You see? As soon as you start talking about overthrowing the government, the regime, predictably, entrenches its position, becomes stubborn and defiant of the popular will, and any issues you raise will be marginalized.
Frankly, I am distrustful of any movement that seeks the overthrow of a regime that is an official Western enemy. It is very difficult to suppress the suspicion that this movement is either manufactured with the help of Western intelligence, or at least manipulated by them. The demands of the Civil Disobedience campaign in Sudan are, of course, contrary to the interests of the West; the toppling of the regime, however, is not. Voicing popular demands can be used to build support for a movement that will ultimately serve Western interests, with the demands falling by the wayside.
I would urge the leaders of the campaign in Sudan to abandon the demand for the departure of Omar Bashir, and reassert the socioeconomic demands above all else.
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/sudans-president-bashir-warns-protesters-hiding-behind-keyboards-whatsapp-will-not-topple-him-1596043
External Context سياق خارجي
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/sudans-president-bashir-warns-protesters-hiding-behind-keyboards-whatsapp-will-not-topple-him-1596043