Sudanese President Says Protesters Are Trying To Copy The 'Arab Spring'



Reuters: Sudan's Bashir fights for survival as protests spread

KHARTOUM (Reuters) - Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir does little to hide his contempt for the young men and women who have been protesting for more than a month to demand an end to his three-decade rule.

Addressing soldiers this month, Bashir, a 75-year-old former paratrooper who seized power in a bloodless coup in 1989, warned the “rats to go back to their holes” and said he would only move aside for another army officer, or at the ballot box.

“They said they want the army to take power. That’s no problem. If someone comes in wearing khaki, we have no objection,” Bashir, wearing his military uniform, told soldiers at a base in Atbara, the northern Sudanese city where the protests started.

“When the army moves, it doesn’t move in a vacuum. It doesn’t move in support of traitors. It moves in support of the homeland,” he added in colloquial Arabic.

Bashir has long been a divisive figure.

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More News On The Sudanese President Saying That Protesters Are Trying To Copy The 'Arab Spring'

Bashir says Sudan protests attempt to copy Arab Spring -- BBC
Bashir says Sudan protesters trying to emulate Arab Spring -- Al Jazeera
Bashir accuses media of exaggerating Sudan protests -- East African
How an illegal Sudanese union became the biggest threat to Omar Al Bashir’s 29-year reign -- Reem Abbas, National Interest
Sudan's protests: The revolt of the periphery -- Reem Abbas, Al Jazeera
How bread has emerged as the main symbol of Sudan unrest -- Mohammed Vall, Al Jazeera

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