The publication of the clip coincided with reports of liquidations in the area Khartoum Bahri Over the past few days, there have been ongoing arrest campaigns targeting a number of activists and those who reject the war.
The huge amount of hashtags and responses that were launched within a few hours brought back memories of the million-man marches that were organized by the Sudanese during the December Revolution, which toppled the government in April 2019. Brotherhood Which lasted three decades.
Amid great controversy about the causes of the war that has been ongoing in Sudan for about 18 months, and increasing accusations against the Brotherhood organization of igniting it in retaliation against the civil forces that led the revolution, one of the Brotherhood members came out on Sunday evening, threatening the Sudanese with death and sending serious threats, but he was forced under the pressure of critical tweets to publish a second clip denying There are those threats.
The Brotherhood member contradicted himself in the new recording, claiming that his words in the first recording were distorted, while the phrases in it were clearly clear and included explicit threats.
The Brotherhood member said in his first recording, “In this war, men died and others were captured. We will never hear anyone say, ‘Civilization and empty chaos…’ We will return him to God (we will kill him).”
In addition to the ambassadorial campaign rejecting these tweets, human rights and popular groups issued condemning statements, considering that these threats come within the framework of an organized campaign to eliminate those who reject the war and those who support civil transformation.
“And he said”Resistance revolutionaries gatheredIn a statement, “We saw and heard on social media threats made by a group of terrorist Brotherhood members who heralded the end of the December Revolution, thinking that this senseless war was the end of the revolution (…) We will remain resistant forever and we will be a poisoned dagger in the eyes of terrorist groups (…) “Whenever the senseless war stops, millions of Sudanese will chant in the streets.”