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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

It was time for Bashir to go, residents of home village say

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Hosh Bannaga, Sudan: Residents of deposed Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir’s home village are still coming to terms with his ouster, but most agree that the time had come for him to go.


“I’m from his village and I did not benefit from his rule,” said Mohamedali Abdel Hamid, a farmer from Hosh Bannaga dressed in a traditional Sudanese robe.


The village, on the Nile some 170 kilometres north of Khartoum, was Bashir’s childhood home. He was born there on New Year’s Day 1944.


“Only his family relatives benefitted” from his rule, Hamid told a correspondent who visited the village.


“They have cars, farms and cows, but we did not benefit. I don’t feel sad that he is gone.”


In power for three decades, 75-year-old Bashir was ousted on April 11 by the army after months of protests against his iron-fisted rule.


A career soldier, he swept to power in a coup in 1989, toppling the elected government of prime minister Sadiq al Mahdi, who is now chief of Sudan’s main opposition National Umma Party and part of the protest movement.


One of Africa’s longest-serving presidents, Bashir was renowned for his populist touch, insisting on being close to crowds and addressing them in colloquial Sudanese Arabic.


But his fate was sealed when the army bowed to the demands of tens of thousands of protesters in Khartoum and elsewhere, nearly four months into demonstrations sparked by a tripling of bread prices.


The protests have not extended to Hosh Bannaga’s sand strewn streets. But Naseer Ibrahim, another villager, was glad to see the back of Bashir.


“Look at the condition of the village — even the school where he studied was rebuilt only last year after a child fell into a toilet,” he said.


Most homes in Hosh Bannaga are made from mud, but Bashir’s family residence — an extended one-storey building with a courtyard — is one of the village’s few well built structures. Most streets amount to sand tracks, while a single road connects the village to the highway leading to Khartoum.


Hosh Bannaga has a hospital that provides medical aid to nearby villages, but part of it is still under construction.


The village has a community centre for women and children set up by Bashir’s first wife, Fatima Khalid.


In the scorching heat of the afternoon, most people stay indoors.


The village has a small market that sells locally grown vegetables.


Located not far from Sudan’s famed Meroe pyramids, archaeological relics have often been uncovered around Hosh Bannaga. — AFP


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