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Sudan police fire tear gas as protesters launch new rallies

Thursday January 31 2019
Protest

A Sudanese protester holds a placard with an anti-corruption slogan during an anti-government demonstration in the capital Khartoum's twin city of Omdurman on January 31, 2019. Police fired tear gas at demonstrators as fresh protests demanded an end to President Omar al-Bashir's three-decade rule. PHOTO | AFP

By AFP

Sudanese police fired tear gas at crowds of demonstrators in the capital and other cities on Thursday, witnesses said, as fresh protests demanded an end to President Omar al-Bashir's three-decade rule.

Chanting "freedom, peace, justice" -- the rallying cry of the protest movement that has rocked Sudan for weeks -- demonstrators took to the streets in both Khartoum and its twin city Omdurman.

"Riot police are firing tear gas at protesters in north Khartoum but they are still demonstrating," a witness told AFP, declining to reveal his identity out of fear for his safety.

"The police is firing tear gas but we will not stop," said a demonstrator from north Khartoum.

Plumes of smoke

In the capital's eastern neighbourhood of Burri -- site of regular protests -- demonstrators clapped, whistled and banged plastic water bottles, as some set tyres and tree trunks on fire, sending thick plumes of smoke into the sky, witnesses said.

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Protesters also gathered in the Red Sea city of Port Sudan, in several villages in Jazeera State, south of the capital, and in the central town of Madani, witnesses said.

Witnesses said police fired tear gas after "many demonstrators gathered at the main bus station of Port Sudan".

Protesters in Madani, where several rallies have been staged since December, were also met with tear gas, witnesses said.

"The police are chasing us in streets and alleys. They are firing tear gas but we are still demonstrating," a protester said.

Price of bread

The Sudanese Professionals Association, which has headed the protest movement, has called for daily demonstrations but few have been reported in recent few days.

The rallies began in the farming town of Atbara on December 19 over the government's decision to triple the price of bread.

They quickly mushroomed into nationwide protests widely seen as the biggest threat to President Bashir's rule since he took power in an Islamist-backed coup in 1989.

Officials say 30 people have died in violence related to the protests.

Human rights groups say children and medics have been among more than 40 people killed since December 19.


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