Mystery strike on car kills two in Port Sudan

KHARTOUM, (Reuters) – Two people were killed in an  attack on a car near Port Sudan yesterday, which police  suggested was a missile fired from the sea, while state media  and a regional government official blamed a foreign aircraft.

Witnesses at the scene near the airport at Sudan’s main port  city said the small car was destroyed and the two charred bodies  of its passengers could be seen.

“A missile from an unknown source probably bombed the car,”  police spokesman Ahmed Al-Tahmi told Reuters. He earlier told  local radio the missile had likely been fired from the Red Sea.

The Sudanese Media Centre, a news agency linked to Sudan’s  state security apparatus, and the speaker of the Red Sea state  parliament, Ahmed Tahir, said an unidentified aircraft had flown  into Sudanese air space to bomb the car.

The plane came in from the Red Sea and flew back after the  bombing, Tahir said. The Sudanese Media Centre said the army  responded with missiles that the foreign plane managed to evade.

“We heard three loud explosions,” a source at Port Sudan  airport told Reuters. “We went outside to see what was happening  and eye witnesses told us they saw two helicopters which looked  liked Apaches flying past.”

Tahir said the two people killed were travelling into the  town from the airport when their car was hit. They have not been  identified.

Sudan’s foreign ministry declined to comment. Sudan’s army  was not immediately available to comment.

This is not the first time mystery has surrounded a strike  in Sudan’s eastern Red Sea state.

In January 2009, unknown aircraft hit a convoy of suspected  arms smugglers on a remote road in the state according to  Sudanese officials, a strike that some reports said may have  been carried out by Israel to stop weapons bound for Gaza. A total of 119 people were killed in that strike near  Sudan’s border with Egypt, according to state media, even though  the attack was disclosed only two months after it occurred.

Sudan is on a U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism, but  Washington this year initiated the process to remove it from  that list after a peaceful January referendum in which the  country’s south voted to secede.