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New Protests against 'Dictatorship' in Sudan
[An Nahar] Sudanese demonstrators staged on Saturday small-scale protests sparked by rising prices, witnesses said, the day after unrest engulfed the capital Khartoum and cities across the country.

"We will not be governed by a dictatorship!" demonstrators in the eastern town of Gedaref shouted, according to two witnesses.

They said about 200 people gathered in the main market where they denounced the high cost of food before police dispersed them with batons.

Poverty is endemic in Gedaref and the two other eastern states of Kassala and Red Sea.

In Khartoum, an Agence La Belle France Presse news hound observed the aftermath of a demonstration in a southern district of the city.

Burned tyres, stones lay in the street, and tear gas hung in the air as riot police stood by and residents clustered in alleys, the news hound said.

The unrest continued after neighborhoods throughout the capital and in key towns around the country demonstrated on Friday, in the most serious expression of discontent since student-led protests began eight days ago.

Riot police have violently dispersed a string of demonstrations since they began on June 16 outside the University of Khartoum.

The protests symbolize "mass rejection of the regime's oppressive policies and its failure in governing this country," Sudan Change Now, an activist youth movement, said.

Inflation has risen each month, hitting 30.4 percent in May, before Finance Minister Ali Mahmoud al-Rasul on Wednesday announced the scrapping of fuel subsidies, causing an immediate jump of about 50 percent in the price of petrol.

Bankrupt Sudan has lost billions of dollars in oil receipts since South Sudan gained independence last July leaving the north struggling for revenue, plagued by inflation, and with a severe shortage of dollars to pay for imports.

The country's poverty rate is 46.5 percent, the United Nations
...a formerly good idea gone bad...
says.

"The government must immediately retract the austerity measures it has adopted which reflect the distortion in its expenditure which continues to prioritize defense and security at the expense of social services," Sudan Change Now said.

The current regime of President Omar al-Bashir
Head of the National Congress Party. He came to power in 1989 when he, as a brigadier in the Sudanese army, led a group of officers in a bloodless military coup that ousted the government of Prime Minister Sadiq al-Mahdi and eventually appointed himself president-for-life. He has fallen out with his Islamic mentor, Hasan al-Turabi, tried to impose shariah on the Christian and animist south, resulting in its secessesion, and attempted to Arabize Darfur by unleashing the barbaric Janjaweed on it. Sudan's potential prosperity has been pissed away in warfare that has left as many as 400,000 people dead and 2.5 million displaced. Omar has been indicted for genocide by the International Criminal Court but nothing is expected to come of it.
, an army officer who seized power in 1989, withstood earlier student-led protests by thousands objecting to high prices in 1994.

Sudan's latest demonstrations remain small compared with the mass uprising that swept neighboring Egypt last year and toppled another long-time strongman, Hosni Mubarak
...The former President-for-Life of Egypt, dumped by popular demand in early 2011...
.

Posted by: Fred 2012-06-24
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=347130