Sudan Protests: At Least 32 Killed, 700 Arrested In Worst Unrest In Years

Sudan Arrests 700 In Worst Unrest In Years
FILE - In this Saturday, Sept. 28, 2013 file photo, Sudanese relatives of Salah Sanhory, 26, who was killed on Friday Sept. 27, 2013 by security forces, mourn during his funeral in Khartoum. Protests over subsidy cuts on fuel and food are erupting at a time when President Omar al-Bashir?s regime is facing a dangerous fraying. Opponents, some from former members of his regime, warn that if he does not carry out political reforms, the regime will collapse and with it, this country could fragment even further than it already has. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)
FILE - In this Saturday, Sept. 28, 2013 file photo, Sudanese relatives of Salah Sanhory, 26, who was killed on Friday Sept. 27, 2013 by security forces, mourn during his funeral in Khartoum. Protests over subsidy cuts on fuel and food are erupting at a time when President Omar al-Bashir?s regime is facing a dangerous fraying. Opponents, some from former members of his regime, warn that if he does not carry out political reforms, the regime will collapse and with it, this country could fragment even further than it already has. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)

KHARTOUM, Sept 30 (Reuters) - Seven hundred people have been arrested during a week of the worst unrest in central Sudan in years, the government said on Monday, as protests continued against President Omar Hassan al-Bashir.

One week on from the start of demonstrations against subsidy cuts, police once again used teargas on protesters, this time women students at the Ahfad university in Khartoum's twin-city of Omdurman who chanted "We don't want Bashir", witnesses said.

At a news conference called by the government to put its side of the week's events, Interior Minister Ibrahim Mahmoud Hamad said 34 people had died, far fewer than the up-to-150 estimated by Sudanese human rights activists and some diplomats.

Hamad said police had not used live ammunition against protesters who, he said, had attacked more than 40 petrol stations, 13 buses and several government buildings.

"This has nothing to do with protests," Hamad said and added that there were indications that rebels from Sudan's borderlands were involved in the violence.

He dismissed photographs of shooting victims circulating on the Internet as fakes. "Most pictures on social media are actually from Egypt," he said.

In a tense exchange, journalists challenged Hamad, one of the most powerful ministers in Bashir's cabinet. "Why do you keep lying?" one reporter asked him.

Accusing foreign media of pursuing an anti-Bashir agenda, Sudan has closed the offices of two foreign television news channels: Saudi-owned al-Arabiya and Sky News Arabia, an off-shoot of Britain's Sky News, based in Abu Dhabi.

Information Minister Ahmed Belal Osman accused al-Arabiya of trying to bring an "Arab Spring" to Sudan by misreporting the protests. Several local newspapers have also been closed because of their coverage of the unrest.

The government of Bashir, who seized power in a 1989 coup, has resisted calls to repeal the subsidy cuts that pushed up gasoline prices by almost double overnight.

"We will continue implementing the economic programme," said Khartoum Governor Abdel Rahman al-Khidr.

On Saturday, a group of Islamists and members of Bashir's National Congress Party urged the president to reverse the austerity measures.

The cuts have been driven by a financial crunch since the secession of oil-producing South Sudan in 2011, which deprived Khartoum of three-quarters of the crude output it relied on for state revenues and foreign currency needed to import food.

The protests are much larger than demonstrations last year against corruption, inflation and earlier fuel subsidy cuts. But they are tiny compared to the masses who turned out to oust rulers in Egypt and Tunisia.

Bashir has stayed in power despite rebellions, U.S. trade sanctions, an economic crisis, an attempted coup last year and an indictment from the International Criminal Court on charges of masterminding war crimes in the western region of Darfur. (Reporting by Ulf Laessing and Khalid Abdelaziz; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

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