Home | News    Saturday 16 June 2012

Salafist group calls on Sudan’s government to avoid ending fuel subsidies

separation
increase
decrease
separation
separation

June 15, 2012 (KHARTOUM) – The Islamist Salafist Ansar Al-Suna group has urged Sudanese authorities to reverse the plan to end fuel subsidies, warning that it will not resolve the country’s economic crisis.

Ansar Al-Suna’s leader Isma’il Osman Al-Mahi said during Friday prayer sermon at the mosque of the group’s headquarters in Al-Sajana area in Khartoum that the government should give up its plans to terminate fuel subsidies.

Al-Mahi cited experts’ opinion saying that ending fuel subsidies is not going to help averting economic collapse.

“If it [lifting fuel subsidies] does not represent a radical solution, why the rush to implement it”

The Sudanese government is planning to terminate fuel subsidies as part of what officials say are drastic austerity measures required to make up for a budget deficit of 2.4 billion USD which resulted from the country’s loss of 75 percent of oil revenues following the secession of South Sudan last year.

According to government officials, ending fuel subsidies will save the country 2 billion USD annually.

Ansar Al-Suna leader proposed a number of alternative measures to confront the economic crisis, including prioritization of agriculture and reducing state spending through eradication of corruption.

He also said that there needs to be a strategy for managing Sudan’s resources in an efficient way that ends ages of wasteful and irresponsible policy of managing resources.

Ansar Al-Suna leader further announced that their ministers in the federal and state governments are willing to relinquish their positions in order to support the government’s austerity efforts and the citizens in this current economic situation.

Sudan has been grappling with rising inflation and a depreciating currency since losing oil, the lifeblood of the economy. Inflation hit 30 percent in May, mainly on food prices, as the Sudanese pound’s exchange rate against the dollars shot up to more than 5 in recent weeks.

Some observers warn that the ending of fuel subsidies might spark popular protests.

(ST)

Comments on the Sudan Tribune website must abide by the following rules. Contravention of these rules will lead to the user losing their Sudan Tribune account with immediate effect.

- No inciting violence
- No inappropriate or offensive language
- No racism, tribalism or sectarianism
- No inappropriate or derogatory remarks
- No deviation from the topic of the article
- No advertising, spamming or links
- No incomprehensible comments

Due to the unprecedented amount of racist and offensive language on the site, Sudan Tribune tries to vet all comments on the site.

There is now also a limit of 400 words per comment. If you want to express yourself in more detail than this allows, please e-mail your comment as an article to comment@sudantribune.com

Kind regards,

The Sudan Tribune editorial team.
  • 16 June 2012 12:12, by Corrector

    South Sudanese policemen and army members caught raping women in south sudan. http://af.reuters.com/article/sudanNews/idAFL5E8HF8O020120615

    repondre message

    • 16 June 2012 12:45, by Michael Angelo

      The article wasn’t about South Sudan you fuck. It was about your collapse economy deep shit.

      repondre message

      • 16 June 2012 12:55, by Corrector

        I just made it about the south, cunt.

        repondre message

        • 16 June 2012 20:10, by truthhurts

          People, can we mind our language please, there’s no need to Angelo to use the term "fuck", and no need for you, corrector to use the term "cunt", if your in England I’m sure you know that it’s one of the most offensive words in the English language.

          repondre message

      • 16 June 2012 13:24, by Logic

        M. Angelo

        Don’t worry about the racist supremacists on this site, they’re bitter bigots who complain from the comfort of their asylum in the UK etc.

        S.Sudan has problems, highlighting these problems is the only way for the bigots of N.Sudan to feel better about their sad situation. Just laugh at the retards.. lolololol!

        repondre message

        • 16 June 2012 17:51, by Northern Sudanese

          Unlogic

          the guys you call retards face 30% inflation while you face 80% inflation

          the guys you call retards are trying to build up their economy in 3 years time while you are staying still with 98% of your gdp lost.

          who are the real retards? North Sudanese or you?

          repondre message

    • 16 June 2012 18:23, by Marolditapei

      GOOD NEWS FOR THE NORTH!!!
      Since South is building a new pipeline through Kenya or Ethiopia and Djibouti in the future, North Sudan pipeline is still valuable. North Sudan Pipeline can be used for transporting cow dungs since fertilizers are lacking in northern region. Good news!Right?

      repondre message

      • 16 June 2012 20:06, by sudani ana

        Marolshit
        You better stop talking about cow dung, or I’ll ask Darkangel to show that photo again, you know which one am talking about don’t you?

        repondre message

    • 16 June 2012 21:32, by Born-to-Rule

      Corrector,
      Your comment has nothing to doing with article. Sudan Tribune should not allow such comment that have nothing to do with article. So were are all the rapes and child molesters in Khartoum now. With all due respect to Sudan Tribune, your website is being run by buffoons.

      repondre message

  • 16 June 2012 14:34, by Civilrights

    Brothers and sisters

    The GOS and NCP are well planned to this conditions and they have good amount of money.
    Every thing is going normal related to their daily expenses.

    Please don’t support them by saying that the economy is down.
    Idirectly you are hurting the peoples of SUDAN and legalizing the justificans of GOS to remove the fuel subsidies.

    repondre message

  • 16 June 2012 22:15, by sudani ana

    North Sudanese brothers, let’s have a debate about lifting of fuel subsidies; personally I think it’s justified in the current circumstances. Our government pays $100 pb of oil and sells it for $40 at a great loss. Think about who benefits, tens of thousands of NGO foreign staff, neighbouring countries who have petrol smuggled across our open borders to benefit other countries. Lifting Continue

    repondre message

    • 16 June 2012 22:30, by sudani ana

      Contine.. Lifting of fuel subsidies as the government says is the bitter pill to achieve recovery and significantly reduce spending. What do you say guys?

      repondre message

Comment on this article


 
 

The following ads are provided by Google. SudanTribune has no authority on it.



Sudan Tribune

Promote your Page too

Latest Comments & Analysis


NCP Parliament Speaker will not negotiate with those who carry arms 2013-05-23 08:09:52 By Mahmoud A. Suleiman May 22, 2013 - This article comes on the backdrop of the war drums beating campaign orchestrated by the National Congress Party (NCP) regime Parliament Speaker, Ahmed (...)

At the Mercy of the Sky, South Sudanese professionals 2013-05-23 08:02:35 By Suzanne Jambo May 22, 2013 - "I have nothing to hide and I walk away with my head high. There was absolutely no board meeting to discuss my issue. The reason given were unilateral spending (...)

National unity: a project for each and every South Sudanese 2013-05-21 14:23:01 By Jacob K. Lupai May 21, 2013 - South Sudan has just attained independence from an imposed unity that had failed miserably to take into account the objective realities on the ground. In the old (...)


MORE




VIDEOS



Latest Press Releases


Sudan: Anatomy of a Conflict—New Report from Harvard Humanitarian Initiative 2013-05-22 00:46:46 Harvard Researchers Publish Satellite Imagery-Based History of Conflict in Sudan 2000+ Civilian Structures Appear Intentionally Destroyed; Humanitarian Agencies Targeted May 21, 2013 (...)

Wau Dialogue W. Bahr el-Ghazal state 13-15 May 2013 2013-05-13 14:41:35 South Sudan Law Society 13th-April-2013 Citizen of Western Bhar el-Ghazal State calls for limitations of President Powers and the Independence of Executive, Legislature and Judiciary and (...)

Sudan: Stepped-Up Assault on Media Freedom 2013-05-04 10:53:49 Human Rights Watch Sudan: Stepped-Up Assault on Media Freedom Newspapers, Other Media Censored, Confiscated, Shut Down MAY 3, 2013 (Nairobi) – Sudan should immediately stop censoring (...)


MORE

Copyright © 2003-2013 SudanTribune - All rights reserved.