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Comment: In reality, it is Hemedti, the brutal and cunning general who organised the harsh crackdown in Khartoum last June, who wields the real power in Sudan, writes Gerard Prunier.
Comment: This is the first protest movement of its kind to demand regime change from the outset, writes Reem Abbas.
Comment: The US' recent willingness to normalise relations with Sudan turns a blind eye to the country's well-documented human rights abuses, writes Jehanne Henry.
Comment: Hassan Turaibi has been a friend of some of Sudan's most brutal dictators. After setting himself up as an opponent when he fell out favour with President Bashir, Turaibi is looking to return to power.
Comment: China has financed Sudanese bridges and power stations, but the Sudanese people live in poverty and the loans will have to be paid back some day, says Tariq al-Sheikh.
The opposition to the recent coup in Sudan illustrates public rejection of military dictatorship. However, more international support is critical to the country's return to democracy and its chance for success, writes Ishac Diwan and Ibrahim Elbadawi
Fans of Donald Trump and the Sudanese warlord Hemedti follow the same playbook: a juvenile obsession with conspiracy and tribalism, writes Khalid Albaih.
The Sudanese people were met with violence by security forces as they marked the 3rd anniversary of protests that toppled Omar al-Bashir. We must question how the state is funding this growing deadly repression, writes Wini Omer.
The rape of 13 women at a protest in Khartoum last month by security service personnel is explained by the long history of state-sanctioned sexual violence as tool to suppress those fighting for state transformation, writes Wini Omer.
Sudan's internet blackout is part of a larger global trend in which numerous governments are embracing the extreme tactic of internet shutdowns, writes Jillian C. York.