Symbol of Sudan protest movement pushes for further change

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Salah makes victory sign as she is surrounded by protesters in Khartoum. — Reuters photo

KHARTOUM: Sudanese student Alaa Salah emerged as a singing symbol of the protest movement that toppled leader Omar al-Bashir, and now insists she will keep demonstrating until civilian rule is secured.

The 22-year-old engineering and architecture undergraduate shot to prominence when a picture of her in a white robe leading chanting crowds from atop a car in Khartoum went viral on social media.

Shortly after on April 11 the army ousted long-time leader Bashir, but since then a 10-member military council has resisted calls to handover power.

Every evening Salah heads down to join the crowds still camped out around the army headquarters in the capital — leading thousands of demonstrators in singing out their calls for change.

“We are staying at the protest site until all our demands are met,” Salah said in an interview with AFP.

“We want a democratic civilian government and that all corrupt figures of the previous regime be prosecuted.”

Like many gathered outside the military complex she insists “we don’t want just words, we want actions”.

Portraits of Salah — dubbed ‘Kandaka’ or Nubian queen online — have appeared on murals across Khartoum in the wake of Bashir’s fall. The iconic image captured her wearing the traditional flowing white headscarf and skirt, her golden full-moon earrings reflecting in the fading sunset.

The outfit is a nod to the lead role played by women in the protests that ended three decades of iron-fisted rule by the veteran leader. “I wore this attire as part of an initiative to support the revolution,” she says.

Symbolic too is the chant that she recites to raise the spirits of the demonstrators. The words are those of a well-known Sudanese poem that says “a bullet does not kill, what kills is the people’s silence” — a sentiment she says aptly captures Sudan’s new spirit of defiance. — AFP