Monday, 17 December 2012

Sudanese opposition


Sudanese opposition expected today, "a political declaration to overthrow the regime"
12-17-2012 12:46 AM
Mohammed AL KHATIM
Planned coalition of Sudanese opposition parties signing, said Monday, "a political declaration to overthrow the regime" after what he described as "possible collapse of the state."
The head of the General Authority for the opposition alliance Farouk Abu Issa correspondent Anatolian news agency after meeting party leaders on Sunday evening, "The survival of the regime one day mean the collapse of the state because of his war racism in Darfur and South Kordofan and the Blue Nile and the rampant corruption and the collapse of the Sudanese economy and international isolation faced by the country."
And Abu Issa saw "that the system is subjected to more than a coup attempt orchestrated by leaders from within unannounced," saying that "a sign of divisions and mistrust between the leaders of the regime and some understanding of the crises that surround the country."

And in turn, said Kamal Omar, Political Secretary to the opposition Popular Congress Party, "The party leaders have formed a committee to draft political declaration in its final form in preparation for launch in a news conference on Monday."
Omar described, in remarks to the reporter and the Anatolia news agency, the political declaration that "the strongest part of the opposition's efforts to overthrow the regime."

The aim of the Political Declaration, which did not mention the opposition of its clauses, to launch the process of filling in the ranks of the opposition and the public to work to bring down the regime of President Omar al-Bashir.

This declaration is different from "constitutional declaration" that spin differences between the opposition on drafting and targeted traffic in the country safely after the toppling of the regime.

Abu Issa pointed out that the party leaders agreed to resolve differences over what they saw on "constitutional declaration" to be signed within a week and strengthen institutions and unify its factions Alliance to accelerate the fall of the regime.

And saw the capital, Khartoum, and a number of states of the Sudan in the past week a series of student protests against the backdrop of the killing of four students in mysterious circumstances where protesters accused the security services بتصفيتهم while police said they found the bodies of drowned in a canal.
The Security Service arrested Abu Issa on Thursday and Saturday twice before being released and interrogated on charges for the security apparatus to liquidate students as Abu Issa said to the reporter and the Anatolia news agency earlier.
A number of student and youth organizations that protests, which began last Sunday will not stop and the roof is to "overthrow the regime" but not renewed protests since Thursday, and observers described it as not represent a serious threat to the regime.
In June, and in July two years saw the capital, Khartoum, and different parts of Sudan protests inspired slogans of the Arab Spring because of harsh economic measures adopted by the government included the removal of subsidies on fuel and increase taxes and flotation of the national currency, but the security services managed to contain them.
Since that time, opposition vows wider government protests ousted by which mocked government leaders constantly say that the opposition parties do not enjoy popular bail.
The opposition is a loose alliance of more than 20 opposition parties and civil society institution most notably the National Umma Party led by Sadiq al-Mahdi and the Popular Congress led by Islamic Hassan al-Turabi.

Anatolia

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