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ISSUE 6.1

The Latest in the Protest Movement for Change in Sudan

Khalid Medani

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Yahya Aitabi
Interviewed by Shahram Aghamir
{{langos=='en'?('20/06/2019' | todate):('20/06/2019' | artodate)}}
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With demonstrators continuing to call for civilian rule and the transitional military council refusing to hand over power, violently attacking the sit-in on June 3rd, VOMENA's Shahram Aghamir spoke with Khalid Medani to discuss the latest in Sudan.

The Khartoum Massacre of June 3rd

On June 3rd, the Sudanese state security forces and its militia violently attacked and dispersed thousands of demonstrators who had camped outside the military headquarters in the Sudanese capital, for weeks. The violent crackdown left dozens dead and hundreds wounded. The sit-in was initially held seeking an end to Omar al-Bashir’s three-decades-long authoritarian rule and later, to demand that the army generals who toppled him, hand over power to a civilian government. According to doctors linked to the protest movement, at least 128 people have been killed since June 3rd. Doctors also say that paramilitary forces carried out dozens of rapes during the attack on the protest-camp.

Guests

Khalid Medani
Khalid Medani

Khalid Medani is associate professor of political science and Islamic Studies at McGill University. 

Khalid Mustafa Medani is associate professor of political science and Islamic Studies at McGill University. Prior to his arrival at McGill, Dr. Medani has taught at Oberlin College and Stanford University. Dr. Medani received a B.A. in Development Studies from Brown University, an M.A. in Arab Studies from the Center for Contemporary Arab Studies at Georgetown University, and an M.A. and Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of California, Berkeley. Medani has published on the on the roots of civil conflict and the funding of the Islamic movement in Sudan, the question of informal finance and terrorism in Somalia, the obstacles to state building in Iraq, and the role of informal networks in the rise of Islamic militancy. 

 
In 2007, Medani was named a Carnegie Scholar on Islam, and was awarded a prestigious grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York. 
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