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Witnesses say Sudan police firing teargas at Bashir supporters

Witnesses say Sudan police firing teargas at Bashir supporters
Sudanese police are targeting supporters of ousted president Omar al-Bashir with teargas
2 min read
17 April, 2020
Sudan reached a with a power-sharing agreement in August [Anadolu Agency]
police fired teargas on Thursday at backers of ousted president Omar al-Bashir who outside the army command's headquarters in , eyewitnesses said.


The demonstrators were calling for the fall of 's transitional government.

The protesters – who lambasted Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok's recent austerity policies and higher food prices – rallied in defiance of a ban on large gatherings to stem the coronavirus outbreak.

"Dozens arrived in front of the Armed Forces' General Command from the east, carrying signs calling for the downfall of the Hamdok government," an witness told AFP.

"Some [signs] read 'No, no to the government of hunger'."

The brief and small-scale protest was quickly dispersed by police, with army soldiers also posted at the site.

The demonstration comes a year after long-time autocrat Bashir was removed from power following large-scale protests.

The popular uprising led to the formation of a transitional political authority, comprised of military and civilian figures.

Thursday's small rally was the first in which protesters have reached the army's central command area since last June, when a sit-in protest there was bloodily dispersed.

Sudan has announced a three-week curfew starting on Saturday in Khartoum state, including the capital and its twin city Omdurman, after reporting its biggest daily jump in confirmed novel coronavirus cases.

Thirty-two cases of the coronavirus have been officially recorded so far.

Despite Sudan's political transition, which has raised hopes of more reforms, the economy remains in deep crisis.

Many in Sudan still have to queue for hours to buy bread.

Last week, Sudanese authorities announced an increase in bread prices, meaning one Sudanese pound [about two US cents] now buys only a 50-gram loaf of bread, compared to one weighing 70 grams previously.

A tripling of the price of bread was the trigger for the first street protests against Bashir in December 2018.

The demonstrations went on for months before the army deposed the longtime ruler on April 11, 2019.

Hamdok sacked Khartoum governor Ahmed Abdoun, the premier's office announced in a statement later on Thursday.

The governor's duties would be transferred to the minister of federal government until a new appointment is made, it added.

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