article 7. (16) of the Sudanese August 2019 Draft Constitutional Declaration,[15][16] under the authority of transition period Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok.[17] The commission is led by human rights lawyer Nabil Adib or Nabil Adib Abdalla and with no female members, to the objection of The No to Oppression against Women Initiative.[18]

Background

Sudanese protests started in December 2018 after which the military removed Omar al-Bashir and established a Transitional Military Council which is headed by the Lieutenant-General Abdel Fattah Abdelrahman Burhan.

On 11 April 2019, the military removed al-Bashir from power in a coup d'état and created a Transitional Military Council (TMC). Following intense protests, Awad Ibn Auf announced his resignation and said that he had chosen Lieutenant-General Abdel Fattah Abdelrahman Burhan to lead the TMC.[19][20] Protesters supported by the Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA)[21][22] and democratic opposition groups engaged in street demonstrations, calling on the ruling Transitional Military Council to "immediately and unconditionally" step aside in favour of a civilian-led transitional government, and urging other reforms in Sudan.[23] For about two months the TMC engaged the SPA in dialogue and discussion on how to shift to a transitional government, disagreeing over whether the transitional government should be civilian-led or military-led.[24] And during the official discussions, there were many attempts on the TMC’s part to disperse protesters and clear the sit-in in front of the Military HQ in Khartoum.[25][26][27]

On 30 May, the SPA expressed concern that a lethal attack by the TMC was intended, stating that on 29 May, "two citizens including a pregnant lady were shot dead by the TMC forces." The SPA warned that military trucks of NISS, the RSF, and other state security forces were accumulating around the area of the sit-in.[28] On 1 June, the SPA said that it had reason to believe that the TMC was "planning and working to end the peaceful sit-in at the headquarters with excessive force and violence" after three people were killed in incidents on the fringes of the demonstration during the previous week.[29]

Massacre

On 3 June 2019, the military armed forces of the TMC headed by the Rapid Support Forces, the succeeding front organization to the Janjaweed militia and NISS, together with other TMC forces[30] used heavy gunfire and tear gas as well as sound bombs aiming at dispersing the sit-in killing more than 100[7] people with difficulties in estimating the actual number.[31]

Estimating the number of victims was difficult in the days following the massacre because of Internet blockage and the deployment of brutal military forces across the capital. The Internet in Sudan was almost completely blocked during and following the massacre, a signature move of the TMC,[13][14] on which the Janjaweed militias had a wide presence throughout Khartoum and prevented documenting the number of victims.[32]

As of the evening of 4 June 2019, there were reports of a large number of victims in the field of the sit-in with difficulty evacuating them. There were several reports of bodies thrown into the Nile.[33] Hundreds of unarmed civilians were injured, hundreds of unarmed citizens were arrested and many families were terrorised in their home estates across Sudan.[34] Seventy women and men were raped by the RSF according to doctors in Khartoum hospitals.[3]

On 9 June, witnesses reported the smell of rotten corpses coming from drainage channels and suspected that soldiers had thrown victims there.[citation needed]

In total, more than 200 military vehicles were used in the attack, with more than 10,000 soldiers and other unidentified personnel in police uniforms.[citation needed]

Timeline

The following is a timeline of what took place in the Khartoum sit-in camp:

  • 4:30 am: Janjaweed militias and NISS with other TMC forces started surveying the area of the sit-in camp in preparation for the attack.[35]
  • 4:55 am: Around 100 military vehicles belonging to Janjaweed militias, armed with heavy military firearms, including anti-aircraft weapons and carrying hundreds of armed soldiers. These soldiers were carrying weapons and sticks when they surrounded the Military HQ in Khartoum. The cars prevented the unarmed civilians from entering the Military HQ. Simultaneously, another 100 white pick-up trucks without number plates, full of soldiers in police uniforms, arrived. Other Janjaweed soldiers were also seen in huge numbers along Nile Street.
  • 6:00 am - onward: The joint forces started the attack on the sit-in camp using live bullets, sound bombs and teargas, storming the civilians from all directions, leaving a narrow path for protesters to exit. The militia started burning the tents and shooting indiscriminately, leaving hundreds dead and injured and throwing many bodies into the Nile.[36]

According to local resident and PhD student Mohammed Elnaiem, the first phase of the attack included discussion between RSF members and the regular army, and in the second phase, the army vehicles departed while RSF vehicles "drove through the barricades.[37] Following the massacre, some bodies were recovered that wore uniforms belonging to the Sudanese Army. Activists concluded that there had been army soldiers who refused to attack the protestors or had attempted to protect them, whereupon they too had been murdered.[38] Nahid Jabrallah attributed the murders to the RSF.[38] After the main attack, the RSF shot wounded protestors in three Khartoum hospitals.[37]

Sit-ins in Port Sudan, el-Gadarif and Sinja were also "raided and attacked by the RSF" on 3 June.[37]

Mass rapes

France 24 documented evidence that the rapes of 70 women and men during the massacre[3][4] were a deliberate campaign to "break the girls".[39] Nahid Jabrallah, founder of the Sima Centre for Women and Children's Studies, and other activists and journalists, stated that there were extensive testimonies of gang rapes and other sexual violence by the RSF during the 3 June attacks. Huma, an activist, said that RSF soldiers humiliated women by asking them to remove their underwear.[39] Online social network images showing women's underwear on a pole and a room full of women's clothing were considered "unverified" as of 20 June 2019.[39] Jabrallah stated that "everyone was threatened with being raped if they resisted the RSF's orders."[38]

International criminal lawyer Celine Bardet of We are not Weapons of War said that evidence gathering for the systematic use of sexual violence as a tool of war needed separate consideration to other evidence gathering, because of social stigma against women testifying about the events. Bardet said that, as of June 2019, evidence was being collected about "a fair amount of sexual violence" that might be used as evidence of an international crime, if the sexual violence were "systematic, targeted and [had] a specific objective".[39] Activist Dalia El Roubi stated that "the symbolism behind the rape of women is very substantial, it's aimed at breaking society" and that the sexual violence of the 3 June massacre was a deliberate action by the RSF to "break" communities in a similar way to which communities were "broken" in Darfur.[39]

Pramila Patten from the United Nations (UN) called for a UN human rights monitoring team to be sent to Sudan and for "rapes and gang rapes of protesters, women's rights defenders and women medical personnel working in hospitals near the sit-in" to stop.[40]

Hala al-Karib, writing in Al Jazeera English, said that local activists provided systematic support for the rape victims, "[extending] their hands to the hundreds of male and female sexual violence survivors and the families of those who were killed" with "discipline and the commitment to support the survivors of violence".[41] Al-Karib said that the activists "understood the root causes and politics behind sexual violence" and "approached sexual violence as a crime connected [to] power relations", while "not [undermining] how personal it is as a crime". Al-Karib criticised the lack of support from international "multimillion-dollar agencies and NGOs" with "fancy conference rooms to strategise in", stating that the "actors that are traditionally tasked with addressing sexual violence [remained] unable or unwilling to end Sudan's sexual violence epidemic and help its survivors achieve justice."[41]

Victims

On 12 June 2019, the Sudanese Doctors' Syndicate published a list of 104 people that were killed on or after 3 June, including 12 children.[42] The majority of the victims were killed by gunfire, while others were stabbed to death, burned, or had their skulls crushed after being run over by Janjaweed pick-up trucks. The list below includes the name of the victim (some unidentified), the date of death, age, hospital and cause of death as indicated by the Sudanese Doctors' Syndicate:[43]

No. Name Date of death Age Hospital Cause of death
1 Abdel Salam Keisha Adel Salam 3 June 25 El Mualim Hospital Gunshot
2 Mujtaba Salah Ahmed al-Hadi 3 June No data Sit-in Field Clinic Gunshot
3  Ali Mohammed al-Noor 3 June 25 El Mualim Hospital Gunshot
4 Said Mohammed Said 3 June 39 Ibrahim Malik Teaching Hospital Gunshot
5 Mohammed Hashem Salah Matar (also: Mohamed Mattar)[44] 3 June 26 No data Gunshot
6 Salah Uddin Said al-Dawleh Abdurrahman Ali Taha 3 June 26 El Mualim Hospital Gunshot
7 Al-Numan Ragab Kafi 3 June 29 Bashair Teaching Hospital Gunshot
8  Ahmed Mohammed Al-Faki 3 June 29 El Mualim Hospital Gunshot
9 Faiza Ahmed Othman 3 June 60 Al Jawda Hospital Gunshot
10 Murad al-Tijani Mohammed Haj al-Khader 3 June 6 Alazhari Gunshot
11 Huzaifa Mohammed Abdullah 3 June 15 El Mualim Hospital Gunshot
12 Burai Mutasem Saifuddin 3 June 18 Royal Care International Hospital Gunshot
13 Faisal Abdel Aziz Abdullah 3 June 38 Royal Care International Hospital Gunshot
14 Abbas Farah Abbas 3 June 27 Royal Care International Hospital Gunshot
15  Ismail Ali Abdel Hadi 3 June 42 Royal Care International Hospital Gunshot
16 Adam al-Doma 3 June 40 El Mualim Hospital Gunshot
17 Mahmoud Abdullah al-Amir 3 June 22 Al-Arbaeen Specialized Hospital Gunshot
18 Daw al-Beit Ibrahim Mokhtar 3 June 28 Armed Forces Hospital (Al-Silah Al-Tibi Hospital - Khartoum) Gunshot
19 Othman Abdeen Mahmoud 3 June 28 Armed Forces Hospital (Al-Silah Al-Tibi Hospital - Khartoum) Gunshot
20 Hanafi Abdel Shakour Hanafi 3 June 22 Armed Forces Hospital (Al-Silah Al-Tibi Hospital - Khartoum) Skull crushed after being run over by pickup truck
21 Khater Hussien Khater 3 June 21 Al-Arbaeen Specialized Hospital Gunshot
22 Othman Mohammed Qasem al-Said 3 June 20 Armed Forces Hospital (Al-Silah Al-Tibi Hospital - Khartoum) Gunshot
23 Munzer Yousef al-Amin 3 June 28 Armed Forces Hospital (Al-Silah Al-Tibi Hospital - Khartoum) Gunshot and crushed skull
24 Abdelwahab al-Said 3 June 54 Mohamed bin Saleh Al Rajhi Charity Hospital Gunshot
25  Saad Mansour Abdeen 3 June 20 Libya Omdurman Gunshot
26 Amro Ibrahim 3 June 25 Asia Hospital Stabbed to death
27 Oday Bashir Noori 3 June 14 Al-Arbaeen Specialized Hospital Gun
28 Walid Bakheet al-Taib 3 June 35 Armed Forces Hospital (Al-Silah Al-Tibi Hospital - Khartoum) Gunshot
29  Ibrahim Musa 3 June 51 Armed Forces Hospital (Al-Silah Al-Tibi Hospital - Khartoum) Body crushed after being run over by pickup truck
30 Othman Ibrahim Hussein 3 June No data Bashair Teaching Hospital No data
31  Mudther Idris Mohammed Zein 3 June 26 Bashair Teaching Hospital Gunshot
32  Eid Farouq Ahmed 3 June 32 Al Tamayoz Hospital No data
33 Othman Hasab-Allah Sadiq 3 June 16 Al Injaz Sudanese German Specialized Hospital No data
34 Mohammed Fathi Ali Ibrahim 3 June 13 Armed Forces Hospital (Al-Silah Al-Tibi Hospital - Khartoum) No data
35 Unidentified Person 3 June No data Omdurman Hospital No data
36 Unidentified Person 3 June No data El Mualim Hospital No data
37 Unidentified Person 3 June No data El Mualim Hospital No data
38 Unidentified Person 3 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Gunshot and body was pulled from the Nile
39 Unidentified Person 3 June No data Royal Care International Hospital No data
40 Unidentified Person 3 June No data Royal Care International Hospital No data
41 Unidentified Person 3 June No data Sit-in Field Clinic No data
42 Ahmed Jaafar Mustafa Khogaly 3 June No data Sit-in Field Clinic No post mortem was done
43  Awad Said Atayia 3 June No data Al Droshab Gunshot and body was pulled from the Nile
44 Mahmoud Ahmed Abdelqayoum 3 June No data Sit-in Field Clinic No post mortem was done
45 Yaser 3 June No data Sharg Alneel Hospital Gunshot
46  Al-Wasileh Nader 3 June No data Sharg Alneel Hospital Gunshot
47  Rana Joun (she was pregnant) 3 June No data Royal Care International Hospital Gunshot
48 Mustafa al-Taj Mohammed Othman 4 June 19 Rabak - block 5 Gunshot
49 Burai Adam Yousef 4 June 19 Rabak - block 10 Gunshot
50 Al-Haj Suleiman 4 June 16 Rabak Gunshot
51 Moaz Abdullah 4 June 20 Rabak - block 3 Gunshot
52 Ayoub Mohammed Abkar 4 June 20 Rabak - block 21 Gunshot
53 Naji Khandouqy Eissa 4 June 8 Rabak - block 5 Gunshot
54  Mohanad Mohammed Fuad 4 June 14 Hilt Koko Gunshot
55  Haitham Anwar 4 June 15 Royal Care International Hospital Gunshot
56 Musaab Said Shagheel 4 June 23 Bashair Teaching Hospital Gunshot
57  Mohammed Abdel Mahmoud Fadel Al-Mawla Said 4 June 32 Best Care Hospital Gunshot
58 Ezuddin Mohammed Bushra 4 June 41 Bashair Teaching Hospital Stabbed to death
59 Sadiq al-Haj Ahmed Abkar 4 June 17 Bashair Teaching Hospital Stabbed to death
60 Omar Mohammed Hussein Bahar 4 June 23 Al-Bagair Stabbed to death
61  Al-Amin Ismail Al-Amin 4 June 27 Um bada Hospital Gunshot
62 Hussam Said Al-Yazal 4 June 40 Best Care Hospital Gunshot
63 Lawal William Pak 4 June No data No data Gunshot
64  Jaddu Mohammed Barka Hamdan 5 June 22 Best Care Hospital Stabbed to death
65  Mujahed Jumaa Ramadan 5 June 24 Sharg Alneel Hospital Stabbed to death
66 Mohammed Al-Sir Khamees Ibrahim 5 June 22 Bashair Teaching Hospital Stabbed to death
67 Amer Adam Yousef Abdelkarim 5 June 17 Bashair Teaching Hospital Stabbed to death
68  Jumaa Ismail Ahmed Sharafuddin 5 June 35 Bashair Teaching Hospital Stabbed to death
69 Mohammed Idris al-Fakki Jaddu 5 June 24 Armed Forces Hospital (Al-Silah Al-Tibi Hospital - Khartoum) Gunshot
70 Baderuddin Rabei Mohammed Ali 5 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Gunshot and body was pulled from the Nile
71 Unidentified Person 5 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Gunshot
72 Unidentified Person 5 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Gunshot
73 Saber al-Tijani Abdurrahman 5 June No data No data Gunshot
74 Al-Nazeer Abdurrahman 5 June No data No data Gunshot
75 Unidentified Person 5 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Gunshot and body was pulled from the Nile (stone was tied to his leg)
76 Yaser Ali Mohammed Abdullah 5 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Gunshot and body was pulled from the Nile (stone was tied to his leg)
77 Unidentified Person 5 June No data No data Gunshot
78  Mujahed Ezuddin Mohammed Naser 5 June No data Al-Shifa Hospital Gunshot
79 Othman Said Ahmed 5 June No data No data Gunshot
80 Mohammed Al-Mujtaba Abdurrahman Daweina 5 June No data No data Gunshot and body was pulled from the Nile
81 Mustafa Suleiman Abdullah Raoumeh 5 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Gunshot
82 Ali Fadel Al-Ati Ali 5 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Gunshot
83 Ali Saboun Hassan 5 June No data Um bada Hospital Gunshot
84 Sadiq Ibrahim Othman 5 June No data Armed Forces Hospital (Al-Silah Al-Tibi Hospital - Khartoum) Gunshot
85 Unidentified Person 5 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Gunshot and body was pulled from the Nile
86 Mohammed Taj al-Sir Mohammed 6 June No data Bashair Teaching Hospital Stabbed to death
87 Abdel Aziz Said Amin 6 June No data Sharg Alneel Hospital Stabbed to death
88  Ghaboush Mubarak Adam 6 June No data Um bada Gunshot
89 Essam Mohammed Noor (Police officer) 7 June No data Um bada - killed inside his house Stabbed to death
90 Amro Anas Mohammed Al-Safi (Child) 8 June No data Omdurman Gunshot
91 Walid Abdurrahman Salem 8 June 37 Bahri Gunshot
92 Ayman Ousama 9 June 17 Omdurman Teaching Hospital Gunshot
93 Jaber-Allah Mohammed Muala 7 June 20 Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Stabbed to death
94 Al-Maleeh Mohammed Muala 7 June 18 Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Stabbed to death
95 Tajuddin al-Awal Darman 7 June 30 Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Stabbed to death
96 Mohammed Suleiman Galfour 7 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Gunshot
97 Mohammed Abdullah Mohammed 8 June 21 Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Gunshot
98  Ibrahim Saleh Omar 8 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Stabbed to death
99 Othman Ibrahim Ishaq al-Qouni 10 June 12 Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Hit by Machete
100 Al-Hasan 10 June No data Royal Care International Hospital 90% burns - 3 June
101 Samuel Emanuel 10 June No data No data No post mortem was done
102 Zamran Hasan Yousef 10 June 21 Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Skull crushed
103  Magdy Adam Babaker 10 June 22 Bashair Teaching Hospital Gunshot
104  Al-Moez Suleiman 10 June No data Royal Care International Hospital Buttstroke with a rifle on the head

Responsibility

Transitional Military Council and Rapid Support Forces

The military armed forces of the Transitional Military Council (TMC), headed by the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) led by Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo ("Hemedti"),[45] the immediate successor organisation to the Janjaweed militia, are widely attributed as being responsible for the attack. The Daily Beast attributed responsibility directly to RSF under Hemedti's command, based on videos,[46] testimonies by witnesses and interviews with civilian activists.[47] Three separate enquiries released statements to the media in late July 2019. On 27 July, an Attorney-General enquiry requested by the TMC attributed responsibility to "at least eight high-ranking officers" and stated a death toll of 87 and no rapes.[48] On 30 July, enquiries by the Darfur Bar Association and the National Umma Party attributed responsibility directly to the TMC,[49][50] confirmed the occurrences of rapes as part of the event,[49] and stated a total death toll of 124 (from 3 to 20 June).[50]

Attorney-General enquiry

On 27 July, Fathelrahman Saeed, the head of a committee appointed by the Attorney-General at the request of the TMC to investigate the massacre, stated that 87 people had been killed, 168 injured, no rapes had occurred and no tents had been burnt. Saeed stated that legal cases for crimes against humanity had been launched against eight unnamed high-ranking security officers.[48] The Sudan Forensic Doctors Union described the result of the enquiry as "poor and defective", and the FFC, the Sudanese Women's Union, the Sudanese Professionals Association and the Democratic Lawyers' Alliance rejected the report. Street protests took place in Khartoum in response to the report.[48]

Darfur Bar Association enquiry

The Darfur Bar Association (DBA) created a Truth and Fact-finding Committee to investigate the massacre, primarily the incidents of rape.[49] On 30 July, the DBA committee stated that eight rape victims were receiving psychological therapy; one in Omdurman had committed suicide as a result of the rape; one rape victim had been forced by social stigma to search for another home for her and her family. The DBA claimed that it had "ample evidence" of responsibility of TMC for the massacre and that the "decision to disband the sit-in" took place at a meeting including all TMC members, the Attorney-General, police chiefs and security directors.[49] The DBA committee argued that the Attorney-General enquiry was neither professional, independent nor impartial.[49]

National Umma Party enquiry

The National Umma Party formed an enquiry committee led by Yousef El Amin.[50] On 30 July, El Amin stated that the sit-in was disbanded by "a large military force wearing RSF uniforms and riot police" and that the massacre had been "premeditated and planned". He stated that 47 victims of the massacre died on 3 June, with a total of 124 dying from 3 to 20 June. He confirmed rapes, throwing of bodies into the Nile, and burning of tents.[50]

International influences

Iyad el-Baghdadi, a human rights activist who became famous during the Arab Spring, argued that the governments of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Egypt supported the carrying out of the massacre.[51] Some of the military vehicles and equipment used in the massacre were manufactured in the UAE.[52][51] The late May visits by TMC leader al-Burhan to the Egyptian president el-Sisi and to the de facto ruler of the UAE, Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, and of the TMC deputy leader Dagalo to Mohammad bin Salman, the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia, were interpreted by el-Baghdadi as encouragements for the TMC to cancel negotiations with the opposition and to carry out a massacre.[51] El-Baghdadi situates this in the general context of Saudi, UAE and Egyptian leaders being afraid of democratic movements.[51] Mahmoud Elmutasim, a political activist and doctor who graduated from the University of Khartoum, stated that Saudi Arabia and the UAE are opposed to the existence of democracies in the Middle East, since if "the idea of democracy itself [should] ever take root, or become widespread in the Middle East," then it would constitute a threat to the governmental systems of Saudi Arabia and the UAE.[52]

The New Arab and Middle East Eye similarly argued that "The blooded assault was launched shortly after top Sudanese generals visited Riyadh, Abu Dhabi and Egypt to secure support for their takeover, with observers arguing the transitional military council received a green light from the three powerful Arab states for their move".[53][54][55]

After news of the massacre, Egypt called for restraint and the UAE called for dialogue and an investigation into the massacre. Emirati Minister of Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash stated "We are concerned about the massacre we've seen. We support calls for proper investigation". Gargash also called for dialogue which he hoped would prevail in Sudan, stating "The regional experience has taught us that the orderly and conservative transition of the state and its institutions is the only way to avoid years of chaos and loss".[56][57]

Transition period official investigation

The Political Agreement between the TMC and the Forces for Freedom and Change (FFC) alliance for a Sudanese transition to democracy, which was initially agreed on verbally on 5 July 2019[58][59] and signed on 17 July,[60][61] includes a plan for an independent Sudanese investigation into the 3 June Khartoum massacre "and related incidents of human rights violations committed against civilians or militaries".[61]

According to an anonymous military official present at negotiations for the initial verbal deal, quoted by The Christian Science Monitor, US negotiators led by Donald E. Booth proposed that TMC members be guaranteed immunity from prosecution in the investigation. The military official stated, "The Americans demanded a deal as soon as possible. Their message was clear: power-sharing in return for guarantees that nobody from the council will be tried."[62] In late July, the FFC requested that the constitutional declaration, a document intended to add details complementary to the political agreement, should give no immunity against prosecution to any civilian or military leaders of the transition institutions.[63]

The Draft Constitutional Declaration signed in August 2019 confirmed the creation of an independent investigation, and gave "procedural" immunity to all senior members of the transition institutions, which can be removed by a simple majority vote of the Transitional Legislative Council. On 21 September 2019, the transition period prime minister, Abdalla Hamdok, issued a decision to initiate the official Khartoum massacre investigation with a 7-member committee of lawyers, independent from all other state bodies, to be assigned to carry out the investigation.[64] The members of the men-only commission, headed by human rights lawyer Nabil Adib, were nominated on 20 October.[17] The No to Oppression against Women Initiative objected to the absence of women members on the commission.[18]

Other investigations

On 5 March 2020, an investigation by Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) stated that Sudanese security forces had planned the attack against pro-democracy stagings in Khartoum. The report said that the 3 June massacre was carried out using techniques by the Sudanese authorities in which they "purposefully pre-positioned" their units and armed them with tear gas and assault rifles before the attack was initiated. PHR stated, "Security forces' horrific tactics – sexual violence, including rape, use of tear gas, whips, batons, and live ammunition – killed and critically injured hundreds of civilians."[65]

Aftermath

On 4 June, the Transitional Military Council (TMC) cancelled all agreements reached during talks with the main opposition alliance on setting up a transitional administration. The sides had agreed on forming a parliament and a government that would prepare for elections after three years.[66] The leaders of the Declaration of Freedom and Change Forces (DFCF) opposition alliance, said an open-ended civil disobedience campaign would continue to try to force the council from power.[67][66][68] The leaders also added that there is no room for negotiations," as military leaders attempted to do damage control in the face of international criticism of Monday's indiscriminate killings.[4][67]

On 5 June, Khartoum was tense with many roads barricaded by protesters, shops shut and streets mostly empty. Rapid Support Forces (RSF) vehicles were patrolling the streets in Omdurman, on the other side of the River Nile from Khartoum and firing into the air.[29][69]

On 5 June, the United Nations Security Council met on at the request of Britain and Germany to hear a briefing from UN envoy Nicholas Haysom, who has been working with the African Union (AU) on a solution to the crisis in Sudan. But China, backed by Russia, blocked a bid to condemn the killing of civilians and issue an urgent call from world powers for an immediate halt to the violence.[70] The DFCF called on all countries and international organisations to stop dealing with Sudan's Transitional Military Council. They also called on the international community to start looking into "the ongoing violations and crimes committed by (TMC) in all cities and towns and to stop it immediately." As reported by the Central Committee of Sudan Doctors (CCSD), an organisation of medical volunteers, dozens of bodies were pulled from the Nile Wednesday and doctors said they had been weighed down with rocks in an attempt to hide the true death toll.[67][11][71][72]

On 6 June, the African Union Peace and Security Department issued a statement suspending the participation of Sudan in all AU activities with immediate effect - "until the effective establishment of a civilian-led transitional authority," which it described as the only way to "exit from the current crisis".[73][74]

On 9 June, normally a regular working day in Sudan, protesters launched a civil disobedience campaign aiming at removing the TMC. Four people were shot dead by the TMC forces in Khartoum.[75][76] As roads were blocked, almost all formal and informal businesses were closed, including, banks, public transport and Khartoum International Airport, where several airlines cancelled their Sudan flights following the massacre and passengers were left waiting outside airport's departures terminal.[77][78][79][80] The general strike was followed by about 60–100% of workers, varying between sectors, for a total of 3 days[81][82] and was followed on 12 June by an agreement between the TMC and the opposition to free political prisoners, stop the strike, and resume negotiations.[82]

An online social media trend with the hashtag #BlueForSudan started several days after the massacre, representing solidarity for the protest movement, with blue signifying the favorite color of Mohamed Mattar, one of the victims of the massacre.[44]

Two were killed on the second anniversary of the massacre, the killing took place in front of the military headquarter, the Sudanese military issued a statement calling it an "unfortunate event".[83] Sudanese prime minister Abdallah Hamdok said he was shocked by the killings, calling it a "crime to use live bullets against peaceful protesters".[84]

Reactions

The United Nations Secretary-General, António Guterres, condemned the use of excessive force by Sudan's security agents and said he was "alarmed" by reports that forces had opened fire inside a hospital.

On 4 June, Norway, the United Kingdom, and the United States issued a statement on developments in Sudan.[85] "The Troika condemns the violent attacks in Sudan on 3rd June, which resulted in the killing and injuring of many peaceful civilian protesters. By ordering these attacks, the Transitional Military Council has put the transition process and peace in Sudan in jeopardy. We call for an agreed transfer of power to a civilian-led government as demanded by the people of Sudan. We welcome the statement of the Chairperson of the African Union (AU) and support the important role of the AU in solving the crisis in Sudan, including its demand for an immediate handover to a civilian-led government". "The Troika also expresses its serious concern over the TMC’s announcement that it will cease negotiations with the Forces for Freedom and Change, retract all previous agreements with them on formation of an interim government, and will hold elections within nine months. The people of Sudan deserve an orderly transition, led by civilians, that can establish the conditions for free and fair elections, rather than have rushed elections imposed by the TMC’s security forces".[86][87]

On 3 June, the African Union issued the following statement "The Chairperson of the African Union Commission, Moussa Faki strongly condemns the violence that erupted today which led to reported deaths and several civilian injuries. In this regard, he calls for an immediate and transparent investigation in order to hold those all responsible accountable. The Chairperson calls on the Transitional Military Council to protect the civilians from further harm". "the Chairperson calls on all international partners to reinforce common efforts towards the immediate cessation of the violence and rapid resumption of negotiations for a political settlement.[88]

Works by artists and photographers

Many Sudanese artists designed and created pieces of art that show the scale of the massacre. Khalid Kodi from Boston College, United States, made a painting that depicts a Sudanese woman in front of the military headquarters, with the woman symbolising the women who were raped[3] by the RSF[38] during the massacre.

In 2021, the French book "Soudan. Année Zero" presented a detailed historical and sociological analysis of the weeks during the Sudanese revolution, that preceded the deadly assault and destruction of the site that protestors had occupied in front of the headquarters of the Armed Forces in central Khartoum. Part of this analysis of the Khartoum massacre are numerous pictures by Sudanese photographers who had documented the uprising until that point in time.[89]

See also

References

  1. ^ Walsh, Declan (4 July 2019). "Sudan Power-Sharing Deal Reached by Military and Civilian Leaders". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  2. ^ Walsh, Declan (4 June 2019). "Sudan's Protesters Reject Military Plan After Crackdown Kills Dozens". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e Salih in Khartoum, Zeinab Mohammed; Burke, Jason (11 June 2019). "Sudanese doctors say dozens of people raped during sit-in attack". The Guardian. from the original on 11 June 2019. Retrieved 12 June 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Complete civil disobedience, and open political strike, to avoid chaos". Sudanese Professionals Association. 4 June 2019. from the original on 8 June 2019. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
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External links

  • BBC News Africa (12 July 2019). Sudan's Livestream Massacre - BBC Africa Eye documentary.

khartoum, massacre, occurred, june, 2019, when, armed, forces, sudanese, transitional, military, council, headed, rapid, support, forces, immediate, successor, organisation, janjaweed, militia, used, heavy, gunfire, tear, disperse, protestors, khartoum, killin. The Khartoum massacre occurred on 3 June 2019 when the armed forces of the Sudanese Transitional Military Council headed by the Rapid Support Forces RSF the immediate successor organisation to the Janjaweed militia 6 used heavy gunfire and tear gas to disperse a sit in by protestors in Khartoum killing more than 100 people 7 with difficulties in estimating the actual numbers 8 9 10 At least forty of the bodies had been thrown in the River Nile 11 Hundreds of unarmed civilians were injured hundreds of unarmed citizens were arrested many families were terrorised in their home estates across Sudan 12 8 and the RSF raped more than 70 women and men 3 4 The Internet was almost completely blocked in Sudan in the days following the massacre making it difficult to estimate the number of victims 13 14 Khartoum massacrePart of Sudanese RevolutionKhartoumKhartoum Sudan LocationKhartoum SudanDate3 June 2019TargetSudanese protestersAttack typeMass murderDeaths128 1 Injured650 injured 2 and 70 raped 3 4 PerpetratorsRapid Support Forces RSF 5 Janjaweed militias 4 and TMC security forces 4 MotiveDispersing sit in campKhartoum City In October 2019 during the 39 month planned transition to democracy an official Khartoum massacre investigation commission was created as required under Article 7 16 of the Sudanese August 2019 Draft Constitutional Declaration 15 16 under the authority of transition period Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok 17 The commission is led by human rights lawyer Nabil Adib or Nabil Adib Abdalla and with no female members to the objection of The No to Oppression against Women Initiative 18 Contents 1 Background 2 Massacre 2 1 Timeline 2 2 Mass rapes 3 Victims 4 Responsibility 4 1 Transitional Military Council and Rapid Support Forces 4 2 International influences 4 3 Transition period official investigation 4 4 Other investigations 5 Aftermath 6 Reactions 6 1 Works by artists and photographers 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksBackground EditSudanese protests started in December 2018 after which the military removed Omar al Bashir and established a Transitional Military Council which is headed by the Lieutenant General Abdel Fattah Abdelrahman Burhan On 11 April 2019 the military removed al Bashir from power in a coup d etat and created a Transitional Military Council TMC Following intense protests Awad Ibn Auf announced his resignation and said that he had chosen Lieutenant General Abdel Fattah Abdelrahman Burhan to lead the TMC 19 20 Protesters supported by the Sudanese Professionals Association SPA 21 22 and democratic opposition groups engaged in street demonstrations calling on the ruling Transitional Military Council to immediately and unconditionally step aside in favour of a civilian led transitional government and urging other reforms in Sudan 23 For about two months the TMC engaged the SPA in dialogue and discussion on how to shift to a transitional government disagreeing over whether the transitional government should be civilian led or military led 24 And during the official discussions there were many attempts on the TMC s part to disperse protesters and clear the sit in in front of the Military HQ in Khartoum 25 26 27 On 30 May the SPA expressed concern that a lethal attack by the TMC was intended stating that on 29 May two citizens including a pregnant lady were shot dead by the TMC forces The SPA warned that military trucks of NISS the RSF and other state security forces were accumulating around the area of the sit in 28 On 1 June the SPA said that it had reason to believe that the TMC was planning and working to end the peaceful sit in at the headquarters with excessive force and violence after three people were killed in incidents on the fringes of the demonstration during the previous week 29 Massacre EditOn 3 June 2019 the military armed forces of the TMC headed by the Rapid Support Forces the succeeding front organization to the Janjaweed militia and NISS together with other TMC forces 30 used heavy gunfire and tear gas as well as sound bombs aiming at dispersing the sit in killing more than 100 7 people with difficulties in estimating the actual number 31 Estimating the number of victims was difficult in the days following the massacre because of Internet blockage and the deployment of brutal military forces across the capital The Internet in Sudan was almost completely blocked during and following the massacre a signature move of the TMC 13 14 on which the Janjaweed militias had a wide presence throughout Khartoum and prevented documenting the number of victims 32 As of the evening of 4 June 2019 there were reports of a large number of victims in the field of the sit in with difficulty evacuating them There were several reports of bodies thrown into the Nile 33 Hundreds of unarmed civilians were injured hundreds of unarmed citizens were arrested and many families were terrorised in their home estates across Sudan 34 Seventy women and men were raped by the RSF according to doctors in Khartoum hospitals 3 On 9 June witnesses reported the smell of rotten corpses coming from drainage channels and suspected that soldiers had thrown victims there citation needed In total more than 200 military vehicles were used in the attack with more than 10 000 soldiers and other unidentified personnel in police uniforms citation needed Timeline Edit The following is a timeline of what took place in the Khartoum sit in camp 4 30 am Janjaweed militias and NISS with other TMC forces started surveying the area of the sit in camp in preparation for the attack 35 4 55 am Around 100 military vehicles belonging to Janjaweed militias armed with heavy military firearms including anti aircraft weapons and carrying hundreds of armed soldiers These soldiers were carrying weapons and sticks when they surrounded the Military HQ in Khartoum The cars prevented the unarmed civilians from entering the Military HQ Simultaneously another 100 white pick up trucks without number plates full of soldiers in police uniforms arrived Other Janjaweed soldiers were also seen in huge numbers along Nile Street 6 00 am onward The joint forces started the attack on the sit in camp using live bullets sound bombs and teargas storming the civilians from all directions leaving a narrow path for protesters to exit The militia started burning the tents and shooting indiscriminately leaving hundreds dead and injured and throwing many bodies into the Nile 36 According to local resident and PhD student Mohammed Elnaiem the first phase of the attack included discussion between RSF members and the regular army and in the second phase the army vehicles departed while RSF vehicles drove through the barricades 37 Following the massacre some bodies were recovered that wore uniforms belonging to the Sudanese Army Activists concluded that there had been army soldiers who refused to attack the protestors or had attempted to protect them whereupon they too had been murdered 38 Nahid Jabrallah attributed the murders to the RSF 38 After the main attack the RSF shot wounded protestors in three Khartoum hospitals 37 Sit ins in Port Sudan el Gadarif and Sinja were also raided and attacked by the RSF on 3 June 37 Mass rapes Edit See also Rape during the Darfur genocide France 24 documented evidence that the rapes of 70 women and men during the massacre 3 4 were a deliberate campaign to break the girls 39 Nahid Jabrallah founder of the Sima Centre for Women and Children s Studies and other activists and journalists stated that there were extensive testimonies of gang rapes and other sexual violence by the RSF during the 3 June attacks Huma an activist said that RSF soldiers humiliated women by asking them to remove their underwear 39 Online social network images showing women s underwear on a pole and a room full of women s clothing were considered unverified as of 20 June 2019 update 39 Jabrallah stated that everyone was threatened with being raped if they resisted the RSF s orders 38 International criminal lawyer Celine Bardet of We are not Weapons of War said that evidence gathering for the systematic use of sexual violence as a tool of war needed separate consideration to other evidence gathering because of social stigma against women testifying about the events Bardet said that as of June 2019 update evidence was being collected about a fair amount of sexual violence that might be used as evidence of an international crime if the sexual violence were systematic targeted and had a specific objective 39 Activist Dalia El Roubi stated that the symbolism behind the rape of women is very substantial it s aimed at breaking society and that the sexual violence of the 3 June massacre was a deliberate action by the RSF to break communities in a similar way to which communities were broken in Darfur 39 Pramila Patten from the United Nations UN called for a UN human rights monitoring team to be sent to Sudan and for rapes and gang rapes of protesters women s rights defenders and women medical personnel working in hospitals near the sit in to stop 40 Hala al Karib writing in Al Jazeera English said that local activists provided systematic support for the rape victims extending their hands to the hundreds of male and female sexual violence survivors and the families of those who were killed with discipline and the commitment to support the survivors of violence 41 Al Karib said that the activists understood the root causes and politics behind sexual violence and approached sexual violence as a crime connected to power relations while not undermining how personal it is as a crime Al Karib criticised the lack of support from international multimillion dollar agencies and NGOs with fancy conference rooms to strategise in stating that the actors that are traditionally tasked with addressing sexual violence remained unable or unwilling to end Sudan s sexual violence epidemic and help its survivors achieve justice 41 Victims EditOn 12 June 2019 the Sudanese Doctors Syndicate published a list of 104 people that were killed on or after 3 June including 12 children 42 The majority of the victims were killed by gunfire while others were stabbed to death burned or had their skulls crushed after being run over by Janjaweed pick up trucks The list below includes the name of the victim some unidentified the date of death age hospital and cause of death as indicated by the Sudanese Doctors Syndicate 43 No Name Date of death Age Hospital Cause of death1 Abdel Salam Keisha Adel Salam 3 June 25 El Mualim Hospital Gunshot2 Mujtaba Salah Ahmed al Hadi 3 June No data Sit in Field Clinic Gunshot3 Ali Mohammed al Noor 3 June 25 El Mualim Hospital Gunshot4 Said Mohammed Said 3 June 39 Ibrahim Malik Teaching Hospital Gunshot5 Mohammed Hashem Salah Matar also Mohamed Mattar 44 3 June 26 No data Gunshot6 Salah Uddin Said al Dawleh Abdurrahman Ali Taha 3 June 26 El Mualim Hospital Gunshot7 Al Numan Ragab Kafi 3 June 29 Bashair Teaching Hospital Gunshot8 Ahmed Mohammed Al Faki 3 June 29 El Mualim Hospital Gunshot9 Faiza Ahmed Othman 3 June 60 Al Jawda Hospital Gunshot10 Murad al Tijani Mohammed Haj al Khader 3 June 6 Alazhari Gunshot11 Huzaifa Mohammed Abdullah 3 June 15 El Mualim Hospital Gunshot12 Burai Mutasem Saifuddin 3 June 18 Royal Care International Hospital Gunshot13 Faisal Abdel Aziz Abdullah 3 June 38 Royal Care International Hospital Gunshot14 Abbas Farah Abbas 3 June 27 Royal Care International Hospital Gunshot15 Ismail Ali Abdel Hadi 3 June 42 Royal Care International Hospital Gunshot16 Adam al Doma 3 June 40 El Mualim Hospital Gunshot17 Mahmoud Abdullah al Amir 3 June 22 Al Arbaeen Specialized Hospital Gunshot18 Daw al Beit Ibrahim Mokhtar 3 June 28 Armed Forces Hospital Al Silah Al Tibi Hospital Khartoum Gunshot19 Othman Abdeen Mahmoud 3 June 28 Armed Forces Hospital Al Silah Al Tibi Hospital Khartoum Gunshot20 Hanafi Abdel Shakour Hanafi 3 June 22 Armed Forces Hospital Al Silah Al Tibi Hospital Khartoum Skull crushed after being run over by pickup truck21 Khater Hussien Khater 3 June 21 Al Arbaeen Specialized Hospital Gunshot22 Othman Mohammed Qasem al Said 3 June 20 Armed Forces Hospital Al Silah Al Tibi Hospital Khartoum Gunshot23 Munzer Yousef al Amin 3 June 28 Armed Forces Hospital Al Silah Al Tibi Hospital Khartoum Gunshot and crushed skull24 Abdelwahab al Said 3 June 54 Mohamed bin Saleh Al Rajhi Charity Hospital Gunshot25 Saad Mansour Abdeen 3 June 20 Libya Omdurman Gunshot26 Amro Ibrahim 3 June 25 Asia Hospital Stabbed to death27 Oday Bashir Noori 3 June 14 Al Arbaeen Specialized Hospital Gun28 Walid Bakheet al Taib 3 June 35 Armed Forces Hospital Al Silah Al Tibi Hospital Khartoum Gunshot29 Ibrahim Musa 3 June 51 Armed Forces Hospital Al Silah Al Tibi Hospital Khartoum Body crushed after being run over by pickup truck30 Othman Ibrahim Hussein 3 June No data Bashair Teaching Hospital No data31 Mudther Idris Mohammed Zein 3 June 26 Bashair Teaching Hospital Gunshot32 Eid Farouq Ahmed 3 June 32 Al Tamayoz Hospital No data33 Othman Hasab Allah Sadiq 3 June 16 Al Injaz Sudanese German Specialized Hospital No data34 Mohammed Fathi Ali Ibrahim 3 June 13 Armed Forces Hospital Al Silah Al Tibi Hospital Khartoum No data35 Unidentified Person 3 June No data Omdurman Hospital No data36 Unidentified Person 3 June No data El Mualim Hospital No data37 Unidentified Person 3 June No data El Mualim Hospital No data38 Unidentified Person 3 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Gunshot and body was pulled from the Nile39 Unidentified Person 3 June No data Royal Care International Hospital No data40 Unidentified Person 3 June No data Royal Care International Hospital No data41 Unidentified Person 3 June No data Sit in Field Clinic No data42 Ahmed Jaafar Mustafa Khogaly 3 June No data Sit in Field Clinic No post mortem was done43 Awad Said Atayia 3 June No data Al Droshab Gunshot and body was pulled from the Nile44 Mahmoud Ahmed Abdelqayoum 3 June No data Sit in Field Clinic No post mortem was done45 Yaser 3 June No data Sharg Alneel Hospital Gunshot46 Al Wasileh Nader 3 June No data Sharg Alneel Hospital Gunshot47 Rana Joun she was pregnant 3 June No data Royal Care International Hospital Gunshot48 Mustafa al Taj Mohammed Othman 4 June 19 Rabak block 5 Gunshot49 Burai Adam Yousef 4 June 19 Rabak block 10 Gunshot50 Al Haj Suleiman 4 June 16 Rabak Gunshot51 Moaz Abdullah 4 June 20 Rabak block 3 Gunshot52 Ayoub Mohammed Abkar 4 June 20 Rabak block 21 Gunshot53 Naji Khandouqy Eissa 4 June 8 Rabak block 5 Gunshot54 Mohanad Mohammed Fuad 4 June 14 Hilt Koko Gunshot55 Haitham Anwar 4 June 15 Royal Care International Hospital Gunshot56 Musaab Said Shagheel 4 June 23 Bashair Teaching Hospital Gunshot57 Mohammed Abdel Mahmoud Fadel Al Mawla Said 4 June 32 Best Care Hospital Gunshot58 Ezuddin Mohammed Bushra 4 June 41 Bashair Teaching Hospital Stabbed to death59 Sadiq al Haj Ahmed Abkar 4 June 17 Bashair Teaching Hospital Stabbed to death60 Omar Mohammed Hussein Bahar 4 June 23 Al Bagair Stabbed to death61 Al Amin Ismail Al Amin 4 June 27 Um bada Hospital Gunshot62 Hussam Said Al Yazal 4 June 40 Best Care Hospital Gunshot63 Lawal William Pak 4 June No data No data Gunshot64 Jaddu Mohammed Barka Hamdan 5 June 22 Best Care Hospital Stabbed to death65 Mujahed Jumaa Ramadan 5 June 24 Sharg Alneel Hospital Stabbed to death66 Mohammed Al Sir Khamees Ibrahim 5 June 22 Bashair Teaching Hospital Stabbed to death67 Amer Adam Yousef Abdelkarim 5 June 17 Bashair Teaching Hospital Stabbed to death68 Jumaa Ismail Ahmed Sharafuddin 5 June 35 Bashair Teaching Hospital Stabbed to death69 Mohammed Idris al Fakki Jaddu 5 June 24 Armed Forces Hospital Al Silah Al Tibi Hospital Khartoum Gunshot70 Baderuddin Rabei Mohammed Ali 5 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Gunshot and body was pulled from the Nile71 Unidentified Person 5 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Gunshot72 Unidentified Person 5 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Gunshot73 Saber al Tijani Abdurrahman 5 June No data No data Gunshot74 Al Nazeer Abdurrahman 5 June No data No data Gunshot75 Unidentified Person 5 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Gunshot and body was pulled from the Nile stone was tied to his leg 76 Yaser Ali Mohammed Abdullah 5 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Gunshot and body was pulled from the Nile stone was tied to his leg 77 Unidentified Person 5 June No data No data Gunshot78 Mujahed Ezuddin Mohammed Naser 5 June No data Al Shifa Hospital Gunshot79 Othman Said Ahmed 5 June No data No data Gunshot80 Mohammed Al Mujtaba Abdurrahman Daweina 5 June No data No data Gunshot and body was pulled from the Nile81 Mustafa Suleiman Abdullah Raoumeh 5 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Gunshot82 Ali Fadel Al Ati Ali 5 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Gunshot83 Ali Saboun Hassan 5 June No data Um bada Hospital Gunshot84 Sadiq Ibrahim Othman 5 June No data Armed Forces Hospital Al Silah Al Tibi Hospital Khartoum Gunshot85 Unidentified Person 5 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Gunshot and body was pulled from the Nile86 Mohammed Taj al Sir Mohammed 6 June No data Bashair Teaching Hospital Stabbed to death87 Abdel Aziz Said Amin 6 June No data Sharg Alneel Hospital Stabbed to death88 Ghaboush Mubarak Adam 6 June No data Um bada Gunshot89 Essam Mohammed Noor Police officer 7 June No data Um bada killed inside his house Stabbed to death90 Amro Anas Mohammed Al Safi Child 8 June No data Omdurman Gunshot91 Walid Abdurrahman Salem 8 June 37 Bahri Gunshot92 Ayman Ousama 9 June 17 Omdurman Teaching Hospital Gunshot93 Jaber Allah Mohammed Muala 7 June 20 Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Stabbed to death94 Al Maleeh Mohammed Muala 7 June 18 Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Stabbed to death95 Tajuddin al Awal Darman 7 June 30 Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Stabbed to death96 Mohammed Suleiman Galfour 7 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Gunshot97 Mohammed Abdullah Mohammed 8 June 21 Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Gunshot98 Ibrahim Saleh Omar 8 June No data Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Stabbed to death99 Othman Ibrahim Ishaq al Qouni 10 June 12 Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Hit by Machete100 Al Hasan 10 June No data Royal Care International Hospital 90 burns 3 June101 Samuel Emanuel 10 June No data No data No post mortem was done102 Zamran Hasan Yousef 10 June 21 Omdurman Teaching Hospital Mortuary Skull crushed103 Magdy Adam Babaker 10 June 22 Bashair Teaching Hospital Gunshot104 Al Moez Suleiman 10 June No data Royal Care International Hospital Buttstroke with a rifle on the headResponsibility EditMain article Khartoum massacre investigation Transitional Military Council and Rapid Support Forces Edit The military armed forces of the Transitional Military Council TMC headed by the Rapid Support Forces RSF led by Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo Hemedti 45 the immediate successor organisation to the Janjaweed militia are widely attributed as being responsible for the attack The Daily Beast attributed responsibility directly to RSF under Hemedti s command based on videos 46 testimonies by witnesses and interviews with civilian activists 47 Three separate enquiries released statements to the media in late July 2019 On 27 July an Attorney General enquiry requested by the TMC attributed responsibility to at least eight high ranking officers and stated a death toll of 87 and no rapes 48 On 30 July enquiries by the Darfur Bar Association and the National Umma Party attributed responsibility directly to the TMC 49 50 confirmed the occurrences of rapes as part of the event 49 and stated a total death toll of 124 from 3 to 20 June 50 Attorney General enquiryOn 27 July Fathelrahman Saeed the head of a committee appointed by the Attorney General at the request of the TMC to investigate the massacre stated that 87 people had been killed 168 injured no rapes had occurred and no tents had been burnt Saeed stated that legal cases for crimes against humanity had been launched against eight unnamed high ranking security officers 48 The Sudan Forensic Doctors Union described the result of the enquiry as poor and defective and the FFC the Sudanese Women s Union the Sudanese Professionals Association and the Democratic Lawyers Alliance rejected the report Street protests took place in Khartoum in response to the report 48 Darfur Bar Association enquiryThe Darfur Bar Association DBA created a Truth and Fact finding Committee to investigate the massacre primarily the incidents of rape 49 On 30 July the DBA committee stated that eight rape victims were receiving psychological therapy one in Omdurman had committed suicide as a result of the rape one rape victim had been forced by social stigma to search for another home for her and her family The DBA claimed that it had ample evidence of responsibility of TMC for the massacre and that the decision to disband the sit in took place at a meeting including all TMC members the Attorney General police chiefs and security directors 49 The DBA committee argued that the Attorney General enquiry was neither professional independent nor impartial 49 National Umma Party enquiryThe National Umma Party formed an enquiry committee led by Yousef El Amin 50 On 30 July El Amin stated that the sit in was disbanded by a large military force wearing RSF uniforms and riot police and that the massacre had been premeditated and planned He stated that 47 victims of the massacre died on 3 June with a total of 124 dying from 3 to 20 June He confirmed rapes throwing of bodies into the Nile and burning of tents 50 International influences Edit Iyad el Baghdadi a human rights activist who became famous during the Arab Spring argued that the governments of Saudi Arabia the United Arab Emirates UAE and Egypt supported the carrying out of the massacre 51 Some of the military vehicles and equipment used in the massacre were manufactured in the UAE 52 51 The late May visits by TMC leader al Burhan to the Egyptian president el Sisi and to the de facto ruler of the UAE Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan and of the TMC deputy leader Dagalo to Mohammad bin Salman the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia were interpreted by el Baghdadi as encouragements for the TMC to cancel negotiations with the opposition and to carry out a massacre 51 El Baghdadi situates this in the general context of Saudi UAE and Egyptian leaders being afraid of democratic movements 51 Mahmoud Elmutasim a political activist and doctor who graduated from the University of Khartoum stated that Saudi Arabia and the UAE are opposed to the existence of democracies in the Middle East since if the idea of democracy itself should ever take root or become widespread in the Middle East then it would constitute a threat to the governmental systems of Saudi Arabia and the UAE 52 The New Arab and Middle East Eye similarly argued that The blooded assault was launched shortly after top Sudanese generals visited Riyadh Abu Dhabi and Egypt to secure support for their takeover with observers arguing the transitional military council received a green light from the three powerful Arab states for their move 53 54 55 After news of the massacre Egypt called for restraint and the UAE called for dialogue and an investigation into the massacre Emirati Minister of Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash stated We are concerned about the massacre we ve seen We support calls for proper investigation Gargash also called for dialogue which he hoped would prevail in Sudan stating The regional experience has taught us that the orderly and conservative transition of the state and its institutions is the only way to avoid years of chaos and loss 56 57 Transition period official investigation Edit Main article Khartoum massacre investigation The Political Agreement between the TMC and the Forces for Freedom and Change FFC alliance for a Sudanese transition to democracy which was initially agreed on verbally on 5 July 2019 58 59 and signed on 17 July 60 61 includes a plan for an independent Sudanese investigation into the 3 June Khartoum massacre and related incidents of human rights violations committed against civilians or militaries 61 According to an anonymous military official present at negotiations for the initial verbal deal quoted by The Christian Science Monitor US negotiators led by Donald E Booth proposed that TMC members be guaranteed immunity from prosecution in the investigation The military official stated The Americans demanded a deal as soon as possible Their message was clear power sharing in return for guarantees that nobody from the council will be tried 62 In late July the FFC requested that the constitutional declaration a document intended to add details complementary to the political agreement should give no immunity against prosecution to any civilian or military leaders of the transition institutions 63 The Draft Constitutional Declaration signed in August 2019 confirmed the creation of an independent investigation and gave procedural immunity to all senior members of the transition institutions which can be removed by a simple majority vote of the Transitional Legislative Council On 21 September 2019 the transition period prime minister Abdalla Hamdok issued a decision to initiate the official Khartoum massacre investigation with a 7 member committee of lawyers independent from all other state bodies to be assigned to carry out the investigation 64 The members of the men only commission headed by human rights lawyer Nabil Adib were nominated on 20 October 17 The No to Oppression against Women Initiative objected to the absence of women members on the commission 18 Other investigations Edit On 5 March 2020 an investigation by Physicians for Human Rights PHR stated that Sudanese security forces had planned the attack against pro democracy stagings in Khartoum The report said that the 3 June massacre was carried out using techniques by the Sudanese authorities in which they purposefully pre positioned their units and armed them with tear gas and assault rifles before the attack was initiated PHR stated Security forces horrific tactics sexual violence including rape use of tear gas whips batons and live ammunition killed and critically injured hundreds of civilians 65 Aftermath EditOn 4 June the Transitional Military Council TMC cancelled all agreements reached during talks with the main opposition alliance on setting up a transitional administration The sides had agreed on forming a parliament and a government that would prepare for elections after three years 66 The leaders of the Declaration of Freedom and Change Forces DFCF opposition alliance said an open ended civil disobedience campaign would continue to try to force the council from power 67 66 68 The leaders also added that there is no room for negotiations as military leaders attempted to do damage control in the face of international criticism of Monday s indiscriminate killings 4 67 On 5 June Khartoum was tense with many roads barricaded by protesters shops shut and streets mostly empty Rapid Support Forces RSF vehicles were patrolling the streets in Omdurman on the other side of the River Nile from Khartoum and firing into the air 29 69 On 5 June the United Nations Security Council met on at the request of Britain and Germany to hear a briefing from UN envoy Nicholas Haysom who has been working with the African Union AU on a solution to the crisis in Sudan But China backed by Russia blocked a bid to condemn the killing of civilians and issue an urgent call from world powers for an immediate halt to the violence 70 The DFCF called on all countries and international organisations to stop dealing with Sudan s Transitional Military Council They also called on the international community to start looking into the ongoing violations and crimes committed by TMC in all cities and towns and to stop it immediately As reported by the Central Committee of Sudan Doctors CCSD an organisation of medical volunteers dozens of bodies were pulled from the Nile Wednesday and doctors said they had been weighed down with rocks in an attempt to hide the true death toll 67 11 71 72 On 6 June the African Union Peace and Security Department issued a statement suspending the participation of Sudan in all AU activities with immediate effect until the effective establishment of a civilian led transitional authority which it described as the only way to exit from the current crisis 73 74 On 9 June normally a regular working day in Sudan protesters launched a civil disobedience campaign aiming at removing the TMC Four people were shot dead by the TMC forces in Khartoum 75 76 As roads were blocked almost all formal and informal businesses were closed including banks public transport and Khartoum International Airport where several airlines cancelled their Sudan flights following the massacre and passengers were left waiting outside airport s departures terminal 77 78 79 80 The general strike was followed by about 60 100 of workers varying between sectors for a total of 3 days 81 82 and was followed on 12 June by an agreement between the TMC and the opposition to free political prisoners stop the strike and resume negotiations 82 An online social media trend with the hashtag BlueForSudan started several days after the massacre representing solidarity for the protest movement with blue signifying the favorite color of Mohamed Mattar one of the victims of the massacre 44 Two were killed on the second anniversary of the massacre the killing took place in front of the military headquarter the Sudanese military issued a statement calling it an unfortunate event 83 Sudanese prime minister Abdallah Hamdok said he was shocked by the killings calling it a crime to use live bullets against peaceful protesters 84 Reactions EditThe United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres condemned the use of excessive force by Sudan s security agents and said he was alarmed by reports that forces had opened fire inside a hospital On 4 June Norway the United Kingdom and the United States issued a statement on developments in Sudan 85 The Troika condemns the violent attacks in Sudan on 3rd June which resulted in the killing and injuring of many peaceful civilian protesters By ordering these attacks the Transitional Military Council has put the transition process and peace in Sudan in jeopardy We call for an agreed transfer of power to a civilian led government as demanded by the people of Sudan We welcome the statement of the Chairperson of the African Union AU and support the important role of the AU in solving the crisis in Sudan including its demand for an immediate handover to a civilian led government The Troika also expresses its serious concern over the TMC s announcement that it will cease negotiations with the Forces for Freedom and Change retract all previous agreements with them on formation of an interim government and will hold elections within nine months The people of Sudan deserve an orderly transition led by civilians that can establish the conditions for free and fair elections rather than have rushed elections imposed by the TMC s security forces 86 87 On 3 June the African Union issued the following statement The Chairperson of the African Union Commission Moussa Faki strongly condemns the violence that erupted today which led to reported deaths and several civilian injuries In this regard he calls for an immediate and transparent investigation in order to hold those all responsible accountable The Chairperson calls on the Transitional Military Council to protect the civilians from further harm the Chairperson calls on all international partners to reinforce common efforts towards the immediate cessation of the violence and rapid resumption of negotiations for a political settlement 88 Works by artists and photographers Edit Many Sudanese artists designed and created pieces of art that show the scale of the massacre Khalid Kodi from Boston College United States made a painting that depicts a Sudanese woman in front of the military headquarters with the woman symbolising the women who were raped 3 by the RSF 38 during the massacre In 2021 the French book Soudan Annee Zero presented a detailed historical and sociological analysis of the weeks during the Sudanese revolution that preceded the deadly assault and destruction of the site that protestors had occupied in front of the headquarters of the Armed Forces in central Khartoum Part of this analysis of the Khartoum massacre are numerous pictures by Sudanese photographers who had documented the uprising until that point in time 89 See also Edit2018 19 Sudanese protests 2019 Sudanese coup d etat Transitional Military Council August 2013 Rabaa massacreReferences Edit Walsh Declan 4 July 2019 Sudan Power Sharing Deal Reached by Military and Civilian Leaders The New York Times Retrieved 13 September 2020 Walsh Declan 4 June 2019 Sudan s Protesters Reject Military Plan After Crackdown Kills Dozens The New York Times Retrieved 10 April 2021 a b c d e Salih in Khartoum Zeinab Mohammed Burke Jason 11 June 2019 Sudanese doctors say dozens of people raped during sit in attack The Guardian Archived from the original on 11 June 2019 Retrieved 12 June 2019 a b c d e f Complete civil disobedience and open political strike to avoid chaos Sudanese Professionals Association 4 June 2019 Archived from the original on 8 June 2019 Retrieved 7 June 2019 Albaih Khalid 7 June 2019 No it s not over for the Sudanese revolution Al Jazeera English Archived from the original on 7 June 2019 Retrieved 7 June 2019 Sudan leader vows to uproot regime 13 April 2019 Retrieved 3 June 2019 a b Kareem Khadder and Julia Hollingsworth Sudan death roll rises to 100 as bodies found in Nile say doctors CNN Retrieved 6 June 2019 a b Oliphant Roland 3 June 2019 Sudan protests Thirty dead and more than 100 injured as troops disperse demonstrators The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 3 June 2019 Security forces in Sudan carry out raids across capital killing at least 30 Washington Post Archived from the original on 3 June 2019 Retrieved 3 June 2019 Sudan security forces shoot protesters at sit in outside army headquarters The Defense Post 3 June 2019 Retrieved 3 June 2019 a b Death toll in Sudan crackdown rises to 100 after 40 bodies recovered from Nile IOL News www iol co za Retrieved 6 June 2019 Protesters shot as Sudan military tries to clear Khartoum sit in www aljazeera com Retrieved 3 June 2019 a b Turn the Internet Back On in Sudan and Keep It On Internet Society Retrieved 9 June 2019 a b Julia Hollingsworth Gianluca Mezzofiore and Sarah El Sirgany 3 June 2019 At least 35 killed as Sudan military storms sit in CNN Retrieved 9 June 2019 FFC TMC IDEA Reeves Eric 10 August 2019 Sudan Draft Constitutional Charter for the 2019 Transitional Period sudanreeves org Archived from the original on 10 August 2019 Retrieved 10 August 2019 FFC TMC 4 August 2019 الدستوري Declaration العربية Constitutional Declaration PDF raisethevoices org in Arabic Archived PDF from the original on 5 August 2019 Retrieved 5 August 2019 a b Abdelaziz Khalid 21 October 2019 Tens of thousands rally against former ruling party in Sudan Thomson Reuters Archived from the original on 21 October 2019 Retrieved 21 October 2019 a b Sudan Activist Committee of Inquiry should include women Radio Dabanga 23 October 2019 Archived from the original on 23 October 2019 Retrieved 24 October 2019 What prompted the protests in Sudan www aljazeera com Retrieved 3 June 2019 Freytas Tamura Kimiko de 24 December 2018 Sudanese Protests After Days of Violence Turn Anger Over Bread Toward Bashir The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 3 June 2019 Sudan admits to 46 protest deaths 6 June 2019 Retrieved 6 June 2019 Burke Jason correspondent Africa Salih and Zeinab Mohammed 3 June 2019 At least 30 Sudanese protesters feared killed as security forces attack Khartoum sit in The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 6 June 2019 Reuters 19 April 2019 Sudan huge crowds call for civilian rule in biggest protest since Bashir ousting The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 3 June 2019 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a last has generic name help The politicking is starting Sudanese protesters struggle to loosen military s grip Retrieved 3 June 2019 Sanchez Raf 15 April 2019 Sudanese military forced to abandon attempt to clear protesters The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 3 June 2019 correspondent Jason Burke Africa 11 April 2019 Sudan protesters reject army takeover after removal of president The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 3 June 2019 correspondent Jason Burke Africa 8 April 2019 Sudan protests continue as security forces appear split The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 3 June 2019 Open Call for Urgent Action Risk of Escalating Violence in the Sit in area in Khartoum www sudaneseprofessionals org تجمع المهنيين السودانيين 30 May 2019 Archived from the original on 8 June 2019 Retrieved 7 June 2019 a b Five dead as Sudan military rulers try to disperse sit in The East African Retrieved 6 June 2019 Sudan leader vows to uproot regime 13 April 2019 Retrieved 5 June 2019 Sudan military calls snap election after crackdown 4 June 2019 Retrieved 5 June 2019 Khartoum residents in state of terror after bloody crackdown Capital News 7 June 2019 Retrieved 9 June 2019 correspondent Jason Burke Africa Salih and Zeinab Mohammed 5 June 2019 Sudan paramilitaries threw dead protesters into Nile doctors say The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 6 June 2019 The Latest Sudan official disputes protesters death toll kansas Associated Press Archived from the original on 8 June 2019 Retrieved 6 June 2019 تجمع المهنيين السودانيين Sudanese Professionals Association www sudaneseprofessionals org Retrieved 6 June 2019 Sudan s Livestream Massacre BBC Africa Eye YouTube BBC Retrieved 22 June 2020 a b c Akram Boshar Shireen Bean Brian 13 June 2019 Massacre and Uprising in Sudan Jacobin Archived from the original on 16 June 2019 Retrieved 15 June 2019 a b c d Ismail Nermin 9 June 2019 Militiamen in Sudan raped men and women says eyewitness DW Archived from the original on 11 July 2019 Retrieved 10 July 2019 They say that some of the bodies were of men wearing Sudanese army uniforms the human rights activist reports Her analysis This means the militiamen also attacked some members of the army who showed solidarity with the demonstrators either because they d refused to participate in this crime or because they were trying to protect women and girls from being raped And so these men were murdered too a b c d e Sudanese activists seek justice for mass rapes after militia breaks the girls France 24 20 June 2019 Archived from the original on 22 June 2019 Retrieved 22 June 2019 UN seeks to verify reports of gang rape by Sudan militias France 24 AFP 13 June 2019 Archived from the original on 21 June 2019 Retrieved 22 June 2019 a b al Karib Hala 5 September 2019 Sudan s youth showed us how to counter sexual violence Al Jazeera English Archived from the original on 5 September 2019 Retrieved 5 September 2019 Sudan The names of 100 people killed in a week of deadly violence Middle East Eye 30 July 2019 Archived from the original on 29 July 2019 Retrieved 12 June 2019 US names new envoy to Sudan as political crisis continues Middle East Eye Retrieved 13 June 2019 a b Bendimerad Rym Faisal Natalia 13 June 2019 BlueforSudan Why is social media turning blue for Sudan Al Jazeera English Archived from the original on 16 June 2019 Retrieved 16 June 2019 Hendawi Hamza 29 April 2019 Out of the Darfur desert the rise of Sudanese general Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo The National Abu Dhabi Archived from the original on 7 June 2019 Retrieved 30 April 2019 Sudan s Livestream Massacre YouTube BBC AFRICA EYE Retrieved 22 June 2020 Lynch Justin 5 June 2019 Remember The Darfur Genocide With Saudi Help One of the Killer Commanders There Is Taking Over Sudan The Daily Beast Archived from the original on 9 April 2020 Retrieved 8 June 2019 a b c Angry response to June 3 massacre report in Sudan capital Radio Dabanga 29 July 2019 Archived from the original on 29 July 2019 Retrieved 29 July 2019 a b c d e Darfur Bar Ass report on June 3 Khartoum rape cases damns Sudan junta Radio Dabanga 31 July 2019 Archived from the original on 31 July 2019 Retrieved 31 July 2019 a b c d NUP June 3 Khartoum massacre premeditated and planned Radio Dabanga 31 July 2019 Archived from the original on 31 July 2019 Retrieved 31 July 2019 a b c d el Baghdadi Iyad 11 June 2019 The Princes Who Want to Destroy Any Hope for Arab Democracy The New York Times Retrieved 11 June 2019 a b Chaos reigns in Sudan as military clings to power amid information blackout TRT World 11 June 2019 Archived from the original on 11 June 2019 Retrieved 11 June 2019 Arab The New Sudan military backers UAE Saudi Arabia call for dialogue after Eid massacre alaraby Retrieved 10 June 2019 Sudan crackdown Saudis gave green light for assault on protesters Middle East Eye Retrieved 11 June 2019 WARIGI Hidden hand in Sudan junta s about turn on power sharing Daily Nation Retrieved 11 June 2019 Sudanese forces storm protest camp more than 35 people killed medics Reuters 3 June 2019 UAE senior official supports investigation of massacre in Sudan Middle East Monitor 7 June 2019 Our revolution won Sudan s opposition lauds deal with military Al Jazeera English 5 July 2019 Archived from the original on 6 July 2019 Retrieved 5 July 2019 Sudan s military council to be dissolved in transition deal WTOP FM AP 8 July 2019 Archived from the original on 8 July 2019 Retrieved 8 July 2019 Int l community applauds Sudan political agreement Radio Dabanga 18 July 2019 Archived from the original on 18 July 2019 Retrieved 18 July 2019 a b Idris Insaf 17 July 2019 Political Agreement on establishing the structures and institutions of the transitional period between the Transitional Military Council and the Declaration of Freedom and Change Forces PDF Radio Dabanga Archived PDF from the original on 18 July 2019 Retrieved 18 July 2019 Magdy Samy 8 July 2019 Sudan International pressure enabled power sharing pact The Christian Science Monitor Archived from the original on 8 July 2019 Retrieved 8 July 2019 Sudan s pro democracy movement concludes Constitutional Declaration draft Radio Dabanga 28 July 2019 Archived from the original on 28 July 2019 Retrieved 29 July 2019 Hamdok forms investigation committee into attacks on pro democracy protests Radio Dabanga 22 September 2019 Archived from the original on 22 September 2019 Retrieved 22 September 2019 Sudan accused of masterminding lethal attacks on Khartoum protesters The Guardian 5 March 2020 Retrieved 5 March 2020 a b Sudan opposition rejects military s transition plan after day of violence Citizentv co ke Retrieved 6 June 2019 a b c Mohammed Tawfeeq Kareem Khadder and Jonny Hallam 6 June 2019 Sudan opposition rejects calls for talks as crisis worsens following deadly crackdown CNN Retrieved 6 June 2019 Urgent Call Killing and burning at the sit in Sudanese Professionals Association 3 June 2019 Archived from the original on 8 June 2019 Retrieved 7 June 2019 Julia Hollingsworth 4 June 2019 Death toll rises to 60 following Sudan crackdown CNN Retrieved 6 June 2019 Toll in Sudan army attack jumps as China Russia block UN action www aljazeera com Retrieved 6 June 2019 Sudan violence 40 bodies pulled from Nile www aljazeera com Retrieved 6 June 2019 Over 35 people killed in Sudan s protest site CCSD Sudan Tribune Plural news and views on Sudan sudantribune com Retrieved 6 June 2019 African Union suspends Sudan over military crackdown www aljazeera com Retrieved 6 June 2019 African Union suspends Sudan demands civilian administration Reuters 6 June 2019 Archived from the original on 6 June 2019 Retrieved 6 June 2019 Deadly start to first day of civil disobedience campaign in Sudan France 24 9 June 2019 Retrieved 9 June 2019 Sudan protesters begin civil disobedience campaign against military rulers Daily Telegraph The Telegraph AFP 9 June 2019 ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 9 June 2019 Security forces tear gas Sudan protesters 9 June 2019 Retrieved 9 June 2019 France Presse Agence 9 June 2019 Sudan protesters begin civil disobedience campaign against military rulers The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 9 June 2019 Reuters Civil disobedience campaign empties streets of Sudan s capital The Standard Retrieved 9 June 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help Welle www dw com Deutsche Sudan protest leaders call for civil disobedience against military rulers DW 9 June 2019 DW COM Retrieved 9 June 2019 Field Report Evaluation on the General Strike and Civil Disobedience in the Professional Vocational Service and Local Sectors Sudanese Professionals Association 12 June 2019 Archived from the original on 12 June 2019 Retrieved 12 June 2019 a b Sudan army protesters to resume talks on transitional council Al Jazeera English 12 June 2019 Archived from the original on 12 June 2019 Retrieved 12 June 2019 Abdelaziz Khalid Awadalia Nadine Eltahir Nafisa 12 May 2021 Two killed as protesters mark anniversary of massacre in Sudan Reuters Retrieved 30 October 2021 Two people killed in Sudan rally over 2019 protest killings Al Jazeera News 12 May 2021 Retrieved 30 October 2021 Sudan Troika statement June 2019 GOV UK Retrieved 4 June 2019 Joint Statement on Developments in Sudan United States Department of State Retrieved 7 June 2019 US Britain denounce Sudan military rulers election plan The East African Retrieved 7 June 2019 Statement of the Chairperson on the situation in Sudan African Union au int Retrieved 7 June 2019 Bach Jean Nicolas Fabrice Mongiat et al 2021 Soudan 2019 Annee zero Paris Soleb and Bleu autour publishers 244 p with numerous photographs ISBN 978 2 918157 44 1 ISBN 978 2 918157 47 2 in French External links EditBBC News Africa 12 July 2019 Sudan s Livestream Massacre BBC Africa Eye documentary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Khartoum massacre amp oldid 1150369162, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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