16.09.11 Sahara Focus
Sudan bars 17 political parties

Sudan has announced that it has ordered 17 political parties to stop their
activities as most of their leaders and party members come from the newly
independent
South Sudan and are therefore foreigners.
SPLM-North, who was banned last week, is one of the groups targeted. The party has a
connection with former SPLM rebels - now the ruling party in the south which seceded in July.
The crackdown is thought to have been prompted by fighting in some border states
between soldiers loyal to SPLM-North and government troops.
South Sudan voted in favour of secession in a referendum in January, part of the
deal under the 2005 peace treaty ending several decades of civil war between
the
north and the south.
The Political Parties Affairs Council released a statement, saying the 17 political groups were now considered "foreign parties". It added: "Their leadership and most members have lost the Sudanese citizenship.”
State owned Suna news agency reported that the parties have the legal right to establish new
ones that comply with the specified requirements. SPLM-North has announced that
its
offices were closed down and most of its party members arrested following
outbreaks of violence in Blue Nile state, where a state of emergency has been
declared.
Sources: BBC News, Reuters, Bloomberg
For more news and expert analysis about the Sahara region, please see Sahara Focus.