"Citizens, demand your rights," shouted university students in the central Sudanese town of Sennar as dozens of residents joined them in a sporadic march against the rise in bread prices, witnesses said. Police fired tear gas to break the protest while shopkeepers closed their shops in the town's main market, witnesses and residents from Sennar told AFP by telephone.
"The police fired tear gas at protesters. I had to close my shop as demonstrators approached the market," a shopkeeper said on condition of anonymity. Pictures and videos of protesters chanting anti-government slogans and burning tyres in the streets were uploaded on several social media websites.
Flour manufacturers have raised the price of a 50-kilo (110 pounds) sack of wheat flour from 167 to 450 Sudanese pounds ($65, 54 euros), Mohamed al-Saeed, a member of a barky owners' union, has told AFP. That sent bread prices soaring and in response leading opposition groups have called for anti-government protests across the country.
"The Umma Party calls on all its members and Sudanese citizens to protest peacefully against the rise in bread prices," the main opposition party said in a statement. "The only way to solve this problem is to overthrow the regime," it added. The opposition Communist Party and the Sudanese Congress Party also called for anti-government protests.