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Sudan PM unharmed in assassination bid: top aide

By AFP
Sudan Sudanese rescue teams and security forces circle damaged vehicles at the site of a bomb attack targeting the convoy of Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who survived the attack unharmed.  By ASHRAF SHAZLY AFP
MAR 9, 2020 LISTEN
Sudanese rescue teams and security forces circle damaged vehicles at the site of a bomb attack targeting the convoy of Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who survived the attack unharmed. By ASHRAF SHAZLY (AFP)

Sudan's post-uprising Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok escaped unharmed Monday as an assassination attempt using explosives targeted his convoy in the capital Khartoum, his top aide said.

"An explosion hit as Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok's car was driving by but thank God no one was hurt," said Ali Bakhit, his office director, in a Facebook post.

The convoy was targeted on the way to his office in the Kober district of northeast Khartoum.

Sudan's official news agency SUNA said Hamdok was in "good health and a safe place" after the attack, without giving further details.

Details of the attack were still unclear but it was staged at "around 9 am at the entrance to Kober bridge... at the time when Hamdok usually heads to his office", SANA said.

Hamdok himself later wrote on his official Twitter account that he was unharmed.

"I assure the Sudanese people that I am well and completely healthy," he said. "What happened will not stop the march toward change."

Images on state television showed at least two damaged vehicles at the blast site, which was quickly cordoned off by police.

State-run radio Omdurman reported that automatic weapons were also fired in the attack and that Hamdok was taken to hospital.

Sudanese Prime Minister Abdulla Hamdok flashing the victory sign during a ceremony marking the first anniversary of the uprising that toppled longtime strongman Omar al-Bashir.  By ASHRAF SHAZLY AFPFile Sudanese Prime Minister Abdulla Hamdok flashing the victory sign during a ceremony marking the first anniversary of the uprising that toppled longtime strongman Omar al-Bashir. By ASHRAF SHAZLY (AFP/File)

Hamdok, a seasoned economist, was named premier last August to head Sudan's government during a transitional period of three years following the ouster of longtime president Omar al-Bashir.

He had built a solid career in continental and international organisations, including as deputy executive secretary of the UN's Economic Commission for Africa in Addis Ababa.

His appointment followed a power-sharing deal between military leaders, who ousted Bashir in April, and the protest movement which led mass street demonstrations against the strongman since December 2018.

Hamdok has since vowed to tackle social and economic difficulties and been attempting to forge peace with rebel groups across the country.

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