“Our country is going through a dangerous turning point that may threaten its entire survival if it is not remedied soon,” Mr. Hamdok warned at the time.
Sudan has not had a civilian prime minister since his departure, and the military has found it difficult to manage the country as donors and international agencies suspended billions of dollars in aid and debt relief.
An estimated 15 million people, or over a third of the population, are facing severe food insecurity, according to the World Food Program. Floods have displaced tens of thousands of people, and the resurgence of large-scale ethnically motivated attacks in Darfur has left hundreds dead.
The streets continue to be gripped by protests as the loosely-connected resistance committees defy the military’s grip on power. At least 116 protesters have been killed since the seizure of power last year, according to a tally kept by activists, with many of them nursing critical wounds or remaining behind bars.
Several resistance committees called on their members to march in the streets on Monday against the signing of the agreement.
“The revolution continues,” Bassam Mohamed, a university student who was attending a protest in the capital Khartoum, said in a text message. Mr. Mohamed, 23, said the resistance committees rejected the deal and will continue protesting until they attain “popular democracy that gives us the right to bread, to health, to education, to work and to housing.”
Rights activists said they were dismayed the first agreement did not give precedence to justice or security reform, particularly given the widespread crackdown on protesters since last year.