Sharjah 24 – AFP: Sudanese blocked streets in Khartoum with burning tyres Thursday to protest a government's decision scrapping subsidies on petrol and diesel that more than doubled prices.
Sudan's economy has sunk further into a deep crisis since the overthrow of Omar al-Bashir in April 2019, sparking frequent demonstrations and risking social unrest in a country in transition.
The lifting of subsidies, which took effect Tuesday, saw the price of petrol shoot up from 150 Sudanese pounds ($0.34 cents) to 290 pounds per litre, while diesel went up from 125 to 285 pounds.
It is the latest in reforms by Sudan's transitional government which vowed to fix the economy, which had been crippled by US sanctions under Bashir.
Late Wednesday, an influential trade union group that had spearheaded mass protests leading to Bashir's ouster, urged the Sudanese to demonstrate against the "unjust" decision.
"We call on protesters to take to the streets now and daily until these unjust decisions are overturned," the Sudanese professionals association said in a Facebook statement.
Responding to that call, small groups of protesters were seen blocking streets in several Khartoum neighbourhoods on Thursday with burning tyres.
Finance Minister Gibril Ibrahim said scrapping subsidies on petrol and diesel was part of policies aimed at "serving the interests of the Sudanese people and the Sudanese economy".
Sudan's transitional government has struggled to rebuild the economy and end the country's international isolation since the ouster of Bashir, and hopes that reforms will make it eligible for an IMF debt relief initiative that would help settle a staggering $60 billion foreign debt.
Since April, inflation has soared over 360 percent, according to official data.