MARRAKECH, Morocco: In the early days of Sudan’s 2019 revolution, Shajjane Suliman brought sandwiches, coffee and mint tea to demonstrations in closed-off sections of Khartoum. But as hope made way for despair, she decided more than food was needed to nourish the movement.
Public outcry had sprung up against Sudan’s longtime military dictator and his mismanagement of the country’s economy. Throughout months of demonstrations, hundreds were killed or injured by security forces suppressing protests.