Al-Bashir vows to squash SPLM-N as Sudan’s army says ready to take
rebels’ stronghold
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August 4, 2011 (KHARTOUM) – President Omer al-Bashir of Sudan has
threatened to quell any military attacks by the rebel Sudan People’s
Liberation Movement North (SPLM-N) as the country’s army declared
readiness to seize the SPLM-N’s main stronghold in the Blue Nile
State.


Sudan’s President Omar Hassan al-Bashir waves as he arrives to attend
the annual Presidential Ramadan breakfast in Khartoum August 17, 2011.
Sudan’s southern state of Blue Nile on Thursday became the country’s
latest flashpoint after Sudan’s army (SAF) clashed with forces of the
SPLM-N led by the state’s governor Malik Agar who was elected to his
position in April 2010.

As fighting intensified, al-Bashir declared a state of emergency in
the state and sacked Agar, prompting the SPLM-N to vow resistance to
the ‘coup’ against the elected governor.

Addressing a gathering of political parties’ representatives in
Khartoum on Sunday, al-Bashir said that the government had run out of
patience in the face of SPLM-N’s provocations.

He claimed that Agar had sought to scuttle the popular consultation
vote which the government implemented in the Blue Nile pursuant to the
provisions of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA).

According to al-Bashir, the legislative assembly in the Blue Nile
rejected demands of autonomy for the region, adding that the
government tried not to replicate the scenario of South Kordofan in
Blue Nile.

He told his audience that the government was exerting efforts to help
those affected by the events in the Blue Nile and “purge it of
outlaws.”

Addressing the same gathering, Sudan’s minister of defense Abdel Rahim
Mohamed Hussein claimed that SAF had asserted control over several
areas, including the vicinity of al- Rosieres Dam which accounts for
nearly 50 percent of the production of electric power in the country.

The commander-in-chief of SAF in the Blue Nile, Yahia Mohamed Khair,
who was appointed as a military ruler, said that the army assumed
control of the situation in all fronts. He added that the army had
managed to secure the state’s capital al-Damazin and was now ready to
retake Al-Kurmuk town which is the mainstay of the SPLM-N.

Meanwhile, Khartoum announced that 4200 people fled al-Kurmuk and
Gisan areas into Ethiopia. The country’s humanitarian coordinator
Hasbu Abdel Rahman said that the refugees were now staying in camps
along the border areas.

In a related development, the head of Sudan’s National Intelligence
and Security Services (NISS) Mohamed Atta visited Ethiopia and
delivered a message from President al-Bashir to Prime Minister Meles
Zenawi.

According to the Sudanese Media Center (SMC), a website run by the
NISS, the letter briefed Zenawi on the situation in the Blue Nile.

It is to be noted that the Ethiopian Prime Minister had led efforts to
reconcile the SPLM-N and the government. Zenawi arrived in Khartoum
last month and moderated talks between Agar and president al-Bashir
but the talks failed as both sides remained inflexible.

(ST)

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