Protesters Block Port Sudan Container Terminal In Rejection of Peace Deal

A man stands opposite the modern port at the harbour in Port Sudan at Red Sea State February 24, 2014. (REUTERS)
A man stands opposite the modern port at the harbour in Port Sudan at Red Sea State February 24, 2014. (REUTERS)
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Protesters Block Port Sudan Container Terminal In Rejection of Peace Deal

A man stands opposite the modern port at the harbour in Port Sudan at Red Sea State February 24, 2014. (REUTERS)
A man stands opposite the modern port at the harbour in Port Sudan at Red Sea State February 24, 2014. (REUTERS)

Protesters blocked Port Sudan’s container terminal and a road between the eastern city and the capital Khartoum on Sunday to protest against a peace deal signed by the government and groups from across the country, a union official and residents said.

The deal, ratified on Saturday in the South Sudanese capital, Juba, was focused on resolving conflicts in the western Darfur region and southern states of Blue Nile and South Kordofan.

Groups from other regions also signed, but some in the east said the two factions that participated in the “eastern track” of the peace process do not represent political forces on the ground, Reuters reported.

The deal is aimed at ending decades of conflict in Sudan and uniting the country behind a political transition following the ouster of former leader Omar Bashir in April 2019.

However, the two most active groups in the west and the south did not sign, and analysts said that during negotiations, local communities were not widely consulted by military and civilian authorities now sharing power.

Workers at the southern port, Sudan’s main sea terminal for containers, and at Suakin port to the south, were on strike over the peace deal, said Aboud El-Sherbiny, head of the Port Sudan Workers Union.

“We demand the cancellation of the ‘eastern track’ and the agreement that was signed yesterday in Juba because this track expresses an external agenda,” he said.

“We will take escalatory steps if this demand is not met.”

South Sudan President Salva Kiir warned that implementing the deal would not be an easy task and urged the international community to lend its support.

“We have no illusion that the implementation of the peace agreement we are celebrating today will be an easy business especially with the economic realities facing Sudan presently,” he said.

“Sudan needs financial resources to rebuild the infrastructure destroyed by the war and floods.”

Economic hardship triggered the anti-Bashir protests and remain a pressing concern — food prices have tripled in the past year and the Sudanese pound has depreciated dramatically.

Recent flooding, which has affected nearly 830,000 people, has worsened the situation.



Lebanese Army Arrests Suspects Linked to Rocket Attack against Israel

Lebanese Army Commander Rodolphe Haikal and troops inspect the border with Israel. (Army Command)
Lebanese Army Commander Rodolphe Haikal and troops inspect the border with Israel. (Army Command)
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Lebanese Army Arrests Suspects Linked to Rocket Attack against Israel

Lebanese Army Commander Rodolphe Haikal and troops inspect the border with Israel. (Army Command)
Lebanese Army Commander Rodolphe Haikal and troops inspect the border with Israel. (Army Command)

The Lebanese army arrested a number of suspects linked to the firing of rockets towards Israel.

Israel on Friday launched the broadest attack against Lebanon since the November ceasefire in retaliation to the firing of rockets from Lebanese territories. Israel responded by striking Beirut’s southern suburbs, known as Dahiyeh – a Hezbollah stronghold.

The army said it arrested a number of people, including Lebanese and Palestinian nationals, on suspicion of launching the rockets.

Nearly a week earlier, Israel attacked southern Lebanon following similar rocket launches from the South.

Hezbollah has denied having any links to both rocket attacks, while the Lebanese government has vowed to arrest the suspects.

A security source told Asharq Al-Awsat that the army has kicked off an investigation with the detainees.

The military has reached leads that will take it to the party behind the attack, another security source told Al Arabiya television.

Army Commander Rodolphe Haikal inspected on Saturday troops deployed south of the Litani River, underscoring their “role in serving the nation and its perseverance.”

“The military institution is tasked with protecting Lebanon and its people regardless of their affiliations,” he stressed.

The launching of rockets from Lebanon towards Israel only serves the enemy, he declared, saying the military is carrying out the necessary investigations to uncover the culprits.

Moreover, he stated that the only hurdle to the Lebanese army’s permanent deployment in the South and consolidation of the ceasefire is the Israeli occupation of Lebanese territories and its repeated violations of the nation’s sovereignty.

In Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu continued to hold Lebanon responsible for the attacks.

He stressed that Israel will be “uncompromising” towards violations and that he has instructed the security minister and army to act accordingly.

“Lebanon is responsible for what is being launched from its territory, and it must ensure that no attacks are carried out against Israel,” he demanded.