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UK warns against Khartoum travel over attack fears
18 Aug 2007 12:16:13 GMT
Source: Reuters
LONDON, Aug 18 (Reuters) - Britain warned on Saturday against travelling to Sudan's capital Khartoum due to heightened fears Western interests may be attacked.

Britain's Foreign Office said on its Web site that public services at the British embassy in Khartoum would be suspended on Sunday and Monday as a precaution.

"There is a heightened threat of terrorist attacks in Khartoum. Western interests, including British official interests, may be targeted. We advise against all but essential travel to Khartoum," the Foreign Office said.

The updated travel advice comes after Sudanese police found three weapons caches in the capital during the past week.

Police arrested eight Sudanese in connection with the stores, which mostly contained grenades and ammunition, sources at the interior ministry said.

Some local Sudanese papers initially reported that foreign Islamists had been arrested but an interior ministry source played down fears of terrorist attacks.

"All those arrested are Sudanese," the source said. "We don't consider this to be terrorist, it's just there a lot of arms getting into Khartoum these days."

The ministry source said that with the signing of a Darfur and a north-south peace deal, many former rebel armed groups had entered the capital and arms had become more prevalent. (Additional reporting by Opheera McDoom in Khartoum)
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A man holds an empty cup as he waits for purified water in the remote village of Saraf Saeed in southeast Sudan, close to the Ethiopian border August 24, 2007. Three of the village's five natural wells have been contaminated in recent weeks by floodwaters. Mustafa Elsayed Elkhalil, health minister for the Al-Gadarif federal state which governs Saraf Saeed, says the water, which is supposed to be a source of life, is the "real source of our health problems". Picture taken August 24, 2007.



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