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Military sources claim that Sudan will form a new government following the regaining of Khartoum.

Military sources claim that Sudan will form a new government following the regaining of Khartoum.

Military sources said on Sunday that the formation of a new Sudanese Government is expected after the recapture is complete of Khartoum. This comes a day after Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, head of Abdel Fatah's army, announced he would create a technocratic government during wartime.

In recent weeks, the Sudanese Army, which had been on the back foot in its war against the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), has gained ground along several axes in the capital Khartoum, and is closing in on the presidential palace on the Nile.

RSF, who had said that it would support a rival civil administration, has now retreated. The army has expanded its air capabilities and has increased the ground ranks with allied militias.

"We can call this a caretaker or wartime government. It's a Government that will help complete our remaining military objectives. That is, freeing Sudan of these rebels," Burhan said at a meeting with army-aligned political figures in Port Sudan, the stronghold of the army, on Saturday.

RSF controls the majority of western country and is waging a fierce campaign to consolidate its control over the Darfur region, by seizing al-Fashir. Burhan said that a Ramadan truce was not possible unless the RSF halted its campaign.

In April 2023, the war broke out over disagreements about the integration between the two forces. They had worked together to remove civilians from power with whom they shared power following the uprising which ousted Omar al-Bashir.

More than 12,000,000 people have been displaced and more than half of the population is facing hunger.

Burhan announced that the interim constitution of the country would be changed. According to military sources, the changes would remove any references to partnership or RSF. Instead, the authority would fall solely to the army, which would nominate a technocratic Prime Minister who would then nominate a cabinet.

Burhan urged civilian Taqadum members to abandon the RSF and said they would be welcome back if this was done. (Reporting and writing by Khalid Abdelaziz; Editing by Ros Russel)

(source: Reuters)