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Residents survey burnt out cars on the
streets of the Sudanese capital Khartoum May 11, 2008. (Xinhua/Reuters
Photo) Photo
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KHARTOUM, May 11 (Xinhua) -- By infiltrating into the
Sudanese capital Khartoum and launching attacks, a major rebel movement in the
western Sudanese region of Darfur could get nothing but grievous losses and
unanimous condemnation by the international society, local analysts affirmed on
Sunday.
They described the assault carried out by the rebel
Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) at Omdurman in northwestern Khartoum as
"apolitically suicide attack" and "a military unvalued adventure."
The Sudanese government termed on Sunday night the
Saturday's attack by the JEM rebels as a "terrorist operation for sabotage,"
announcing that this operation had "finished."
"This terrorist operation for sabotage was plotted by
Chad and carried out by JEM leader Khalil Ibrahim," Kamal Obeid, the minister of
state in the Sudanese Ministry of Information and Communications, told
reporters.
The JEM is believed to have the most powerful forces
among rebel groups in the western Sudanese region of Darfur, which amount to
over two dozens.
The Sudanese government announced on Saturday evening
that the army and the police had crushed the attempt of the JEM rebels to
infiltrate into the capital and carry out sabotage activities there, killing and
capturing a number of the infiltrators.
It was the first time for rebels in Darfur to enter
Khartoum and launch attacks there since bloody conflicts erupted in the western
Sudanese region neighboring Chad in February, 2003.
Sadig al-Madi al-Mahdi, a presidential adviser and
the chairman of the Umma Party-Collective leadership, told Xinhua that this
attack was "a desperate attempt aimed at snapping the public opinion."
"But this was a politically suicide attack by the JEM
which will lose the support of the Darfur people," the Sudanese well-known
political analyst said.
Al-Fatih Az-ddin, the mayor of Omdurman, said that
what had been done by the JEM was "a military adventure which could not
succeed," adding that the rebel forces infiltrating into Omdurman had been
totally defeated.
Kamal Obeid admitted the existence of the "fifth
fleet" of the rebels in Khartoum without giving the details.
Most analysts agreed that the JEM would not have been
so audacious and reckless without assistance of collaborators inside the
Khartoum regime.
On Saturday evening, as the rebel forces were being
repulsed by the army troops and police, the JEM claimed that they would continue
the fighting until President al-Bashir was ousted.
"We are in Omdurman, we are in Khartoum north. This
is not something that is going to be finished in a few hours," JEM official
al-Tahir al-Faki told a Western news agency, adding "there is an imbalance of
power and wealth, we have to sort this out."
During its emergency meeting on Sunday evening, the
Sudanese cabinet listened to the reports made by the ministers of defense and
interior on the rebel attack.
"The Council of Ministers praised the big
professional work performed by the armed and security forces as well as the
police, which led to the defeat of the rebelling forces," Kamal Obeid noted.
He said that the cabinet instructed the authorities
concerned to collect the vehicles and weapons used by the rebels in the attack
in order to show them to the public on the scale of the rebel operation.
"The casualties and material losses are still being
counted, and the statistics will be announced as soon as being completed," the
Sudanese official said.
An anonymous source in the Sudanese Armed Forces told
Xinhua that over 60 rebel militants were killed and some 120 others captured
during the Saturday fighting at Omdurman, which is the northern gate of the
Sudanese capital.
The official SUNA news agency reported that more than
300rebels had been arrested, and 60 vehicles seized or destructed by Sunday
noon, noting that the military commander of the JEM, Jamal Hassan Jala-Eddin was
killed by the troops on the outskirts of Khartoum on Sunday.
The Sudanese army said that the operation for
searching the remnant rebels who could being hiding at any place, asking local
residents to inform if finding any suspected persons.
Possible helps from Chad was another reason behind
the adventure in Khartoum of the JEM, which used to limit its military
activities inside Darfur, which amounts to one fifth of Sudan's size.
Early on Sunday, Sudanese President Omer al-Bashir
announced a decision to sever diplomatic ties with Chad, holding Chad
responsible for the rebel attack on the Sudanese capital.
But the Chadian government denied the accusation that
N'Djamena was involved in the JEM's attack in Khartoum.
"Chad has nothing to do with this adventure," Chadian
Information Minister Muhammad Hissein told Qatar-based Pan-Arab al-Jazeera
television monitored in Khartoum.
However, by the Saturday action, the JEM has
minimized the possibility of forcing the government back to negotiation table on
the conditions aroused by the rebel group, even if this was one of the main aims
it was seeking in the attack.
Presidential adviser Mustafa Osman Ismail ruled out
any chance of holding talks with the JEM after the attack.
"From this day we will never deal with this movement
again other than in the way they have just dealt with us," he said on al-Jazeera
TV channel.
The international society, notably including the
U.S., France, Britain, which used to be vehemently criticizing the Sudanese
government over the Darfur issue, has denounced the Saturday's attack by the JEM
rebels on Khartoum.