Friday, 22 February 2013

URGENT: Implementation of Amputation Sentence in Khartoum, Sudan


SUDO - UKURGENT: Implementation of Amputation Sentence in Khartoum, Sudan
February 18, 2013

Doctors in Al-Ribat University Hospital in Khartoum implemented a sentence of amputation on a man convicted with Brigandage (Haraba) after the convicted had exhausted all appeal stages. This is the first time in thirty years that this penalty has been implemented in Sudan.
Al-Sudani newspaper issued in Khartoum on Friday February 15, stated that the convicted had blocked the road in March 2006 stopping a car on its way to the market in West Kordofan, and threatening the passengers with a Kalashnikov rifle he was carrying.
According to Sudanese Penal Code which is based on Shari’a laws, article 167 Haraba (Highway Robbery) of the Penal Code 1991 states:
Whoever threatens the public or troubles the security of the roads by menaces intending to commit an offence against human body, honour or property, provided the act is committed:-
(a) Out of town, in land, sea or air or in town where help is difficult to get.
(b) By use of arms or any instrument capable of causing harm or threat to cause such harm is said to commit Haraba.
Article 168 states the punishment of Haraba as follow:
Whoever commits Haraba shall be punished with: -
(a) Execution or execution and thereafter crucifixion if his acts resulted in murder or rape.
(b) Amputation of the right hand and left foot if his act resulted in grievous bodily harm or theft of property which amounts to the required minimum (Nisab) for theft punishable with amputation (Sariqah Hadiya).
(c) Imprisonment by way of banishment for a term which may not exceed seven years in cases not covered by paragraphs (a) and (b).
SUDO UK condemns amputation and considers such penalties as cruel, inhuman and degrading punishments. In addition they are inconsistent with Sudan’s obligations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).
SUDO UK urges on the Sudanases Government to:
  • Amend articles within the 1991 Penal Code to bring it into line with international human rights standards ratified by the Sudan
  • Monitor all courts in Sudan to ensure accordance with international human rights law and the rule of law.
  • Guarantee respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms throughout Sudan in accordance with national laws and international human rights standards
SUDO UK calls on all doctors to refuse to carry out amputations in line with The UN Principles of Medical Ethics relevant to the Role of Health Personnel, particularly Physicians, in the Protection of Prisoners and Detainees against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, adopted by General Assembly resolution 37/194 of 18 December 1982 and applicable to all health professionals, which state that it is against medical ethics for health personnel to be in any relationship with detainees “the purpose of which is not solely to evaluate, protect or improve their physical and mental health”.

Resource

Wednesday, 20 February 2013

Sudan must save Darfuri activist from imminent execution


Amnesty InternationalSudan must save Darfuri activist from imminent execution
15 February 2013

Sudanese authorities must halt the execution of a Darfuri activist whose sentence was changed from 10 years’ imprisonment to death, Amnesty International urged today amid fears he will be hanged this weekend.
Bakri Moussa Mohammed, who has been involved in protests against the repression of displaced people by security forces in South Darfur, was jailed in 2010 for his alleged participation in a murder.
"We believe Bakri Moussa Mohammed is at imminent risk of being hanged and we implore the Sudanese authorities to act immediately to stop the execution, through whatever means available," said Netsanet Belay, Amnesty International’s Africa director.
"The vague circumstances of the change in Bakri’s sentence are a clear violation of fair trial standards."
Bakri Moussa Mohammed’s family believe he was arrested and sentenced for murder in retaliation for his activism.
On 31 December 2012, almost three years after his imprisonment, he was told by an officer in Kober prison, Khartoum, that his punishment had been revised to a death sentence.
The same day, he was transferred to death row and reportedly brought to the gallows three times, before being told that the execution would be postponed for 35 days.
The deadline has now passed, and Amnesty International understands that a further grace period secured by Bakri’s lawyer will expire in about 24 hours.
There appears to have been no court hearing about the change of sentence.
Bakri’s family believe the decision was taken by the prison administration under the influence of the National Security Service.
"The Sudanese authorities have serious questions to answer about the revision of this sentence. Trials for crimes carrying the death penalty must comply with the most rigorous internationally recognized standards for fair trial," said Netsnanet Belay.
"Those rules appear to have been flouted in the case of Bakri Moussa Mohammed, whom we fear is being persecuted solely for exercising his right to freedom of expression and assembly."
Bakri Moussa Mohammed, an active government critic, was a community activist in the Kalma camp for displaced people in South Darfur. He was arrested in 2009 and sentenced in 2010 for murder, although he maintains his innocence.
International law prohibits any execution after a trial which does not meet international fair trial standards.
Any person sentenced to death also has the right to request a pardon or commutation of a death sentence.
Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all cases without exception. The death penalty violates the right to life and is the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment.

Resource:
http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article45539

Monday, 18 February 2013

(The Darfuri: death by definition)




The Darfuri: death by definitionBy Magdi Elgizouli

Four students were found dead Friday in a feeder irrigation canal of an experimental farm next to the main campus of the University of Gezira. The students drowned to death; their bodies carried no marks of injury, said the local police. Mohamed Yunis Nayel Hamed, Adil Mohamed Ahmed Hamadi and al-Sadiq Abdalla Yagoub were identified as Darfuris and the fourth al-Nu’man Ahmed al-Gurashi as a Gezira lad. Last week, the University of Gezira witnessed clashes between Darfur students demanding their exemption from tuition fees and student supporters of the ruling National Congress Party (NCP). The security authorities upon invitation by the university administration intervened and arrested tens of the protesting Darfur students, among them the four found dead on Friday. The Vice Chancellor declared on Saturday the suspension of studies in the University of Gezira till further notice “in order to secure lives and property”. In their demand the Darfur students cited the Doha Document for Peace and Darfur (DDPD) signed between the government and the Liberation and Justice Movement (LJM) in May 2011. 
Article 14 of the DDPD deals solely with the Darfuri quest for higher education, the rite of passage to political emergence and national visibility, and is worth quoting in full: “15% of admissible seats in national universities shall be allocated for students from Darfur pursuant to the requirements of competition for 5 years; The people of Darfur shall be represented in the management of national universities and higher education institutions based on the competence and scientific qualifications specified by the Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research; 50% of admissible seats in national universities in Darfur shall be allocated for the sons and daughters of Darfur pursuant to the admission committee requirements. Meanwhile a mechanism or committee shall be constituted to examine the conditions of those affected by war to be exempted from university fees for 5 years; All students who are the offspring of IDPs and refugees from Darfur States duly admitted by the admission committee to national universities shall be exempted from educational fees for 5 years; The admission procedures for the children of IDPs, refugees and those affected by war shall be facilitated in the various localities in the States of Darfur.” 
To a Darfur student asking for the waiver of fees the paragraphs of the article are clear enough, providing five years exemption to the offspring of IDPs and refugees and a committee to consider the same for all those affected by war in the region. To the cash-hungry university administrator eager to purse fees at the beginning of the academic year the same paragraphs are rich with conditions that could be employed to rubbish applications for a waiver with bureaucratic pleasure. I can imagine requests for proof of IDP status, proof of Darfur origin, identification documents, and the wildest disputes over stamps, signatures, and due verification from local, state and national authorities. Once a Darfur student fails to establish in solid stamped and signed paper that she or he is the offspring of IDPs or refugees the waiver can be immediately dropped of course, exactly like most committees and commissions born out of peace agreements. 
The Vice Chancellor of the University of Gezira, Mohamed Omer Warrag, said today that the campus violence of last week could have been avoided had the relevant rules and regulations been diligently applied. Mr Vice Chancellor, reported students of the University, flashed an iron rod in his hand when confronting the protesting Darfur students in the company of a mix of security agents, police, and student supporters of the ruling party, regulations indeed! In a statement issued on Friday the Darfur Students Association in the University of Gezira held the university administration and students’ union responsible for the deaths and demanded the dismissal of the Vice Chancellor and the prosecution of the perpetrators. Immediate criminal responsibility for the deaths is unlikely to be established in a court of justice. Personally, I carry the memory of the late Mohamed Abd al-Salam Babiker, a fellow Khartoum University student and friend who died in the custody of the National Intelligence and Security Services (NISS) in 1998 answering for a wave of student agitation in protest against an upscale of dormitory accommodation fees. Thirteen suspects were identified and a police case filed, but justice was never done. Mohamed’s first folly was organisation, his second was that ‘he had no back’, the Sudanese expression for poor connections in the circles of power. Mohamed’s father is a tailor, his means of a production a single old-fashioned Singer mechanical sewing machine under a shade in the main market of Wad Medani. He had no ‘backed’ relatives to brag of or ask for money, not even a local sheikh of standing, and every good reason to protest the increase in accommodation fees. One of the gentlemen accused of killing Mohamed was promoted from security thug to diplomat. The four students found dead on Friday in a Gezira ditch are probably equally back-less. The definition Darfuri in that regard served in the police statement as a perverse justification for their death. Darfuris die anyway, don’t they?


Resource
http://stillsudan.blogspot.co.uk/2012/12/the-darfuri-death-by-definition.html

Sunday, 17 February 2013

War criminal Ahmed Haroun Calls For Genocide

War criminal Ahmed Haroun Calls For Genocide 








Born in 1964, Haroun is from the state of North Kordofan. He comes from the Arab tribe in western Sudan.

He trained as a lawyer and at one time he was Sudan's youngest minister of state.

He also accused in participating in mobilizing and training of tribal fighters to attack civilians during the counterinsurgency in South Sudan.

He also participated in the mobilization of the Murahileen militia and the conduct of military operations in Kordofan during the 1990s.
During the time Haroun served as the Minister of State for the Interior, from April 2003 to September 2005, he also managed the Darfur Security Desk, which coordinated different government bodies involved in the counterinsurgency campaign in Darfur, such as the police, the Janjaweed, the Armed Forces, and the Intelligence Service.
This department also managed access of NGOs and the media to Darfur From 2006 until 2009, he was the Minister of State for Humanitarian Affairs.

Frågor Till Sveriges utrikesminister och Riksdagen




Sveriges utrikesminister
Utrikesdepartementet & Utrikesutskott i Riksdag

Datum : 29 july 2012 

  Ni har följt val den utvecklingen i Sudan under de senaste tre veckorna. Folkmassorna i Sudan har gått ut i demonstrationer i alla städer över hela landet. Den aktionen är ren protest svar på den nya ekonomiska reformen, men i huvudsaken den uttrycker en djup avvisande av den politiska regimen, som infördes sig på landet med våld sedan juni 1989 och t. o. m. idag. Denna regim har orsakat stora mänskliga tragedier för det sudanesiska folket i hela landet. Kriget i Darfur, Nuba bergen och södra Blue Nile, samt norra Sudan lika som tidigare södra Sudan har bekostat många livet. Regimen i Sudan har skapat svåra förutsättningar för alla segment av det sudanesiska folket, vilket driver ut folk på gatorna för att protesterar mot fattigdom och hela denna dåliga situation som de liva i. Bekräftelse på den aggressiva typen av förkastande av demokrati och yttrandefrihet, mötte regimen den fredliga protesten med våldsamt förtryck och arresteringar. Antalet fångar, rationellt, är mer än tusen talls enligt uppskattningar från människorättsorganisationer världen över. 

 Under dessa svåra förhållanden, som upplevs av vårt folk i hemmet, har kampanjer och demonstrationer av solidaritet från folket i olika länder i världen, har lanserat föra fredag, till exempel i London, Stockholm, Oslo, Amsterdam, New York, Dublin, förutom till andra städer runt om i världen. Alla dessa demonstrationer, av solidaritet med en röst ropade kräver regimens fall, och återställande av demokrati och fria sudanesiska folket. Betygsätt, eftersom vi står inför en totalitär terroristregim stannar inte våld som ett sätt att lösa den politiska konflikten, uppmanar vi alla fria världens folk att stå med det sudanesiska folket i den här prövningen och hjälpa de ur det förtrycket med att ligger press på regimen genom olika sätt att uppnå följande mål:


  •   Att frisläppa alla politiska fångar omedelbart eller   ställa de inför en rättvisa domstol. 
  • För att säkra fredliga uttryck, fritt alla människor i Suda
  •  Att stoppa blodsutgjutelsen i Darfur och Nuba bergen  och södra Blå Nilen. 
  •  Att leverera mat och mediciner till alla dess drabbade områden som regimen driv ett meningslöst krig i, till exempel i Darfur och Nuba bergen och södra Blue Nile 
  •  Stoppa alla fientligheterna mot The Republic of South Sudan Folket där är en del av den sudanesiska nationens historia.
  • Tryck av det internationella samfundet för att påskynda den arresteringsordern som utfärdades mot Sudans president Omar al-Bashir av den Internationella brottmålsdomstolen (ICC).
  • Att driva genom EU att självständig frågan och term skall icke accepteras i den kommande konflikt förhandlingar med regimen. 

Slutligen, vi tackar ER för er förståelse och uppskatta varje ansträngning Ni ta för att hjälpa vårt folk i Sudan.

Inventor of ghost houses in Sudan ( Black History)

 Inventor of ghost houses in Sudan

 ( Black History)









Nafie Ali Nafie

Torturer and former "intelligence chief" of Sudan.
Thought to be involved in assassination attempt of Egyptian President Mubarek in 1995.
Minister of Agriculture, 1996.

Additional Comments:


Active National Islamic Front member
1989 a lecturer in agriculture at Khartoum University
agriculture degree from U. of California at Davis
deputy manager of Sudan Security Bureau,
late 1989 
Torturer. In December 1992 Nafi is called Sudanese 
"intelligence chief" with Ali Osman Taha his number two.

Nafi is responsible for links to Iranian Security Minister Ali Fallahian, and Pasdaran rep Ali Menshawi.(MidEastConf, 18 Dec 92) Called head
of "Surete General" (Jeune Afrique, 10/II/1993).


Member RCC delegation to Nairobi peace talks, 8/1994, and called Minister for
State at the Presidency.


Joined Bashir in IGADD summit meeting, Nairobi, 9/1994.

Member, High Council for Peace (chaired by
Muhammad al-Amin Khalifa), 11/1994.

Called Major General (Security), and in accordance with General Security Act was sworn
in as Director, Internal Security Organ (with Dahawi as External
Security), 16 Jan 1995.

Replaced 8/1995 as Director, External
Security by Muhammad Ahmad Musfafa al-Dabi??, called General
who headed military intelligence since 1989.


Dr. Faroug Mohd Ibrahim he was Tortured by Nafie Ali Nafie Personally


The applicant is a Sudanese national and former Associate Professor at the Faculty of Science at the University of Khartoum, where he taught the subjects of microbiology, plant pathology, genetics as well as systematic and evolution. On 30 June 1989, a group of military officers seized power in Sudan. The applicant alleges the following: he was detained on 30 November 1989 by members of the security forces, without being informed of the reasons of his arrest or any charges being brought against him at the time of arrest. He was neither formally charged nor brought before a judge following his arrest or during his subsequent detention.


The applicant, together with 18 other detainees, was blindfolded and brought to Ghost House No.1 (Ghost House refers to rooms or apartments to which detainees were taken and kept incommunicado) and detained from 30 November to 12 December 1989 without having contact to the outside world. He was subjected to interrogations about courses taught and about colleagues by high-ranking members of the security services who took issue with the teaching of evolution and the applicant’s political activities. During the interrogations, the applicant was repeatedly kicked, beaten and flogged, subjected to a prolonged bath in ice water, threatened with rape and death and deprived of sleep for up to three days. The applicant was detained for three days in a small and dirty 1 metre by 1.6 metre toilet room flooded with water before being transferred to another bathroom where he was held together with five other detainees for another nine days. The applicant was later transferred to Kober prison and released on 23 February 1990. He stayed in Sudan but stopped teaching before leaving the country in June 1991 out of concerns for his safety and in protest against the University of Khartoum’s failure to remedy the violation of his and its’ academic freedom.


The applicant has lodged several complaints about his treatment, the first during his detention in 1990. In 2000, the applicant sent a letter to President Bashir in which he asked the President to take action in respect of the complaints of torture raised in his earlier complaint, outlining three options, namely: i) Truth, apology and mutual reconciliation as first priority; ii) Prosecution before national courts, as second priority; or, as third option;iii) Resort to international human rights courts. As his complaints went unheeded, he took his case to Sudan’s Constitutional Court, challenging the legality of the immunity and prescription laws that blocked investigations and prosecutions in his case. The Constitutional Court of Sudan dismissed the applicant’s case on 6 November 2008. On 6 May 2010, REDRESS brought an application to the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights on behalf of the applicant, alleging a violation of articles 1, 5, 6 and 7 of the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights

Resource

http://www.redress.org/case-docket/redress-on-behalf-of-dr-farouk-mohamed-ibrahim-v-sudan
http://nifcrimes.com/nafi.html





Inventor of ghost houses in Sudan Visit Sweden







Sudans diktator är åtalad för krigsbrott.
Ändå tar utrikesminister Carl Bildt emot en av hans närmaste män.
Nafie Ali Nafie anklagas av exilsudaneser i Sverige för att ligga bakom omfattande tortyr i Sudan.

Diktatorns högra hand befinner sig i Sverige på eget initiativ.
Besöket är en del av en Europaturné och troligen ska han försöka putsa på Sudans usla rykte vad gäller mänskliga rättigheter.

Träffade Bildt

I går träffade Nafie Ali Nafie demokratiorganisationen IDEA i Stockholm och utrikesminister Carl Bildt.

– När frågan om hans besök kom upp noterade vi att han är en inflytelserik person från ett land som vi har diplomatiska förbindelser med, säger Erik Zsiga, Bildts pressekreterare.

Men han beskrivs som Omar al-Bashirs högra hand, en diktator åtalad för krigsbrott.

– Vi ser inget konstigt i det. Vi uppmanar alla länder att samarbeta med ICC (Internationella brottmålsdomstolen i Haag, reds. anm.). Så även Sudan. Vi har en del kritiska frågor som det kan finnas anledning att ta upp, bland annat när det gäller mänskliga rättigheter. När han är i landet är det ett bra tillfälle att träffa honom.

Seminariet ställdes in

Inför Nafies möte med IDEA:s generaldirektör fick Aftonbladet en kort pratstund med diktatorns man på Strömsborgsbron i centrala Stockholm.

Vad är din relation till Sverige?

– Varför skulle jag ha en relation? Vi ingår alla i samma "community" och det är meningen att vi alla ska dela våra erfarenheter. Vilken typ av speciellt band syftar du på?

Generellt, menar jag.

– I morgon kan ni fråga allt.

Nafie Ali Nafie skulle även ha framträtt på ett seminarium vid Utrikespolitiska Institutet i Stockholm. Det ställdes in efter att Aftonbladet ringde upp institutet.
Exilsudaneser som bor i Sverige sedan de flytt det politiska förtrycket i Sudan är upprörda över Nafies besök.

”Har personligen torterat”

– Han är en av Sudans farligaste män med mycket blod på sina händer, säger Aymar Adel Amin. Han har personligen torterat människor i fängelset. Alla i Sudan vet vem han är och är rädda för honom.
Nafie var tidigare chef för säkerhetstjänsten i Sudan. I dag har han en topposition i regeringspartiet. Oppositionen hävdar att Nafie direkt uppmanade Janjaweedmilisen att i utbyte mot vapen använda våld för att driva bort andra folkgrupper från Darfur.



Resource
http://www.aftonbladet.se/nyheter/article16157360.ab


Urgent Action : Dozens of Nuba Detainees lives at risk


Urgent Action : Dozens of Nuba Detainees lives at risk

Published on January 11, 2013 in news

A released detainee from Kadugli , who was detained on December 14th , 2012 informed Arry that he had been severely tortured while he was detained ,in the Army 14th division base in Kadugli the capital of South Kordofan state , he said that” they take us eye folded to closed rooms and they beat us and put us in big barrels of cold water for hours , the peoples who were torturing us were not Sudanese they were not speaking Arabic“ . He said this kind of torture had been used on him and many of his colleagues detainees men and even women, and the detainees always taken with their eyes closed to the torture rooms.
During late October and through the tow months of November and December 2012, the Sudanese government started a campaign of mass arrests of civilians men and women in Kadugli and Dillanj, all of them from Nuba ethnicity and from one tribe the Oncho  more than 60 men were detained during November 2012, and they are still in detention since then , and facing torture and ill treatment. The detainee who spoke to Arry was released on January 5th  2013, and he confirmed that he witnessed the women detention tortured the same way men were tortured until the women entered hunger strike in the end of December and transferred to Al Obied Prison. The estimated number of detainee women in Alobied is  almost 90women and more than 70 men still in detention in Kadugli military base , denied access to family , lawyers or medical treatment , while their lives is danger because of torture and ill-treatment inside the detention . The women in Al Obied prison are still living in inhuman conditions and they have been are denied access to family, lawyers and medical treatment.
Arry Organization is deeply concerned about the detainees’ wellbeing as their life in danger because of the life threating torture and ill treatment inside the Sudanese government detention in Kadugli military base.
PLEASE SEND APPEALS BEFORE NOW TO:
President
HE Omar Hassan Ahmad Al Bashir
Office of the President
People’s Palace PO Box 281
Khartoum, Sudan
Fax: +249 183 782 541
Salutation: Your Excellency
Minister of Justice
Mohammed BusharaDousa
Ministry of Justice, PO Box 302
Al Nil Avenue
Khartoum, Sudan
Fax: +249 183 764 168
Email : info@sudanjudiciary.org
Salutation: Your Excellency
And copies to:
Minister of Interior
Ibrahim Mohamed Hamed
Ministry of Interior
PO Box 873
Khartoum, Sudan
Also send copies to diplomatic representatives accredited to your country


Resource
http://arry.org/?p=648


65 Women Detainees Urgent Action From ARRY



Urgent Action : 65 Women detainees enter hunger strike in Kadugli/ Nuba mountains

Published on December 31, 2012 in news

On December 27th ,2012 more than 65 women detainees in Kadugli the capital of south Kordofan state, entered in  hunger strike, protesting the ill-treatment inside the armed forces 14th division detention in Kadugli. After 3 days of hunger strike, on December 30th , the security and armed forces decided to transferred the women detainees to Al Obaied prison , in North Kordofan. The conditions in the Kadugli prison described to be inhuman, by some detainees released, and the situation in Al Obied should be better in term of space and food, but its unknown yet if the women detainees will allowed family visits , or any charges will be presented against them.
The Sudanese security in Kadugli the capital of South Kordofan/Nuba mountains state , started arrest campaign against women in Kadugli since early November 2012. While the numbers in mid -November were 33, the arrest campaign against Nuba women continued to take place in Kadugli and Dillanj. The cities of South Kordofan especially Kadugli and Dillanj are totally under siege by the Sudanese armed forces, where informations and supplies are impossible to get in and out the cities. The only reason this women detained is suspecting that they have relations to the Sudanese Peoples Liberation Movement/North “SPLM/N”, the movement fighting the government in the region. Most of the detainees women has no relation to politics , and they are house wives, and their families and children in strong need for their care.
Arry organization and the families of the detainees are extremely concerned about the safety of the detainees women , as they are in danger of torture and ill treatment in detention . Therefore Arry organization is calling the Sudanese government to :
-          Immediately and unconditionally release the 65 detainees and insure their safety or press charges against them.
-          To allow the detainees family visit and insure them access for lawyers and medical care and reveal their detention location.

P LEASE SEND APPEALS BEFORE NOW TO:
President
HE Omar Hassan Ahmad Al Bashir
Office of the President
People’s Palace PO Box 281
Khartoum, Sudan
Fax: +249 183 782 541
Salutation: Your Excellency
Minister of Justice
Mohammed BusharaDousa
Ministry of Justice, PO Box 302
Al Nil Avenue
Khartoum, Sudan
Fax: +249 183 764 168
Email : info@sudanjudiciary.org
Salutation: Your Excellency
And copies to:
Minister of Interior
Ibrahim Mohamed Hamed
Ministry of Interior
PO Box 873
Khartoum, Sudan
Also send copies to diplomatic representatives accredited to your country

Urgent Action From Arry Org


Urgent Action :Tow WHRDs receiving death threats after released from detention

Published on February 7, 2013 
On January 14th, 2012 ,  the Sudanese security detained Awatif Awad , she is Women human rights defender, she is working on women and youth rights. Awatif was released on January 17, after she was psychologically and physically tortured, she was sexually harassed and verbally abused in the detention, after  her release the security forced her to report every day to the political division office, and she missed one day they raided her house in search for her  and threaten her family and she is still receiving death threats  and at risk of detention and torture.
On January 18th, 2012 the Sudanese security detained Amira Abd Allah and tortured her physically and Psychologically. Amira was arrested few weeks before this arrest in December 2012 and ordered to report daily to the security political division every day until she was rearrested in January 2013. She is receiving continuous  death threats and  of being rearrested and tortured from the security.
Arry Organization is very concerned about the 2 WHRDs Awatif Awad and Amira Abd Allah, as they are at risk of torture and living in danger of detention and receiving death threats. Arry organization call on the Sudanese government to stop harassing and threading them and investigate the violations and torture they faced the security detentions.


P LEASE SEND APPEALS BEFORE NOW TO:
President
HE Omar Hassan Ahmad Al Bashir
Office of the President
People’s Palace PO Box 281
Khartoum, Sudan
Fax: +249 183 782 541
Salutation: Your Excellency
Minister of Justice
Mohammed BusharaDousa
Ministry of Justice, PO Box 302
Al Nil Avenue
Khartoum, Sudan
Fax: +249 183 764 168
Email : info@sudanjudiciary.org
Salutation: Your Excellency
And copies to:
Minister of Interior
Ibrahim Mohamed Hamed
Ministry of Interior
PO Box 873
Khartoum, Sudan
Also send copies to diplomatic representatives accredited to your country

Saturday, 16 February 2013

foton och video om sudanesiska demonstration Infront sudanesiska ambassaden i Stockholm juni 2012



نحن أبنائك في الحزن النبيل

السودانيون أمام السفاره السودانيه بالعاصمه السويديه ستكهولم

جمعه لحس الكوع 29 يونيو 2012





Under these bad situations in Sudan, has started demonstrations and solidarity campaigns of people from Sudan in different countries of the world on Friday, June 29, 2012 , for example, in London, Stockholm, Oslo, Amsterdam, New York, Dublin in addition to other cities around the world. All these demonstrations of solidarity shouted with one voice demanding the fall of the regime and the recover of democracy and freedom For the Sudanese people.