• Abdalla Hamdok signing documents a few hours after assassination attempt
    Abdalla Hamdok signing documents a few hours after assassination attempt
  • Abdalla Hamdok signing documents a few hours after assassination attempt. @SudanPMHamdok via Twitter
    Abdalla Hamdok signing documents a few hours after assassination attempt. @SudanPMHamdok via Twitter
  • Security personnel stand near a car damaged after an explosion targeting the motorcade of Sudan's Prime Minister Abdallah Hamdok near the Kober Bridge in Khartoum, Sudan. Reuters
    Security personnel stand near a car damaged after an explosion targeting the motorcade of Sudan's Prime Minister Abdallah Hamdok near the Kober Bridge in Khartoum, Sudan. Reuters
  • Sudanese rescue teams and security forces gather next to a damaged vehicle at the site of an assassination attempt against Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who survived the attack with explosives unharmed, in the capital Khartoum. AFP
    Sudanese rescue teams and security forces gather next to a damaged vehicle at the site of an assassination attempt against Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who survived the attack with explosives unharmed, in the capital Khartoum. AFP
  • The site of an assassination attempt against Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who survived the attack with explosives unharmed, in the capital Khartoum. AFP
    The site of an assassination attempt against Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who survived the attack with explosives unharmed, in the capital Khartoum. AFP
  • Security personnel stand near a car damaged after an explosion targeting the motorcade of Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok near the Kober Bridge in Khartoum, Sudan. Reuters
    Security personnel stand near a car damaged after an explosion targeting the motorcade of Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok near the Kober Bridge in Khartoum, Sudan. Reuters
  • Sudanese rescue teams and security forces gather next to damaged vehicles at the site of an assassination attempt against Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who survived the attack with explosives unharmed, in the capital Khartoum. AFP
    Sudanese rescue teams and security forces gather next to damaged vehicles at the site of an assassination attempt against Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who survived the attack with explosives unharmed, in the capital Khartoum. AFP
  • Sudanese rescue teams and security forces gather next to damaged vehicles at the site of an assassination attempt against Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who survived the attack with explosives unharmed, in the capital Khartoum. AFP
    Sudanese rescue teams and security forces gather next to damaged vehicles at the site of an assassination attempt against Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who survived the attack with explosives unharmed, in the capital Khartoum. AFP
  • Sudanese security forces stand guard at the cordoned-off site of an assassination attempt against Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who survived the attack with explosives unharmed, in the capital Khartoum. AFP
    Sudanese security forces stand guard at the cordoned-off site of an assassination attempt against Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who survived the attack with explosives unharmed, in the capital Khartoum. AFP
  • Sudanese rescue teams and security forces gather next to damaged vehicles at the site of an assassination attempt against Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who survived the attack with explosives unharmed, in the capital Khartoum. AFP
    Sudanese rescue teams and security forces gather next to damaged vehicles at the site of an assassination attempt against Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who survived the attack with explosives unharmed, in the capital Khartoum. AFP
  • Sudanese rescue teams and security forces gather at the site of an assassination attempt against Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who survived the attack with explosives unharmed, in the capital Khartoum. AFP
    Sudanese rescue teams and security forces gather at the site of an assassination attempt against Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, who survived the attack with explosives unharmed, in the capital Khartoum. AFP

Sudan bolsters measures to drive out Al Bashir supporters


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Sudan’s ruling council is increasing efforts to drive out loyalists of deposed former president Omar Al Bashir after an assassination attempt against interim Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok.

American FBI investigators will help Sudan make inquiries into the failed assassination attempt, the Sudanese culture and information minister Faisal Mohammed Saleh said on Wednesday.

No group has claimed responsibility for the blast targeting Mr Hamdok's motorcade on Monday, but the country's ruling council said Al Bashir loyalists will be firmly dealt with, indicating the attack may have links with supporters of the old regime.

Al Bashir was overthrown in April last year after months of nationwide protests against his autocratic rule. A joint military-civilian government was set up to oversee Sudan’s transition to democratic rule the following August, with Mr Hamdok at the helm.

The ruling council has already taken steps to disempower Al Bashir’s supporters but new measures will now bring a branch of Sudan’s security services that had close links with the country's autocratic former President under government control.

A committee set up to dismantle the old regime will also be given additional powers, sovereign council spokesman Mohamed Al-Faki said in a statement. The committee has already moved to disband the former ruling party and dismiss senior officials at banks and embassies.

The attack highlights the fragility of Sudan’s transition to civilian rule following the power-sharing deal between the pro-democracy movement and armed forces last August.

Mr Hamdok tweeted on Monday to say that he was “safe and in good shape” after the explosion, which happened en route to his office in Khartoum.

“Rest assured that what happened today will not stand in the way of our transition, instead it is an additional push to the wheel of change in Sudan,” he added in a brief statement on Twitter.

The attack came less than two months after an armed revolt by rogue intelligence officers led to a tense stand-off with the armed forces that shut down the capital’s airport and left at least two people dead.