Bashir out, military in. But for Sudan’s protesters, the story’s not over.
With long swords and 1,000 spears glinting in hard sunlight, the Sudanese Arab warriors rode camels toward the airstrip, cracking hide whips to honor Sudan’s military ruler Omar al-Bashir.
It was a scene meant to exude power, and it largely did in 1992, at a rally on the southern edge of the Sahara, 500 miles southwest of Sudan's capital, Khartoum. The stocky president, who had seized control in a military coup less than three years before, was triumphant amid the swirling clouds of dust.
General Bashir roused the mob with promises of victory over rebels in the south and held aloft the dual badges of his junta: a copy of the Quran and an AK-47 assault rifle – the proverbial book and sword.
“Whoever thinks of subjugating us, they will find a nation that loves martyrdom!”
Eight years of examplesMilitary concerns‘We take out the trash, and you bring us more?’You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.
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