Skip to main content

Sudanese President pledges rural development

Sudanese President pledges rural development
Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir on Sunday promised to bring development to rural areas as towns and villages across the country are shaken by anti-government protests.

Speaking to hundreds of villagers in North Kordofan State, Bashir promised to provide clean water to rural areas across Sudan and also build a new hospital there.

The Sudanese President’s speech was broadcast on state television following the inauguration of a new 340 kilometre highway linking the state of North Kordofan to Omdurman, the twin city of the capital, Khartoum.
Young people, for whom we have built universities, must be ready to continue the mission of building a new Sudan.
Bashir, who has been in power since 1989, has sought to mobilize his supporters by organizing rallies across the country in the face of a protest that began in December.

At a second rally within the same State on Sunday, Bashir said ‘‘young people, for whom we have built universities, must be ready to continue the mission of building a new Sudan’‘, as he addressed hundreds of villagers waving portraits of him and Sudanese flags.

Anti-government protesters are demanding he steps down over increases in bread and fuel prices.
A Human Rights Watch report said 30 people have lost their lives since the beginning of the demonstrations.
AFP

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

AFRICA'S TOP 5 "UNAFRICAN" PRESIDENTS OF THE YEAR 2018

"Botswana's impressive performance, Tanzania's great strides, Ethiopian reforms leaves the mark" says our online readers.  By Africa 54 Magazine, Accra, Ghana, 31 Dec, 2018 As we end the year 2018 and welcome the incredible 2019, our online magazine readers were asked to simply comment: who is your best African President for the year 2018- a leader who is not common to have one in Africa "UnAfrican" because of his/her incredible performance, leadership, focus, courage and great result.                                              And these are the results for 2018... #1 IAN KHAMA-Botswana: Always cool in leading the small country into tremendous social and economic transfomations including quality infrastructure, access to social services and j...

Tanzania More Peaceful Nation than France, US and UK

By Staff Writer, New York 31-3-2019: TANZANIA remains East Africa’s most peaceful and calm nation than most of the developed world like France, the United States of America (USA) and the United Kingdom (UK), the report reveals. The Global Peace Index (GPI) 2018 report released this weekend by the Institute for Economic and Peace (IEP), shows Tanzania improved by ranking 51, gaining three positions from 54 in 2017. Four living Presidents of Tanzania The most powerful nation on earth, USA is ranked 121 st while the UK ranked 57, six positions behind Tanzania. The UK dropped 16 positions compared to its 2017 rank. The s tudy covers 163 independent nations and territories around the world. This is good news for most Tanzanians and Africa about the reality of their narrative compared to the Africa of the Western media. Tanzania is one of the top five countries in Africa whose economies is the fastest on the continent. The nation is a beacon of peace and harmony in...

Tanzania's Most Peaceful Election: Why Opposition Got Flabbergasted?

 By John Njoroge:  The ruling party and President John Pombe Magufuli are both leading by far (update: final results are now out, see an update note at the end of the article), trailing the weak opposition in Tanzania following the 28th October General elections.              President John Pombe Magufuli of Tanzania As usual, as the results were pouring out, the oppostion parties, activists and western propaganda machination, all over, resorted to one simple phallacy; whether the election was free and fair. Actually I heard the opposition rejecting the results on the basis of some irregularities.  Let me address that first before I share what I believe to be the reasons for weaker oppostion this time around in Tanzania.  The term free and fair has no one meaning in electoral governance across the world; countries abhor diverse socio-political systems and so is how they manage their elections. The fact that all political parties too...