Sudan police disperse protesters with tear gas on sixth day of unrest

Sudan police disperse protesters with tear gas on sixth day of unrest
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By Reuters
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KHARTOUM (Reuters) - Sudanese police used tear gas to disperse soccer fans who tried to stage a protest as soon as they exited a match in the capital Khartoum on Monday, the sixth day of anti-government protests in which at least 12 people have been killed.

Security in the capital had been fortified ahead of the planned protest. Car and pedestrian traffic in the city were reduced on Monday.

President Omar al-Bashir warned citizens against responding to "attempts to instil frustration", his first public comments since the protests began on Wednesday last week.

The demonstrations are the biggest in several years against Bashir's 29-year rule, with protesters enraged over price rises, shortages of basic goods and a cash crisis. Protests on Sunday also followed a football match.

The official Sudan News Agency said Bashir had met security aides on Monday. It quoted him as saying the state was "continuing with economic reforms that provide citizens with a decent life".

Demonstrations have repeatedly targeted the offices of Bashir's party and called for him to step down.

Government officials have blamed the unrest on "infiltrators". Officials and witnesses have recorded at least 12 deaths, though exact casualty figures are hard to ascertain.

Monday saw mostly smaller protests, including two in Jazeera state, where Bashir was due to visit on Tuesday for a three-day trip.

He will travel to the state's north to open a hospital, avoiding a visit to its capital Madani which was one of the central locations of unrest during a wave of similar protests in September 2013, when scores of people were killed in the city.

Eight unofficial unions of professionals planned a protest on Tuesday in central Khartoum less than 1 km from the presidential palace. Organisers said they plan to march to the palace and hand the presidency a memo calling for Bashir to step down immediately.

One of Sudan's top opposition parties, Umma, backed the plans. Its leader Sadiq al-Mahdi, Sudan's last democratically elected prime minister until he was overthrown by Bashir in a coup in 1989, returned to Sudan on Wednesday and addressed thousands of supporters, calling for a democratic transition.

(Reporting by Ali Mirghani and Hesham Hajali; Writing by Yousef Saba; Editing by Peter Graff)

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