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Sudan Tribune

Plural news and views on Sudan

Sudanese opposition leader Hassan Al Turabi arrested

CAIRO, March 31 (AFP) — The Sudanese authorities have arrested Islamist opposition leader Hassan Al Turabi in the capital Khartoum shortly after accusing officers of trying to mount a coup, Qatar’s Al Jazeera satellite TV station reported early Wednesday.

The television quoted Turabi’s wife Wissal Al Mehdi as saying “many security men” surrounded the home of the head of the Popular Congress (PC) and arrested the 71-year-old opposition leader.

A former leading light of Omar Al Beshir’s regime, Turabi had been freed in October 2003 after spending nearly three years under house arrest.

His wife added that several leading members of the Popular Congress had also been picked up.

The move came after the arrest on Sunday of some 10 Sudanese army officers on suspicion of involvement in a military coup attempt apparently related to the ongoing conflict in west Sudan’s Darfur region, reported on Tuesday by an official close to the government.

The officers arrested were thought to belong to the PC, which said on Monday that there had been a government crackdown on senior party officials following allegations of a coup attempt from within the army.

PC deputy leader Abdullah Hassan Ahmed was summoned by security police on Sunday night and told some civilians also took part in the alleged coup attempt, a party statement said.

The authorities then launched a wave of arrests against party officials and axed or transferred a raft of officers in the army, police and security services who originated from Darfur, it said.

The accusations of Darfuri involvement in a coup attempt were a pretext for “a crushing military campaign against the people of Darfur,” the party said.

In a statement to AFP, a PC official on Tuesday accused the Sudanese authorities of having invented the story of a coup so as to dissolve Turabi’s party.

Turabi told AFP on Tuesday that six party officials, including three politburo members, had been detained.

He linked the crackdown to government charges that his party supported the year-old rebel movement among Darfur’s indigenous non-Arab minorities, an allegation he vigorously denied.

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