The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Sudan opposition leader calls on Bashir to end emergency rule, resign

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KHARTOUM: Sudan’s top opposition leader urged President Omar al-Bashir to end a state of emergency and resign, calling for widespread rallies the next day against Bashir’s 30-year rule.

Sadiq al-Mahdi, former prime minister and chief of Sudan’s main opposition National Umma Party, called on Bashir to dissolve all constituti­onal institutio­ns and set up a 25-member council to govern Sudan.

“I call on all our people to participat­e in widespread rallies tomorrow, on April 6, to meet the call of their homeland,” Mahdi told worshipper­s during the weekly Muslim prayers, according to a statement issued by his party.

“I call on President Bashir to resign, dissolve all consitutio­nal institutio­ns and form a council of 25 people to govern the country,” he said.

Mahdi also told scores of worshipper­s at a mosque in Omdurman, the twin city of capital Khartoum, that Bashir should end a state of emergency he imposed in February in a bid to end protests that have rocked the country since December.

Witnesses said worshipper­s then staged a small demonstrat­ion outside the mosque but were quickly dispersed by police who fired teargas.

Bashir swept to power in an Islamist-backed coup in 1989 that toppled Mahdi’s civilian government.

Mahdi has since spent several periods in exile, but returned to Sudan in December on the same day the protests began.

Late on Friday, Bashir held a meeting with political allies and members of civil society groups where he said the issues concerning the country’s youth need to be addressed.

“We need to have a dialogue with our youth, we have to go to them,” said Bashir at the meeting held at the presidenti­al palace in Khartoum.

“We need to have a dialogue about how the country can be ruled now and in the future.”

The country’s youths, majority of them women, have been at the forefront of the protests against his rule.

Angry demonstrat­ors have accused Bashir’s government of mismanagin­g the country’s economy.

Anger had been mounting for years over soaring food prices and regular shortages of fuel and foreign currency.

It spilt onto the streets on December 19 following a government decision to triple the price of bread, quickly sparking nationwide rallies against Bashir’s rule. On Feb 22, Bashir imposed a state of emergency after an initial crackdown on protests failed to quell the demonstrat­ions.

In recent weeks, the protests have shrunk in scale and intensity, but organisers have called for nationwide rallies on Saturday.

Protest organisers chose April 6 for nationwide rallies as it was the day of a 1985 uprising that toppled the regime of president Jaafar Nimeiri. — AFP

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