A woman attending a New Sudan Foundation (Tasis) rally in Kauda on Friday said the movement has greatly benefited the people, especially women in the Nuba Mountains region.
Kaka Mohammed said the Tasis government has protected marginalized communities from the aerial bombardments once carried out by the Khartoum regime.
She called on the Tasis leadership to remain steadfast in its struggle to liberate the Sudanese people from repression, emphasizing that Sudanese women stand firmly behind the movement.
Ms. Mohammed described the Nuba woman as “strong as a stone” and appealed to the Khartoum government to cooperate in achieving comprehensive peace in Sudan.
A student representative at the rally said they attended to express their solidarity with the Tasis movement.
Kauda was one of the areas most affected by deadly aerial bombardments between 2012 and 2016, during which schools and public facilities were destroyed and many lives lost.
In the early 2000s, a bomb dropped by Sudanese government forces killed a dozen schoolchildren at Saint Vincent Primary School, whose mass grave now stands at the entrance of the school as a testimony to the atrocities committed by Khartoum.
Supporters of the Tasis government have pledged to continue their struggle through peaceful or armed means to liberate Sudan from ongoing violence and injustice now in its third year.