Sudan Protests:Transitional Military Council and Opposition break talks; Protesters killed

TTT

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At least eight people have been killed in protests that have swept across Sudan for a second consecutive day amid rising public anger over soaring prices and other economic woes.

Authorities on Thursday declared a state of emergency in the eastern city of Gadarif, where six protesters died during clashes with riot police, legislator Al-Tayeb al-Amine Tah told local broadcaster Sudania 24 on Thursday, without providing further details.

"The situation in Qadarif has become dangerous and the protests have developed to include fires and theft and it's now out of control," Mubarak al-Nur, its independent member of parliament, told Reuters news agency.

Two protesters were also killed in the northeastern city of Atbara, where police fired tear gas to disperse demonstrators.

Authorities also imposed a curfew on the city after protesters torched the headquarters of President Omar al-Bashir's National Congress Party (NCP).

"The protests began peacefully and then turned to violence and vandalism ... We declared a state of emergency and a curfew and the closure of schools in the city," Hatem al-Wassilah, the governor of the Nile River state.

Residents told Al Jazeera that the protests were triggered on Wednesday by a government decision to raise bread prices from one Sudanese pound ($0.02) to three Sudanese pounds ($0.063).

Police on Thursday fired tear gas to break up a crowd of around 500 people in the capital, Khartoum, then chased them through back streets and made arrests, a witness said.

Some of the demonstrators called for the :fall of the regime", a slogan that was common during the Arab Spring uprisings that swept through the region in 2011. Police said "limited" protests in Khartoum had been contained.

On Friday, a spokesperson for the Sudanese government said the protests of the two previous days were "dealt with in a civilised way without repression or opposition".

"Peaceful demonstrations were derailed and transformed by infiltrators into subversive activity targeting public institutions and property, burning, destroying and burning some police headquarters," the spokeperson was quoted as saying the official Sudan News Agency.

"The crisis is known to the government and is being dealt with."

Prices triple
Anger has been rising in the country over the rising costs of bread and fuel and other economic hardships, including skyrocketing inflation and limits on bank withdrawals.

Sudan's economy has struggled to recover from the loss of three quarters of its oil output - its main source of foreign currency - since South Sudan seceded in 2011, keeping most of the oilfields.

The country's economic woes have been exacerbated in the past few years, even as the United States lifted 20-year-old trade sanctions on Sudan in October 2017. Washington has kept Sudan on its list of state sponsors of terrorism, which prevents Khartoum from accessing much-needed financial aid from institutions such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.

Bread prices have more than tripled since the start of this year after a government decision to stop state-funded imports of wheat.

Officials had hoped the move would create competition between private companies importing wheat, and therefore act as a check on price rises - but a number of bakeries have since stopped production, citing a lack of flour.




WATCH
24:45
Anger over the rising price of bread in Sudan
This forced the government to increase flour subsidies by 40 percent in November.

Meanwhile, the value of the Sudanese pound has slumped by 85 per cent against the US dollar this year, while inflation soared to nearly 70 per cent in September.

In October, Sudan sharply devalued its currency from 29 pounds to the dollar to 47.5 after a body of banks and money changers set the country's exchange rate.

The move led to further price increases and a liquidity crunch, while the gap between the official and black market rates has continued to widen.

The economic crisis is one of the biggest tests faced by al-Bashir, who took power in a coup in 1989.

In recent months, he has dissolved the government, named a new central bank governor and brought in a package of reforms, but the moves have done little to improve the situation.

In a separate development on Wednesday, leading opposition figure Sadiq al-Mahdi returned to the country after nearly a year in self-imposed exile.

Mahdi was overthrown in 1989 by a group of military commanders close to President Omar Hassan al-Bashir's National Congress Party.

"The regime has failed and there is economic deterioration and erosion of the national currency's value," Mahdi, who heads the Umma party, told thousands of his supporters.

Several killed in Sudan as protests over rising prices continue

His party has argued that Bashir must go in order to improve the country's image abroad and attract crucial investment and aid.

SOURCE: Al Jazeera and news agencies
 

BoBurnz

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:francis: How long till al-Bashir swings? I give it another year. Feels like he's beaten back Karmic justice for long enough.
 

Secure Da Bag

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No one else in Africa bakes bread and can sell it to Sudan? :what:They really ran out of flour? :wtf:

How much of this is an internal coordinated effort to oust al-Bashir?
 

BoBurnz

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No one else in Africa bakes bread and can sell it to Sudan? :what:They really ran out of flour? :wtf:

How much of this is an internal coordinated effort to oust al-Bashir?
Some of it is internal pressure from his enemies, but Sudan and South Sudan have been going through brutal periods of drought and austerity. 2017 destroyed most of the food supply in South Sudan and the constant strife and conflict haven't helped.

I'm honestly amazed they've held on this long tbh.
 

Secure Da Bag

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Some of it is internal pressure from his enemies, but Sudan and South Sudan have been going through brutal periods of drought and austerity. 2017 destroyed most of the food supply in South Sudan and the constant strife and conflict haven't helped.

I'm honestly amazed they've held on this long tbh.

As an aside, the AU really needs to promote some agricultural education or better food markets/trade. This is ridiculous. Especially for a country that borders the damn ocean.
 

88m3

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Slightly ot but I've always found it kind of bizarre a lot of times online and on forums people support Bashir and support what he did in Darfur and South Sudan...


If anyone has any thoughts?
 

TTT

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Bashir is in Syria when this is happening too. I remember Egypt having similar protests before the Arab spring over bread prices. Once you subsidize something you cannot just end it abruptly without causing upheavals. Interesting that the South Sudan oil recepits are biting, I recall reading around the time they split that the South Sudan pipeline would run through Sudan and the Sudanese would make some money off it
 

88m3

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Bashir is in Syria when this is happening too. I remember Egypt having similar protests before the Arab spring over bread prices. Once you subsidize something you cannot just end it abruptly without causing upheavals. Interesting that the South Sudan oil recepits are biting, I recall reading around the time they split that the South Sudan pipeline would run through Sudan and the Sudanese would make some money off it

just happened across this on wikipedia and thought it was interesting


On 18 January 2011, security forces arrested Hassan al-Turabi from Khartoum, presumably at the wake of the recent instability in Sudan’s politics. Al-Turabi commented on the recent price rises in Sudan stating it could result at a "popular uprising" if the unrealistic rises were not reversed. He added that the governments including that of Sudan should take lessons from the recent events in Tunisia.[66]

Hassan Al-Turabi - Wikipedia

:sas2:
 

thatrapsfan

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just happened across this on wikipedia and thought it was interesting


On 18 January 2011, security forces arrested Hassan al-Turabi from Khartoum, presumably at the wake of the recent instability in Sudan’s politics. Al-Turabi commented on the recent price rises in Sudan stating it could result at a "popular uprising" if the unrealistic rises were not reversed. He added that the governments including that of Sudan should take lessons from the recent events in Tunisia.[66]

Hassan Al-Turabi - Wikipedia

:sas2:
Turabi was the ideological architect of Bashir’s coup ironically. He fell out with him in the latter years of his life.

The protests now appear to have turned into a country-wide revolt aimed at Bashir and his regime rather than about bread prices. A military coup may be ahead.

Video of people chanting the people want the downfall of the regime ( famous Arabic Spring chant) after a soccer game tonight:



Some analysis:

 

newworldafro

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I'm intrigued.

Is it authentic?

30 years is definitely a long time.

These type of things always make me nervous.........I guarantee the people in that want more freedom. The question becomes do they want more "freedom" to energize sharia law or more freedom to vote for folks that will give them more freedom in general.

__________________
Look at Libya. A stable developed country with a decades long dictator. No not a Democratic system, but nobody was hungry, massive social programs and cash payments for education, housing land......huge public works project to open up the underground aquifer spigots to green and Make the Sahara Green Again......opportunities/partnerships to help enhance the rest of Africa....

_______________

Now Libya is a hell hole In Libya, Militia Advances on Capital, Raising Prospect of Renewed Civil War
 
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Berniewood Hogan

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I'm intrigued.

Is it authentic?
Sudan doesn't exist. You ever been to Sudan? All these people are actors paid by the deep state. Oh, but Sudan is on all these maps and globes, you say. Maps and globes made by who? For what agenda? The round Earth? Please. Do your own research. Think for yourself. The truth is out there (but not in Sudan, which isn't a real place).
 

newworldafro

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Sudan doesn't exist. You ever been to Sudan? All these people are actors paid by the deep state. Oh, but Sudan is on all these maps and globes, you say. Maps and globes made by who? For what agenda? The round Earth? Please. Do your own research. Think for yourself. The truth is out there (but not in Sudan, which isn't a real place).

Pretend like "uprisings" are always only just random people tired of their government, brehs.

Pretend
like after 100 years of geo-politics there is never any historical account of outside influence in "uprisings", brehs.

Pretend like 100% of posters in HL are literal sheep that have no understanding of the nuances of the world around them, brehs.
________________________________________
Speaking of influence to cause an uprising....

You still upset that Russiagate isn't a thing ain't you. :mjlit:
It's gone be alright. :mjlol:
 
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