Veteran Sudanese Islamist leader Hassan al-Turabi says his country has become weak and occupied by foreigners.
African Union forces are in Darfur, but with a limited mandate
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He said there were now so many foreign armies in Sudan it could no longer be considered independent.
Thousands of peacekeepers from the African Union and UN
have been sent to Sudan to try to stabilise conflicts involving rebels
and militia.
Mr Turabi's comments in a BBC interview come as Sudan celebrates 50 years of independence from the UK.
Conflict has dominated Sudan's years of independence,
although a long-running civil war pitting the largely Christian south
against the Muslim north ended in 2005.
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We have a record of how many armies you have in one country. Would you call that independence?
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The BBC's Jonah Fisher in Khartoum says a highly
centralised government has left those outside the capital complaining
of underdevelopment and marginalisation, and that rebels and militia
have thrived in outlying areas.
More than 6,000 African Union peacekeepers, with a
limited mandate, have been deployed to the western Darfur region where
conflict has raged since early 2003.
It has left tens of thousands of civilians dead and forced more than two million from their homes.
The government and pro-government Arab militias are accused of war crimes against the region's black African population.
The UN Security Council has called on Khartoum to disarm
the militias and the International Criminal Court is investigating the
alleged war crimes.
Controversial
"Look at Sudan now - it has tens of militias independent
of the army. And we have so many African armies here... and other
armies of the United Nations," Mr Turabi said.
"We don't have an army here. We have a record of how many armies you have in one country. Would you call that independence?"
Mr Turabi - a proponent of Sharia law - is a
controversial figure in Sudanese politics and has spent much of the
last five years in detention.
He was once a close colleague of President Omar al-Bashir but he lost out in a power struggle with him in 1999.
He was freed again in June 2005, after being held in connection with an alleged coup plot.
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