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’50 killed’ in Sudan protests

Sudanese police killed at least 50 people this week, often "shooting to kill", when they moved to quell angry protests over the government's cut of fuel subsidies, two rights groups said. Hundreds of Sudanese activists, protesters,

Sudanese police killed at least 50 people this week, often “shooting to kill”, when they moved to quell angry protests over the government’s cut of fuel subsidies, two rights groups said.

Hundreds of Sudanese activists, protesters, students and members of opposition parties have also been arrested amid the violence, according to a joint statement by the two groups – Amnesty International and the African Centre for Justice and Peace Studies (ACJPS).

Anti-government protests first erupted in the town of Wad Madani south of Sudan’s capital, then spread to Khartoum and seven other cities in the country’s east following president Omar al-Bashir’s announcement last Sunday of new austerity measures, including the lifting of subsidies – a move that instantly almost doubled prices on fuel products.

A gallon (3.8 litres) of diesel sprang from eight Sudanese pounds (£1.13) to 14 pounds (£1.97). A gallon of petrol that was 12 pounds rose to 21, while a canister of cooking gas that was 14 pounds is now 25.

Mr al-Bashir – an autocrat who has ruled for nearly 24 years after taking over power in a military coup – justified the new measures, saying they would rescue the country from “collapse”.

Sudan lost most of its main oil-producing territory when South Sudan broke off and became an independent state in 2011. The two countries are now embroiled in a standoff over an oil-rich region claimed by both and the northern state’s threat to halt a key oil transportation route from the southern state.

Mr al-Bashir’s announcement set off riots, with angry protesters torching police and petrol stations, as well as setting fire to government buildings. Hundreds of students, meanwhile, marched in the streets, chanting anti-government slogans and calling for Mr al-Bashir’s removal.

The violence gripped the nation for three days and on Thursday, authorities deployed army troops around vital installations and petrol stations in Khartoum.

Residents prepared for more potential violence and protests expected on Friday, particularly after worshippers flood out of mosques following the weekly Islamic prayer.

Sudanese police said a total of 29 people, including policemen, were killed during the week’s riots and that hundreds were arrested after police stormed “hideouts of gangs and rioters”. The police statement was carried by the official SUNA news agency late on Thursday.

The two right groups, Amnesty and ACJPS, said they documented 50 deaths in two days of rioting, Tuesday and Wednesday. Most of those killed were aged between 19 and 26, the groups said.

ACJPS cited one witness as saying that he saw two bodies with gunshot wounds to the back, “suggesting that the deceased had been shot whilst running away”.

“Shooting to kill – including by aiming at protesters’ chests and heads – is a blatant violation of the right to life, and Sudan must immediately end this violent repression,” said Amnesty’s deputy chief for Africa, Lucy Freeman.

A precise death toll from the violence was almost impossible to obtain, partly due to a media blackout that prevented journalists from obtaining records and a 24-hour internet outage on Wednesday.

It was unclear whether the outage was government-orchestrated and linked to the rioting but the cut recalled a similarly dramatic outage in Egypt, Sudan’s neighbour, when authorities shut off internet access during that country’s 2011 uprising.

Youth activists and doctors at a Khartoum hospital told the Associated Press that at least 100 people had died in the protests since Monday.

Sayyed Qanata, a physician at the main hospital in Khartoum’s flashpoint Omdurman district, a longtime opposition stronghold, said his hospital recorded 113 deaths in Khartoum alone. Those include the 38 bodies he himself counted, Mr Qanata said.

Amgad Farid, a spokesman for the Change Now youth movement, said the organisation compiled a list of 81 protesters killed on Wednesday alone in Khartoum.

A protest group, Girifna, which is Arabic for “Fed Up”, also put the number of dead at 100 in a posting on its website.

Amnesty and ACJPS said chief editors of several Khartoum newspapers were summoned by authorities and instructed to only publish police statements on the violence. One paper, Al-Sudani, was banned on Thursday, reportedly for its anti-government stance.

AP

Aljazeera: Police fire on funeral in Sudan amid unrest

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25 COMMENTS
  • Suleiman Salim September 29, 2013

    Eritrea is an anchor of stability in our region. anta Eritreawi mKwan kndey yTEm. God/Allah bless Eritrea.

    • Genet September 29, 2013

      Suleman, is that the reason so many Eritreans flee Eritrea on daily basis?
      Another lost mind, poor guy!

      Haftka Genet

  • Saleh September 29, 2013

    Suleiman must a PFDJ psychophant groupie who lives on the handouts of the dictator. How can Eritrea be an anchor of stability when every breathing Eritrean is saying girifna fedup with Isaias incompetence. The dictator mantra after him Eritrea can go to hell. So Suleiman the cheap “shuit’ is trying to deceive the gullible deki Ere if there are any left these days,.

    • Suleiman Salim September 29, 2013

      Saleh must be a Woyane sychophant groupie who lives on the handouts of his Tigrayan masters.

  • Cali September 29, 2013

    It is likely the Arab-slave of the Islamist fascist regime of Omar al Beshir may survive by committing more crimes as the genocide it had committed before on the black Muslims of Darfur, Nubia mountains, Abiye, eastern Sudan, the animists of south Sudan …
    This Jihadist fascist Arab slave had so far killed half a million in the Muslim Darfur but not a single Arab League member, the Arab media, Arab religious institutions or the Abid websites had condemned or posted these crimes on their websites.
    Just like the heinous rapes and slavery of Eritreans in the Arab world.

  • Yerhiwo September 29, 2013

    I hope this demonstration shifts to Eritrea….and hope the people chant “Dictator Isaias Afwerki is a killer”. Wedi Medhin Berad is worse than Bashir. HGDEF policy is to push native Eritreans outside of their home using SAWA and National Service. Poor Eritreans! we are spread everywhere that we are unable to demonstrate against this brutal regime.

    Wake up Eritreans!!! Stand up for your right, for your freedom, for your land, for your people, etc. DIA, Kisha, Monkey, Charlie, Woldu Barya, etc. and HGDEF supporters are mostly non-Eritreans who are there to destroy Eritrea.

    • Bokre September 29, 2013

      YA,
      Here is YG in his words:
      “On the right stage – in mainland Eritrea – the young men that we see agitating in diaspora are eerily absent. Even though oblivious of it, the Warsai in diaspora happen to have outsourced the dirty job of ushering regime change to their fathers and mothers back at home.”

    • Suleiman Salim September 29, 2013

      Yerhiwo( Mr No Hope )

      You want Eritrea to be defenceless.Mr. WOYANE AGENT, we know you and your aim very well. National Service is important for the survival and growth of our country.Every Eritrean is aware of that fact and supports the efforts of the Eritrean government in that direction.

  • Bokre September 29, 2013

    There are many reasons why this will never happen in Eritrea in the short run. In a land where its cities and towns are denuded of its youth, and the only youth, mostly very old, are in the never ending military service, no mass uprising will take place.
    Here is, why, one by Zekre Lebona:

    http://asmarino.com/articles/951-mass-uprising-deficit-in-post-liberation-societies-the-eritrean-case

    • Suleiman Salim September 29, 2013

      Bokre,

      Are you trying to transfer the whole of Asmarino to Assenna? Asmarino ktASu delya dya?

  • Bokre September 29, 2013

    Why this may not take place in Eritrea, unless Issaias suddenly drops dead or the neighbors invade, read YG’s: Discontent at the top: Mismatching disjointed Eritrea (I and II)

    http://asmarino.com/articles/1685-i-discontent-at-the-top-mismatching-disjointed-eritrea51

  • Bokre September 29, 2013

    In “Mismatching disjointed Eritrea”, YG writes:

    Mismatched Eritrea

    If a band made up of a mute and a cripple advertizes a show that involves singing and dancing, it would be easy for a prospective audience to picture how that division of labor would go. Even though it would be easy to imagine either of the duo or both playing musical instruments, the only way to imagine them in the act of singing and dancing would be for the cripple to sing (for he has no legs to dance with) and for the mute to dance (for he has no voice to sing with). But if, on the real stage, it is actually the mute who tries to sing and the cripple who tries to dance, one can claim that the audience has been a victim of its “normalized” imagination. It got it wrong simply because it took for granted that it was dealing with rationally normal, even though physically handicapped, people and came up with the only plausible scenario under the circumstances. How else would it think that a mute and a cripple would attempt to pull off such an undoable act? So is it with the Eritrean opposition in diaspora: only by normalizing the abnormal state of Eritrea would they keep on mismatching agents of change and the roles they are supposed to play in the division of labor they imagine that turns every contemplated action to usher regime change into a not-doable one. And given the numerous possible agents of change in regard to Eritrea, the mismatch could turn out to be quite dizzying and intangibly bizarre. The various fantasy scenarios that the opposition has been circulating since the Jan 21st Forto event are often a result of this “normalized” mismatching.

    One of the fantastic things that the Forto event did was that it inspired the diaspora opposition into a flurry of activities: demonstrations in the streets of many capitals, occupation of embassies across the globe, full-house Paltalks in euphoric mood, increased Arbi Harnet calls to Eritrea, websites gone wild with “breaking news” and possible scenarios, endless chattering at Facebook, etc. Given these flurry of events reminiscent of Arab Spring, one is tempted to say of the inspired that these are indeed the real agents of change. Given that they are overwhelmingly male, young and educated – similar to the demographic scenes in Arab Spring – one would assert that these could really “sing and dance”. But, sadly, we wouldn’t dare say that of them simply because they happen to be on the wrong stage. On the right stage – in mainland Eritrea – the young men that we see agitating in diaspora are eerily absent. Even though oblivious of it, the Warsai in diaspora happen to have outsourced the dirty job of ushering regime change to their fathers and mothers back at home. One cannot imagine children, women and the old (the demographics of urban Eritrea) marching with their clenched fists through streets of Asmara; at least, not until they see the regime literally crumbling around them. Nor can one assign that job to the gun-carrying rank and file soldiers, as they happen to be overwhelmingly illiterate and middle-aged peasants and pastoralists, abandoned as they are by their younger and educated counterparts in a thoroughly hollowed out army. If so, one has to reluctantly assign that job to the Shaebia family – as has been clearly the case in Sirihit Forto – thereby making the most important correction in the mismatching puzzle. Not only were the mutineers from the army, they were also led by colonels; and, for that, from the old guards of Shaebia – a point that those with “grass-roots revolution” in their minds seem to miss.

    Read in full: http://asmarino.com/articles/1685-i-discontent-at-the-top-mismatching-disjointed-eritrea51

  • ab ab September 29, 2013

    if there is any protest started in Eritrea no one will shoot to kill protesters instead police will join it will their flashing. but the only worry is if the dictator puts the DEMHIT infront of our people there can be war b/n them and eritrean army.

    • ERITRAWIT September 29, 2013

      ab ab good luck to sudan people don’t worry our people are ready for change to wipe out this devil we are much much bigger than demhit even my grandma she will be in the center with berbere the devil man he will pay for all his crime he committed.

    • Suleiman Salim September 29, 2013

      ab ab,

      “if there is any protest started ..”

      Nothing is going to start. afka hah abilka aytSebe anta beAl kfu’ tmnit:: DEMHIT have a job to do in Ethiopia.

  • Truly Truly i say to you September 29, 2013

    I absolutely share with “ab ab” view. The reason Isayas protected by DEMHIT army, he lets inter many DEMHIT and many Ethiopian defected army including if you see in March 24, 2013 to those defected in Eritrea— A total of 29 Ethiopian commando forces, who were trained in Blaten Special Force Institute , in the name of to liberate Tigray and Ethiopia, like many meek( Fool Hamasenaites,some of Seraye opportunists, few of Akeleguzay and other trips by the devil serpent Timbinay ( wolf with sheep skin) because deceived as they thinking it is not to liberate Tigray or Ethiopia; but Isayas because knows one day the people of Eritrea as will start for revolt to demand and fight for their rights, because he not trusts the Eritrean army to defend him; with DEMHIT Army to avenge the possible coming revolt it is.
    There is no doubt this the Sudanese protest soon or later as will shift to Eritrea.
    We Eritreans have to acknowledge the fact that, the bible as says; ” without shedding of blood as there is no forgiveness! (Hebrew, 9; 22) meant, “without paying sacrifice, there is no liberty!”
    Our people up to know they died like a dog meaninglessly in Sinai and Mediterranean Sea. But from those in Mediterranean Sea perished, if half of them their blood were be shaded by protest demonstration inside Asmara ; believe me Eritrea were be already since long time ago liberated.

  • Saleh September 29, 2013

    Why do people keep refering to YG as the big thinker?. YG is neither an intellectual nor a sane individual. He is a loner, contrarian, and argumentative by nature. This is from a guy who went to school with him close to fifty years ago in a primary catholic school in Mendefera.He has identity crisis as his real ‘mebokulu’ is south of Mereb.By discounting the Ghedli era he is trying to hand over Eritrea to his cousins from south of Eritrea. So Yosief was a confused kid when he was in primary school and he is still confused in his advanced years. For him to be taken seriously he needs to advance Eritrean interests from the perspective of Eritrea as an independent state and not as an appendage to ‘mama Ethiopia’ as he never fails to do in his long winded writing style..Then again those who are of mixed heritage no one is preventing them from crossing over the river of Mereb– but crossing they should do alone.That includes Yosief Ghebrehiwet. The choice is up to him.

    • Kombishtato September 29, 2013

      Salih wrote, “YG has identity crisis as his real ‘mebokulu’ is south of Mereb.By discounting the Ghedli era he is trying to hand over Eritrea to his cousins from south of Eritrea. So Yosief was a confused kid …”

      Poor Salih,
      who has just arrived from Tigray with his parents as a refugee in Keren? Who is asking the Kerenites to burn their own Bilen and Tigre languages? Not yg!
      Who is burning Eritrean languages such as Tigre to walk, talk and smell like the Arabs? Not yg!
      Who is shouting Eritrea is an Arab nation? not yg!
      Who is suffering from identity crisis? Salih needs to find his Arab masters.

    • Kabbire September 29, 2013

      Saleh is talking about ancestral village Adi or ‘mebokolu’. If this is important, where is your ‘mebokol’ Saleh? Do you have Adi? Does Salih Gadi Johar, Salih Yonous have Adi in Eritrea? Where?

      ዝብኢ ኣብ ዘይፈልጥዎ ዓዲ ኸይዱ ኣጎዛ ኣንጽፉለይ ኢሉ ይበሃል። 🙂

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