Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdock has resigned following weeks of protests in Khartoum. Thousands of Sudanese have taken to the streets in protest of a military coup last October. Opposition groups chanted slogans calling for a return to power and a return to normalcy. But two protesters were killed on Sunday in a military operation. The decision to oust Prime Minister Hamdock, who returned to power six weeks after he was ousted in a coup, puts the Sudanese government under full military control. In a televised address to the nation, Prime Minister Hamdock said "the country's very existence is at stake." He said he had done everything in his power to keep Sudan in a "dangerous situation", but "despite all the efforts, no agreement has been reached" and "I have decided to hand over my prime ministerial job to someone who can transfer Sudan to a civilian administration." French news agency AFP reports quoting medical...
It is a time when the farmer, the consumer, the merchant and the broker work together. Although Addis Ababa does not grow pepper and feed Ethiopia, all that is produced throughout the country is harvested and distributed to the region. Teklehaimanot, with millions of dollars in circulation, is a major pepper trading center. Traders say that since last July, an unusual product by these distributors has been dubbed "Chinese pepper" and disappeared in mid-September. "When we bring the pepper from the plant, the packaged fertilizer says 'Made in China' [China-made]," says a trader in the glass. There were about 30 pepper traders at the pepper market in the area of Meri, but in mid-October it was reported that "you have Chinese pepper" but no one was available. According to the crystal, the merchants do not even want to be known for selling pepper; Not to lose a customer. The incessant love of life Unbalanced trade imbalance and devalued fo...
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