Khaleej Times

Bashir replaces spy chief amid crackdown on protests

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khartoum — Sudan’s President Omar Al Bashir on Sunday replaced powerful intelligen­ce chief Mohammed Atta, official news agency Suna reported, amid a security crackdown on opposition protests against rising food prices.

Bashir issued a presidenti­al decree announcing Salah Abdallah Mohammed Salih as the new head of the country’s National Intelligen­ce and Security Service (NISS), Suna said.

Salih, widely known as Salih Ghosh, previously headed NISS and was replaced by his then deputy Atta in August 2009.

Atta’s removal came after he returned this week from Cairo where he was part of a Sudanese delegation that held talks with Egyptian officials on several issues including security. In recent weeks NISS has been leading a crackdown on sporadic opposition protests that have erupted since early January against rising food prices.

Protesters have taken to the streets after bread prices increased on the back of a government decision to leave wheat imports to the private sector that triggered a sharp rise in the cost of flour.

NISS agents and anti-riot police have swiftly broken up these rallies held in Khartoum and some other parts of the country.

The agency has also arrested several senior leaders of opposition groups since January in a bid to prevent the protests from spreading.

The authoritie­s have detained several journalist­s covering the protests. Most of them have now been released. “The NISS seems to be arresting just about any journalist it can catch,” Paris-based media watchdog Reporters Without Borders said in a statement this week.

“This wave of arrests and confiscati­ons of newspapers since the start of the year is unpreceden­ted.”

Under Atta, NISS stepped up its overall crackdown on opposition activists and anti-government media coverage.

NISS agents confiscate­d entire print-runs of newspapers that criticised government policies or reported on anti-government protests.

Salih, until Sunday a lawmaker for the ruling National Congress Party, worked on and off for NISS since the 1989 coup that brought Bashir to power.

As its chief, he was credited with building NISS into one of the most powerful security agencies of Bashir’s regime before his dismissal in 2009.

He was later jailed on accusation­s that he had planned a coup to topple Bashir, but no evidence was found against him and the president pardoned him.

Salih is still seen as a powerful and influentia­l figure despite the coup accusation­s that were made against him, Magnus Taylor, a Sudan analyst said.

 ?? AFP file ?? Mohammed Atta. —
AFP file Mohammed Atta. —

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