Sudanese police attack demonstration against price hike

Sudanese police attack demonstration against price hike
Updated 18 June 2012
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Sudanese police attack demonstration against price hike

Sudanese police attack demonstration against price hike

KHARTOUM: Sudanese riot police yesterday attacked a Khartoum student demonstration against high food prices, firing tear gas and beating some of the protesters with batons, an AFP correspondent reported.
At around midday, hundreds of students emerged from the University of Khartoum campus, located in the city center, adjacent to the Blue Nile river, chanting slogans including: “We want lower food prices!”
Riot police, who were waiting for the demonstrators outside in around 10 small pickup trucks, used tear gas and batons to disperse them. They then ordered all students to vacate the university campus.
Several hours later, men in civilian clothes stopped cars in the street, ordered anyone they suspected of involvement in the protest out of the vehicles and beat them, the correspondent witnessed.
On Saturday evening, police used tear gas to break up a similar protest on the same street, where a crowd of students, estimated to be in the hundreds, held a demonstration against high food prices, witnesses said.
Sudan is suffering from soaring prices and a rapidly depreciating currency, following the secession of the South last year and the loss of three-quarters of Khartoum's vital oil revenues, its main hard currency earner.
Inflation officially hit 30.4 percent in May, compared with 28.6 percent in April, the central statistics bureau said earlier this month, although some economists say the real figure could be more than 40 percent.
Traders say the price of beef has more than doubled over the past 12 months, from around 15 Sudanese pounds ($2.7) to as much as 35 Sudanese pounds ($6.4).
The already-high prices are set to jump even higher if, as is widely expected, the government follows through on a decision it has been mulling for weeks to lift fuel subsidies which it can no longer afford.
Khartoum's main university was closed for more than two months earlier this year after students clashed with riot police in late December.