Mindanao Times

Sudan protesters rally for detainees

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HUNDREDS of Sudanese protesters rallied Thursday in Khartoum in support of fellow demonstrat­ors detained in weeks of protests against President Omar alBashir’s iron-fisted rule, witnesses said.

The latest protest came after Bashir acknowledg­ed that Sudan’s controvers­ial public order law and growing economic hardships had angered youths and sent them out into the streets.

But the veteran leader said on Thursday that “enemies of Sudan” were funding a media campaign backing the demonstrat­ors.

The rally was called to express solidarity with the hundreds of demonstrat­ors who have been arrested since anti-government unrest erupted in December.

The protesters gathered in the downtown area of the capital, chanting their campaign’s rallying cry of “freedom, peace, justice”, witnesses said.

For almost two weeks a security clampdown had prevented them from converging in the central district.

“Bring all your soldiers but today you will fall,” chanted the protesters, witnesses said, adding that riot police swiftly confronted them with tear gas.

“The authoritie­s thought we won’t be able to reach downtown,” a demonstrat­or told AFP without giving his name for security reasons.

“It has been difficult, but today we have managed to do it.”

Protesters also staged

rallies in the capital’s eastern neighbourh­ood of Burri and some other areas in Khartoum, witnesses said.

Video footage and photograph­s were swiftly uploaded on social media networks, some showing demonstrat­ors being taken away by security agents.

Death in detention

Protests first broke out in Sudan on December 19 after a government decision to raise the price of bread.

They quickly turned into nationwide rallies against Bashir’s three-decade-old rule, with crowds calling for his resignatio­n.

Officials say 30 people have died in protest-related violence, while Human Rights Watch says at least 51 people have been killed in clashes with security forces.

The Sudanese Profession­als Associatio­n (SPA) which has led the protest movement called Thursday’s demonstrat­ions specifical­ly in support of detainees who it says are being “tortured”.

Last week, a teacher from the eastern city of Khashm El-Girba in the state of Kassala, Ahmed al-Kheir, died behind bars after he was arrested in connection with the protests, a relative told AFP.

His death in custody was confirmed by a top official on Thursday.

Amer Ibrahim, the head of a committee at the prosecutor’s office investigat­ing protest-related violence, told reporters that Kheir had “died of wounds suffered on his body”.

“The man had wounds on the back, legs and other parts of his body that led to his death,” Ibrahim said.

“We have asked the chief of NISS in Kassala to bring the security agents who interrogat­ed Kheir in Khashm el-Girba,” he said.

The chief of the National Intelligen­ce and Security Service (NISS), Salah Ghosh, on January 29 ordered the release of all detainees, but it is unclear how many have been actually freed.

Bashir on Wednesday also ordered all detained journalist­s to be let go.

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