Khartoum, August 5 (SUNA) - The spokesman of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Ambassador Ghariballah AL-Khadir has disclosed treatments for the conditions of Sudanese miners in Mauritania. The Ambassador AL-Khadir said, in statement to the Sudan News Agency (SUNA), that the Mauritanian government asserted that its law does not allow the practice of surface mining and therefore any person exercising mining will be arrested and his passport will be booked until a ticket will prepared for him to be enabled to leave the country, explaining that the law there imposes fines in excess of US $ 90 per day on those who engage in surface mining. Ambassador Khadir said that the Sudanese embassy in Mauritania met with the Mauritanian Interior Minister, explaining that the Sudanese citizens were relieved from fines their passports given to them and were asked to adjust their situation to work in any other field, and not to exercise surface mining without the consent of the authorities, pointing out that Sudan's ambassador in Mauritania stressed that there is no Sudanese prisoner or reserved in the Mauritanian prisons. Ambassador Khadir appealed to those who want to visit Mauritania to bear in mind that Mauritanian law does not allow the practice of surface mining despite welcoming of the Mauritanian government to the Sudanese citizens to work and invest in any other area. BH/BH
الرسائل والمقالات و الآراء المنشورة في المنتدى بأسماء أصحابها أو بأسماء مستعارة لا تمثل بالضرورة الرأي الرسمي لصاحب الموقع أو سودانيز اون لاين بل تمثل وجهة نظر كاتبها
لا يمكنك نقل أو اقتباس اى مواد أعلامية من هذا الموقع الا بعد الحصول على اذن من الادارة