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Signs are mounting that Abdel Fattah al-Burhan’s army is reversing the democratic gains of the 2019 uprising, and activists are calling it a full-blown counter-revolution.
Sudanese women demonstrate against security forces’ use of violence against anti-coup protesters in the city of Omdurman, Sudan, on June 25.
Simon Marks and
Mohammed Alamin
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The tiny congregation was deep in prayer when armed officers stormed their church. Four men, converts to Christianity from Islam, were brought to a local police station. All were charged with apostasy, which can carry the death penalty.
Such oppression is becoming more prevalent in Sudan, a country that was supposed to have put years of harsh Islamist rule behind it. This summer has also seen authorities in a southern state impose a death-by-stoning sentence for adultery and the emergence of a puritanical police force that is reinforcing laws that banned women from wearing trousers and has cracked down on alcohol dealers in the capital, Khartoum.