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Sunday, June 8, 2014

Sudan arrests 2nd opposition leader


          Sudan arrests 2nd opposition leader

2014-06-09 
(Shutterstock)
(Shutterstock)

Khartoum - Sudanese authorities on Sunday arrested the head of Sudan's opposition Congress Party, a party official said, weeks after the arrest of another opposition leader, Sadiq al-Mahdi, sparked violent anti-government protests.

The arrests are likely to hurt national dialogue talks that were called by President Omar al-Bashir in order to ease tension among Sudan's political parties ahead of parliamentary and presidential polls due next year.

Opposition parties in Sudan have voiced concern about the government's mismanagement of Darfur, accusing it of killing civilians during a recent surge of violence in the region.

Western diplomats and Sudanese security sources estimate that thousands have been killed in clashes between militias supporting and opposing the government in Darfur since March.

"The police forces detained our party head Ibrahim al-Sheikh for participating in a political lecture yesterday night," the Congress Party's General Secretary Abdel Kayoum Awad told Reuters.

Awad said the prosecution has charged Sheikh with undermining the constitutional order by spreading "harmful lies" after he blamed the government for the recent violence in Darfur in a speech on Saturday.

National dialogue talks 

Sudan has been witnessing a wave of small yet frequent youth protests since March. On Sunday, one man was killed in clashes between the police and protesters upset by a long cut of water supplies from their Mayo district, south of Khartoum.

Law and order has collapsed in much of the huge Darfur region, where mainly African tribes took up arms in 2003 against the Arab-led government in Khartoum, which they accused of discriminating against them.

The conflict killed 300 000 people and displaced around two million, according to the United Nations. Bashir has a pending arrest warrant against him from the International Criminal Court on charges of masterminding genocide and other war crimes in Darfur.

The charge of undermining the constitutional order, which Mahdi has also been accused of, can lead to the death penalty, a government official said.

Mahdi, a former prime minister, was arrested on 17 May. He was also charged with insulting the state security forces by accusing them of participating in the Darfur unrest.

In response to the arrest, Mahdi's Umma party withdrew from the national dialogue talks.

Since then hundreds of Sudanese have gathered for protests after Friday prayers, calling for Mahdi's release and chanting "The people want to change the regime" and "Freedom, peace and justice".

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