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Sudan police break up new protests

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Khartoum: Sudanese police broke up several protests held after Friday prayers, as security agents arrested a top opposition leader following calls for more demonstrations against a rise in bread prices.


Angry crowds have taken to the streets in Khartoum and other cities since December 19 after a government decision to hike the cost of bread.


Nineteen people have been killed so far in the protests, the government said, and the UN on Friday called on the authorities in Sudan to investigate the deaths.


Police fired tear gas at hundreds of worshippers who staged demonstrations after Friday


prayers in several cities, including Khartoum and its twin city of Omdurman on the west bank of the Nile, witnesses said.


Photographs posted by activists on social media networks showed thick plumes of smoke rising from some neighbourhoods in Khartoum as protesters burnt garbage and tyres.


In Omdurman, crowds of worshippers chanted “Freedom, Peace, Justice” as they poured out of a mosque belonging to main opposition National Umma Party, a witness said.


But they were quickly confronted by anti-riot police, the witness added.


The protests came as opposition groups called for more anti-government rallies to be held over the next few days.


A group of opposition parties met late on Thursday and agreed to “push for more protests” in the coming days, the Sudanese Communist Party said in a statement.


Several opposition party members have been arrested amid a crackdown on demonstrations.


The opposition Sudanese Congress Party said that a few hours after protests began on Friday its chief Omar el Digeir was arrested by security agents.


“He has been taken to an unknown location,” the party said in a statement.


The Sudanese Writers’ Association said that well-known poet Mohamed Taha had also been arrested on Tuesday after he participated in a protest in Khartoum.


“We don’t know his whereabouts,” the association said.


The Sudanese journalists network said that two journalists were detained.


Among those killed in the protests — which first erupted in towns and villages and later spread to Khartoum — were two security personnel, according to the government.


Most died during “incidents of looting”, while 219 people were wounded, said government spokesman Boshara Juma, adding that no deaths had been reported in Khartoum so far.


 — AFP


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