Sudan’s Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok pledged justice last week for scores of pro-democracy protesters killed a year ago when security forces broke up a sit-in outside the defense ministry. The demonstration was the culmination of weeks of protests that led the army to overthrow veteran leader Omar al-Bashir and ushered in a power-sharing agreement last year.The military - including a powerful paramilitary force that witnesses and activists said played a leading role in the raid - is now in a fragile, three-year pact with civilians. Hamdok, an economist and former senior United Nations official, leads a transitional government and named a commission in October to investigate the raid.
We get an update on whether the Sudan experienced politician reform since the ousting of al-Bashir and the heightening of protests a year.
African Dialogue anchor Benjamin Moshatama speaks to:
Sabir Ebrahim
Consultant
Sudan Liberation Movement in South Africa
Prof Kwesi Kwaa Prah
Author & Public Speaker
Dr Jok Maduk Jok {New York}
Executive Director
Sudd Intitute