Sunday, 27 October 2013

Sudan Protests Test Al-Bashir








Sudan Protests Test  Al-Bashir

by Emily Mankowsk



Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir is facing the greatest threat to his leadership since he seized power in 1989.

Demonstrations that began in Khartoum on Monday, September 23rd, to protest a dramatic cut in fuel subsidies have spread throughout Sudan and intensified with the government’s bloody response. While the final trajectory remains unclear, the unprecedented scope of protests and the government’s use of live ammunition, internet shutdowns, and widespread detentions have led some Sudan experts to speculate this could be the end for Bashir.

Dozens of people were reportedly killed in the first few days of protests, including at least 50 shot in the chest or head on Tuesday and Wednesday alone. An increased security presence met protesters ahead of evening prayers on Friday, causing further clashes and reported deaths that may now number well over 100.

While government attacks in Darfur and other parts of Sudan have been ongoing for years, unrest and mass killing has rarely touched Khartoum and other cities currently facing mass protests.

Bashir’s announcement on Sunday that the government will cut fuel subsidies led to an increase by almost100% in the price of gasoline and diesel overnight. In addition, the Sudanese pound has sharply depreciated in value over the past few weeks and the prices of essential food products, like sugar, have risen dramatically. The combination of these shifting economic factors and continuing political unrest over Bashir’s regime triggered a public outcry.

Thousands gathered in the city of Wed Madani on Monday, but soon the protests spread across the nation with news outlets reporting demonstrations in the capital, Khartoum, Omdurman, Port Sudan, Atbara, Gedarif, Nyala, Kosti, Ed Obeid, Ed Damazin, Kassala, and Sinnar.



The protests initially began peacefully, however violence quickly erupted in many of the cities. It has been reported that civilians have set fire to cars, petrol stations, and police buildings and thrown rocks at the security forces. In response, Sudanese police and National Security and Intelligence Services (NISS) officers fired tear gas and live ammunition in attempts to control and disperse the crowds.

While the Sudanese government insists that fewer than 29 people have died over the past four days of protests, credible news sources and activist groups put the death toll at minimum of 50 casualties as of Friday, September 27th. However, some Sudanese opposition groups maintain that the number of deceasedexceeds 100. Most of the victims ranged between 19-26 years of age, the majority of them students. One of the deceased was a 14-year old boy from North Khartoum. Hundreds more civilians have reportedly been detained by Sudan’s NISS, including activists, demonstrators, political opposition leaders, and students.

Lucy Freeman, Amnesty’s deputy chief for Africa, said the police’s “aiming at protesters’ chests and heads” is a “blatant violation of the right to life,” urging authorities to end the violent repression of the protestors.

The Sudanese Vice-President Ali Osman Taha, who was addressing an event in Khartoum on Thursday, said that his government does not fear those demonstrations and insisted that the economic measures decided this week will remain in place. Sudan’s Minister of Information Ahmed Bilal Osman told Al Jazeera that the protests were forms of “terroristic attacks” meant only to cause chaos in the country.

The Sudanese government appears to be doing all that they can to contain the protests, but the oppression seems to have only incited the people more. Around 3,000 people took to the streets again on Friday in Omdurman demanding freedom and the resignation of President Omar Hassan al-Bashir.



The U.S. State Department issued a statement denouncing the Sudanese government’s crackdown on protests, the excessive use of force against civilians, and the inhibiting of universal rights of freedom of speech and assembly.

The U.S. statement and the violent actions of the Bashir regime underscore the level of absurdity and potentialembarrassment of a near visit by Bashir this week to New York to address the UN General Assembly. Bashir had stated his intention to travel to New York on the very same day he announced the subsidy cuts, going as far as to say he had secured a flight and hotel.

Wednesday, 23 October 2013

Sudanese 'diplomats spying for agents that torture in Khartoum'


The Telegraph : Sudanese 'diplomats spying for agents that torture in Khartoum'

By Damien McElroy, Foreign Affairs Correspondent


Badaoui Malik Badaoui, a Darfur refugee, was arrested at Khartoum airport in July last year to face questions about his attendance at demonstrations at Downing St and outside the Sudanese embassy in St James in 2010.


Over a period of nine days in detention, he suffered daily beatings after undergoing questions for shaming Darfur.


Another activist, who has applied for asylum, known only as Yassir said he was also held last January just months after attending an even in the House of Lords about Sudan descent in conflict in three restive provinces. He is convinced that the security agents at Khartoum airport were acting on intelligence gathered in London.


"I think there are some refugees that are not genuine but have been sent here by the Mukhabarat (Sudan Security Services) to monitor the rest of us," he said. "They said they had sent me to London to make a human of me," he said. "They said 'you are a black slave, you will never be the equivalent of an Arab. We sent you to the UK and you have come back brainwashed against us."


"We believe there are government spies writhing the Sudanese community," said Kamal Kambal, an activist for the Nuba people, who are fighting for greater autonomy from Khartoum. "They knew the whole story of that meeting and used it against Yassir during his arrest."
Baroness Kinnock, the wife of the former Labour leader, said she had hosted an event by the activist organisation Waging Peace. She said a report issued by the organisation into the incident had established that there was infiltration by Sudanese agents.


"It makes it clear that the Sudanese government is spying on Sudanese individuals in the UK and that this can result in their detention and torture when they return to Sudan. I was appalled to hear of the arrest, detention and torture of a Sudanese man because of his attendance at an event in Parliament which I chaired.

"The government must look again at the activities of the Sudanese intelligence agencies in this country and investigate the claims of torture by the Sudanese National Intelligence Services made by those who have been returned."

In response to questions from Gareth Thomas, a Labour MP, the Foreign Office said it was aware of the reports of torture detailed by the campaign group Waging Peace. "We have frequently made clear, publicly and in private discussions with the Sudanese authorities, our concerns over the ill-treatment of detainees in Sudan," Mark Simmonds, a junior minister said.

However Mr Thomas said the government should act against Sudanese spying in the UK.

"If this sort of activity is taking place in the UK and the government has gathered evidence of representatives of the Sudanese government or Sudanese involved in monitoring the community on behalf of the government, the Foreign Office should be calling in the ambassador to explain these activities and a stand should be taken," Mr Thomas said.

In written questions to the Foreign Office, Mr Thomas has demanded that officials establish if Sudanese with British links have been tortured on return to Khartoum and report to parliament on how people may have been affected by the practice.

Sudanese interrogators have presented video and other surveillance evidence of opposition meetings in British citizens. One man, known only as A in the report, said he was presented with photos of himself at two separate meetings on the Edgware Road with opposition activists as proof of his political involvement.

Mohammad Nuradin spent more than three years in Sudanese prisons after returning from the country in 2004 after a three year spell in Europe, including a period in London. After escaping Sudan in 2009, he came back to Britain but the Manchester-based activist faces deportation after his asylumn claim was rejected.

"I am worried about going back. They already know that I have gone to protest – there are cameras on us at the embassy when we go on demonstrations, there are people spying in the rooms when we have meetings and they already know that I have escaped from the country," Mr Nuradin said. "I fear they will catch me at the airport."

Mr Nuradin said he was beaten, sometimes by hand, sometimes with a metal pipe or rifle butt of a rifle. He suffered cigarette burns and was made to stand in the sun all day. At night cold water was thrown on him as he slept.

Activists said a government review of the official assessment of the risk of torture faced by Sudanese returned from the UK must reflect the new evidence.

"Many democracy campaigners from Sudan also face deportation back to a country that will torture and possibly kill them. The Home Office should recognise the risk they face, if deported, and defend their right to sanctuary," said Olivia Warham, a director of Waging Peace.

Sunday, 20 October 2013

British Foreign and Commonwealth Office Report The human rights situation in Sudan deteriorated between July and September 2013.



British Foreign and Commonwealth Office Report
The human rights situation in Sudan deteriorated between July and September 2013.





The human rights situation in Sudan deteriorated between July and September 2013. The worsening of tribal conflict and lawlessness in Darfur, and violent demonstrations in Khartoum and several other cities at the end of September, were significant causes for concern.


Fighting has continued between the government of Sudan and the Sudan Revolutionary Front (SRF), with the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reporting new fighting in North and South Kordofan between 23 and 28 July. The intensity of fighting has reduced since then with the onset of the rainy season.

A one-month unilateral ceasefire was declared by the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement–North (a banned militant organisation) from 1 September. However, in the states of South Kordofan and Blue Nile there were further credible reports of aerial bombardment of rebel-held areas by the Sudanese Armed Forces, with civilian casualties. There were also reports of at least 12 civilian deaths due to unexploded ordinance in South Kordofan. Human rights groups have reported that the government of Sudan continues to detain without charge civilians suspected to be members of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North in the government-held areas in South Kordofan and Blue Nile. Most are still under detention, but several detainees have now been charged and convicted, and 18 female detainees were released on 20 July.

OCHA assess that the number of those affected or displaced by conflict in the two border states is over one million, although it is impossible to verify these figures without independent access to the areas. OCHA figures state that 225,000 Sudanese have taken refuge in South Sudan and Ethiopia after fleeing the conflict in South Kordofan and Blue Nile. OCHA also report that out of 63,000 people displaced by attacks by the SRF in late April, 21,000 had returned to their homes by the end of July. The government of Sudan and the SRF have yet to agree on technical preparations to administer polio vaccines to 165,000 children under five in rebel-held areas, which would include the need for a two-week ceasefire to allow vaccination to take place.

The security situation in Darfur continues to deteriorate, with reports of looting and armed robbery affecting both aid workers and Darfur residents. Seven UNAMID (African Union – United Nations Mission in Darfur) peacekeepers were killed in an ambush in South Darfur on 13 July. Armed men attacked and robbed the offices of the American Refugee Committee on 24 August and the International Committee of the Red Cross on 26 August. Inter-tribal fighting has also increased, with over 100 people from the Salamat and Misseriya tribes killed in fighting in Central Darfur on 22-25 July, and nearly three hundred from the Misseriya, Ma’aliya and Reizegat tribes killed in East Darfur on 10-12 August. OCHA reports 134,000 people were newly displaced as a result of this fighting, and remain unreachable due to government restrictions on humanitarian access to many areas in Darfur.

Political freedom deteriorated significantly towards the end of the period. Following the lifting of fuel subsidies at the end of September, there were a number of protests in Khartoum, Wad Medani and other cities around Sudan. There were credible reports that over 100 protesters and police were killed, and hundreds more injured, with live ammunition being used by security forces on protesters. Over 600 political activists and protestors were detained by the authorities.

Newspapers continued to be subject to censorship: around ten editions of newspapers were confiscated for publishing material the authorities disapproved of between July and mid-September. During the protests in late September, security services issued a directive against negative articles on the lifting of subsidies. Up to three Sudanese newspapers were banned from publishing for indefinite periods. The Khartoum bureaux of Sky News and Al Arabiya were closed down by the authorities. Up to 400 journalists are reported to have gone on strike as a result of the directives. Up to four newspapers have chosen not to publish.

On 2 July, the Sudanese Parliament adopted an amendment to the Armed Forces Act that could allow civilians to be tried in military courts. In August, President Bashir announced that International NGOs would not be allowed to work on human rights. The effects of both acts remain to be seen. A Christian international aid worker was forced to leave Sudan in August after security forces alleged he was engaged in proselytisation work. A positive development was the 8 September release of a political prisoner from the Popular Congress Party, after almost 12 years in prison.

There were several cases of concern in the courts in this period. A police officer from Darfur who wrote a report on corruption was sentenced to four years in prison on 23 August on charges of discrediting the police and creating false information. A woman from Khartoum is being tried for public indecency after refusing to cover her head in a government office in Jebel Aulia, and could face flogging. Sudanese lawyers also report continued harassment of Darfuri students by the police and security forces, including beatings, arbitrary arrest, and mistreatment while in detention.

Religious freedoms in Sudan continue to be an issue of concern; FCO officials continue to raise this issue with senior interlocutors in the government of Sudan.

Update: 30 June 2013

The human rights situation in Sudan deteriorated significantly between April and June 2013 largely due to escalating conflict and insecurity.

Fighting between the government of Sudan and the Sudan Revolutionary Front (SRF) intensified with a major attack by the SRF at the end of April on the towns of Umm Rawaba in North Kordofan and Abu Karshola in South Kordofan. According to OCHA figures, 63,000 people were displaced in this fighting. There are reports from local human rights groups that SRF soldiers looted the towns and killed an unknown number of civilians. In June, SRF forces shelled the state capital of Kadugli on a number of occasions hitting a UN compound and killing a UN peacekeeper and also hitting a local football stadium that was hosting a regional tournament. FCO Minister Simmonds made a statement condemning the attack.

Meanwhile, Sudan Armed Forces continued their campaign of aerial bombardment in South Kordofan and Blue Nile with credible reports that civilian settlements were affected. Human rights groups have also reported that the government of Sudan continues to detain without charge civilians suspected to be members of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North in the government-held areas in South Kordofan and Blue Nile.

OCHA now assess that the number of those affected or displaced by conflict in the two borderstates may be as high as 907,000 in South Kordofan and 158,000 in Blue Nile, although it is impossible to verify these figures without independent access to the areas. OCHA also report that there are now 223,000 Sudanese refugees in South Sudan and Ethiopia who fled the conflict in South Kordofan and Blue Nile.

In Abyei, on May 4, the Paramount Chief of Dinka Ngok, Kuol Deng Majok, and a United Nations Interim Security Force for Abyei (UNISFA) peacekeeper were killed when armed men attacked their convoy in the area of Baloom. FCO Minister Simmonds issued a statement expressing deep concern and urging restraint on all sides.

In Darfur, worsening insecurity led to massive displacements with OCHA estimating that there have been over 300,000 new IDPs since the beginning of the year, including 27,000 refugees who fled to Chad and 3,500 who have fled to the Central African Republic. This was driven by a number of factors, including inter-communal fighting over resources and clashes between government and armed movement forces, particularly in parts of Northern, Southern and Central Darfur. Access to people affected by conflict in Darfur remains constrained due to the government of Sudan’s new Directives for Humanitarian Work issued in March, under which access by international humanitarian organisations and their staff to conflict areas is fully restricted.

There were no real improvements on political and civil rights in this reporting period. On 1 April, President Bashir made a positive speech calling for national dialogue with all opposition forces and ordering the release of some political detainees. But there has been no further progress on implementation of this new approach. Furthermore, Vice-President Taha issued a directive to lift pre-publication censorship on newspapers. However, since his directive, security services have temporarily suspended at least three newspapers due to their reporting.

A further concerning development was the case of three men sentenced to amputations of the hand for theft in a court in El Fasher, North Darfur, in June. The sentences have not yet been carried out. Human rights organisations also report that in June, a female student was fined for wearing trousers by a public order court in Khartoum.

Religious freedoms have come under threat with evidence of a trend towards religious intolerance. Since September 2012, at least 215 foreign Christians have been expelled from Sudan with some having their assets in-country confiscated by security services. There are also many examples of Sudanese and South Sudanese Christians being harassed and sometimes detained by security services and some church premises closed down or demolished. FCO officials have raised strong concerns about this trend with senior interlocutors in the government of Sudan.

The UN Independent Expert on Human Rights in Sudan, Professor Mashood Baderin, visited the country from 16th – 19th June. The government of Sudan offered cooperation during his visit and he travelled to the state capitals in South Darfur and Blue Nile and to parts of North Kordofan. British Embassy officials met the Independent Expert during his visit to feed in views ahead of his report to the UN Human Rights Council in September 2013.

Update: 31 March 2013

The first three months of 2013 have shown no signs of progress on the human rights situation in Sudan. Internal conflicts show little sign of abating, and numerous restrictions on freedom of expression remain in place.

The Government of Sudan and Sudan People’s Liberation Movement – North (SPLM-N) have yet to begin talks aimed at ending the conflict and allowing access for humanitarian purposes in Southern Kordofan and Blue Nile, despite calls for them to do so from the African Union, supported by the UNSC. Latest figures from the UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) suggest that more than one million people from both states have now been displaced or severely affected, while full access for humanitarian purposes continues to be blocked by the government. It is not possible to make a complete and accurate needs assessment in the absence of such access, but we judge that high levels of food insecurity persist in both states. We urge parties to the conflict to commit to talks without preconditions, aimed at an immediate cessation of hostilities and agreement to full and independent humanitarian access.

In Darfur, 10 years after the outbreak of conflict, there has been a recent further upsurge in violence. This is adding to the already substantial humanitarian need in an area where 1,430,000 internally displaced people in camps rely on food aid. We have pressed the Government of Sudan to meet their obligations under the Doha Document for Peace in Darfur to draw this conflict to a close, as well as allowing unrestricted access for humanitarian and security groups.

Since the start of the year we have been told of cases of international Christian institutions and individuals being harassed by the Sudanese security forces, including the detention of individuals without charge and the confiscation of scriptural books and travel documents. We believe that over 150 non-Sudanese Christians have left Sudan following harassment from the security services. We have raised our concerns for the treatment of Christians jointly with other international partners.

Political expression during this period has been an area of equal concern. In the last three months the Sudanese Authorities have arrested and detained signatories to the New Dawn Charter, a political manifesto calling for change in Sudan. Those detained have included a British dual national, to whom we have requested consular access without success. We are concerned about the welfare of those detained. We, along with EU partners, continue to raise these cases with the Government of Sudan.

In this period we have also been told of a case of amputation as punishment for theft. While provided for by Sudan’s Penal Code, there has been a de facto moratorium on this punishment since 1984, with the exception of a case in 2001, and this latest application is a deeply worrying development. Claims that judges could be trained to perform the amputations should medical professionals refuse to carry them out are also of great concern to the international community. The EU formally raised our serious concerns about this incident with the Sudanese Ambassador in Brussels on 7 March.

It is welcome news that the UN Independent Expert on the situation of human rights in the Sudan, Professor Mashood Adebayo Baderin, visited Sudan for the second time in February 2013, and was able to visit Darfur. His statement upon completion of his visit highlights the growing number of humanitarian concerns within Sudan and underlines our call for the government to fully cooperate with him as he performs his duties in accordance with the mandate from the UN Human Rights Council.

Saturday, 19 October 2013

Stop Human Rights Violations in Sudan

Stop Human Rights Violations in Sudan


Given the Sudanese government’s history of human rights violations, detainees are at grave risk of perdition. There is no adequate information of their whereabouts and/or charges. "Freedom of press worsened since the recent uprising in September 2013." Faisal M. Salih, laureate of Peter Mackler Award commented. We, group of Sudanese activists in Washington DC will hold a hunger strike in front of the White House (Oct 21-25) in solidarity with Sudanese rightful aspirations .Our goal is to pressure the Sudanese government to respond to the following demands: -Immediate release of political detainees and stop of arbitrary arrest; - Bringing those responsible of killing protestors to court; - Respecting freedom of press and media expression in Sudan.Your support is essential to serve justice. Equally important, China, Iran and Qatar should revisit their political and economic associations with the Sudanese government for they are enabling the violation of human rights violations

Stop Human Rights Violations in Sudan

Tuesday, 8 October 2013

Brief on the ongoing developments and human rights situation in Sudan Prepared by Sudanese civil society groups in Sweden in consultation with two civil society organizations in Khartoum

منظمات المجتمع المدني السودانية في السويد تتقدم بمذكرة للخارجية السويدية حول وضع الحريات وحقوق الإنسان في السودان

ستكهولم، 7 اكتوبر 2013: في إطار تكثيف الضغط الدولي علي الحكومة السودانية ، دفعت مجموعة من منظمات المجتمع المدني السودانية بالسويد بمذكرة لوزارة الخارجية السويدية حول الوضع الراهن للحريات وحقوق الإنسان في السودان إثر الإحتجاجات واسعة النطاق التي تشهدها البلاد. هدفت المذكرة إلى التنوير بمجريات الأحداث الحالية في السودان، وإلى وضع قضية الانتهاكات في السودان في أجندة الحكومة السويدية لخلق مزيد من الضغط على الحكومة السودانية . كشفت المذكرة حجم الانتهاكات التي ارتكبها نظام الخرطوم ضد حقوق الإنسان وحرية التعبير، منددةً بالتصدي الحكومي الدموي للتظاهرات السلمية، ومنوهةً إلى ضرورة ايقاف الانتهاكات الحالية وإطلاق سراح المعتقلين فوراً أو تقديمهم للعدالة علاوةً على إجراء تحقيق شفاف حول الانتهاكات الأخيرة وتحويل المجرمين إلى القضاء، مع ضمان حرية التعبير والتوقف عن تضييق الخناق على كتاب الرأي. تأتي هذه المذكرة مكملة للحراك الجماهيري الذي نظمه السودانيون في السويد في الأيام القليلة الماضية والذي بدأ يوم الأربعاء 2 أكتوبر بالتظاهر أمام السفارة السودانية بإستكهولم مشفعاً تلك المبادرة بتظاهرة كبرى في وسط العاصمة إستكهولم يوم السبت 5 أكتوبر شارك فيها مجموعه من السودانيين  و منظمات المجتمع المدني السودانية والروابط الإقليمية رفضاً للدموية و الوحشية التي يتعامل بها النظام في السودان و الأجهزة الأمنية و الشرطية مع المدنيين مما أسفر عما يفوق ال 200 شهيد و 700 جريح و ما يفوق 2000 معتقل في سجون النظام ناهيك عن الاستهداف الواضح لوسائل الإعلام المحلية و الدولية . وهي دعوة للجميع بالتظاهر أمام سفارات السودان في جميع أنحاء العالم لكشف وتنوير المجتمع الدولي ومراكز صنع القرار بمجريات الأحداث الراهنة في السودان.
 أيمن عادل أمين
ع/ منظمات المجتمع المدني الموقعة على المذكرة



Sudanese civil society organizations in Sweden, advancing to the note of the Swedish Foreign about the status of civil liberties and human rights in Sudan Stockholm , 7 October 2013: in the context of intensified international pressure on the Sudanese government , led a group of Sudanese civil society organizations in Sweden memorandum to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Sweden on the current situation of human rights and freedoms in Sudan after large-scale protests taking place in the country . The purpose of the memo to enlightenment informed of current events in Sudan, and to put the issue of violations in Sudan in the Swedish government's agenda to create more pressure on the Sudanese government. Revealed note the size of abuses committed by the regime in Khartoum against human rights and freedom of expression, condemning addressing government bloody peaceful demonstrations, and noting the need to stop the violations of current and release the detainees immediately or bring them to justice as well as to conduct a transparent investigation on recent violations and convert criminals to justice, while ensuring freedom expression and stop cracking down on opinion writers. Comes this note complementary to the motionless mass organized by the Sudanese in Sweden in the past few days , which began on Wednesday, October 2nd to demonstrate in front of the Sudanese Embassy in Stockholm supporting the initiative demonstration a major center of the capital Stockholm on Saturday, October 5 in which a total of Sudanese and civil society organizations, Sudanese and links regional rejection of the brutal and bloody regime is dealing in Sudan , the security services and police with civilians, resulting in what more than 200 killed and 700 wounded and more than 2,000 detainees in the prisons of the system not to mention the apparent targeting of the media , both domestic and international . It is a call for everyone to demonstrate in front of the embassies of Sudan in all parts of the world to detect and inform the international community and the decision-making centers informed of current events in Sudan.
Ayman Adel Amin

from Civil society Group sign the Statement




To : Swedish Foreign Minister
 That was on Monday 23rd 2013 at 5:45 pm. We have been arrested from a peaceful demonstration in the neighborhood. (…) My brother El  Sheikh was beaten and his head was injured in three places according to the medical report (…), his  collar-bone was broken in addition to several bruises. We haven’t been allowed to go to the hospital. He was bleeding all the night. This made him swoon. As for me, I have been beaten by several soldiers. They were too many and attacked me like flies. They have beaten me with countless hoses, but I can track their traces in my body. They dragged me across the floor, called me bad names using the rudest words. I have been threatened with group rape. One of them even molested me. Can you imagine?”
From testimony of the young Sudanese novelist Ms. Rania Mamoun



Brief on the ongoing developments and human rights situation in Sudan
Prepared by Sudanese civil society groups in Sweden in consultation with two civil society organizations in Khartoum
Stockholm 7th October, 2013

On 23rd September peaceful protests started in Medani, central Sudan in response to the government decision to cut subsidy of oil products, and consequently increase prices of fuel and food items. One day later protests expanded to the capital city of Omdurman Khartoum, Khartoum North and other major towns of Sudan. Demonstrators soon shifted from protesting against subsidy cuts to demand regime change and democracy.
Police and National Congress Party militias dealt with protests violently by using excessive and unnecessary force. This led to several killings and injuries among peaceful protesters. Recent estimates indicate that death toll amounts to over 200 lives and 700 injuries. In parallel to this cruelty authorities arrested more than 2000 of activists. The Minister of Interior declared on 27th September that they have arrested 600, two days later the Sudanese Committee for the Defense of Rights and Freedoms (SCDRF), a human rights group in Khartoum announced that the number of detainees have increased to1000. Based on the most recent experience of similar protest in June-July 2012, human rights groups are deeply concerned of the safety of detainees. According to some activists and demonstrators released from detention, as well as a number of well-documented incidents and rampant cases, torture is a routine practices in secret detention centers run by the National Intelligence and Security Service (NISS) as well as in police custodies in Sudan. It is also reported that most of the leaders of opposition parties are subject to detention and house arrest. Furthermore, eyewitnesses report orchestrated destruction of private properties in different parts of Khartoum by security agents to justify brutality against protesters and use of excessive force.
The Spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights stated on 27th September that Security forces [in Sudan] are reported to have used excessive force in suppressing the protests, with security agents allegedly firing live ammunition at some protesters and beating others. Witnesses speak of bodies of dead demonstrators with gunshot wounds in the upper torso and head. There have also been reports of destruction of property by demonstrators”. In a joint statement with African Centre for Justice and Peace Studies, Lucy Freeman, Africa Deputy Director at Amnesty International said “Shooting to kill – including by aiming at protesters’ chests and heads – is a blatant violation of the right to life, and Sudan must immediately end this violent repression”
In addition to killing, Government of Sudan spared no effort to curtail freedom of expression in Sudan during this week of protests. Since 25th September Internet service was interrupted several times including a full blackout on 25th. Electronic media and news outlets are frequently blocked. Also, according to Journalist for Human Rights (JHR), a human rights group focus on media freedoms, the National Intelligence and Security Service (NISS) summoned on 25th all editors of Khartoum printed dailies and warned them collectively to abstain from publishing on a long list of topics including subsidy cuts, demonstrations, killings of protesters and detentions of activists. They have been instructed to confine their news stories to what they receive from NISS or from the official spokespersons of police and army. Obtaining information from other sources including victims and medical staff in hospitals is strictly prohibited. A number of journalists and columnists are prohibited from publishing since the beginning of the protests.
The Sudanese Human Rights Monitor, an organization based in Khartoum reported that three dailies were confiscated on 19th September. These were Al Ayam, Al Jareeda and Al Intibaha. On 24th Aljareeda was again confiscated and columnists Zuhair Al Sarraj was banned from writing for seven days. In response to clear instructions by NISS on the coverage of protests, Al Ayam daily decided on 26th September to voluntarily stop publishing as 'censorship made it impossible to publish a newspaper within the minimum professional ethics' according to its editor, Mr. Mahjoub M. Salih. At least two more dailies decided later to stop publishing.
Representatives of foreign media have also been harassed. According to human rights sources, corresponded of the satellite channel Al Arabia was arrested for some hours, his license was withdrawn and his broadcast office in Khartoum was closed down. The correspondent of the US TV Al Hurra in Medani has been arrested, Skynews correspondent have been summoned and presenter Sulf Abudafir of the local Al Masa TV has been arrested for a short period and warned not to cover protests.
Reading these developments with the grave violations of human rights committed by the current Sudanese regime including Darfur genocide and the atrocities against the peoples of the Blue Nile and Nuba Mountains, concerns about potential large scale violence are pressing. We invite Sweden, the EU and all actors in the international community to use their bilateral and multilateral channels to pressurize the Government of Sudan to:
  • Respect their obligations under Sudan 2005 Interim Constitutions and international law. They must immediately stop killing peaceful demonstrators;
  • Release all detainees or bringing them to court in a due legal process as soon as possible. In all cases the Sudan government must guarantee their safety and bodily integrity; and
  • Initiate independent investigation into the killing of demonstrators including those killed in Nyala, South Darfur last month, and bring perpetrators, whoever they are to justice.
  • Respect freedom of expression and stop application of all types of censorship and harassments against journalists and writers.
If the we are drawing lessons from the atrocities committed in Darfur, Nuba Mountains, Blue Nile, Syria, Libya, Egypt and Yemen, world must act now and firmly to stop using excessive force against peaceful protesters.
The undersigned:
  1. Sudanese Revolutionary Committee in Sweden
  2. Darfur Association in Sweden
  3. The Nubian Association in Sweden
  4. Nuba mountains Peoples Association  in Sweden
  5.  Sudan Liberal Democratic Party
  6. Sudan People's Liberation Movement/ North(SPLM/N)
  7. The Sudan Front for Change (SFC)
  8. Human Rights Organization- Sudan (HROS)
  9. Freedom of Expression Campaign  - Sudan
  10. Two Civil Society Organization From Sudan



Sunday, 6 October 2013

SUDAN DETAINED JOURNALISTS WHO SUPPORTED ANTI-GOVERNMENT PROTESTS




SUDAN DETAINED JOURNALISTS WHO SUPPORTED ANTI-GOVERNMENT PROTESTS

By Amanda Sperber
06/Oct/2013

Last Monday night, Abdel-Rahman El-Mahdi slept in his car outside Sudan’s National Intelligence and Security Services (NISS) compound's gates. His wife, Dahlia Elroubi, had been arrested after eight NISS agents visited their home in Khartoum, Sudan’s capital.

When the NISS agents arrived, Abdel sent his three children to their rooms. “I said [to the NISS agents], ‘Do you have a search warrant?’” Abel told me over the phone two days later. “They said, ‘No. We are national security, and we don’t need a search warrant.’” The agents tossed Dahlia—along with her camcorder, camera, photocopy machine, and small printer—into their car.

After the agents drove away, Abdel jumped in his car and drove after them. “They drove to the palace compound, and that was where I lost contact with her,” Abdel said. While his mother watched his three kids, Abdel spent the next day outside the gates, exhausted and wearing rumpled clothes. Authorities gave Abdel few details about why they arrested his wife.

This isn't surprising. In the midst of Sudan's ongoing economic crisis, President Omar Al-Bashir's regime decided to lift fuel subsidies, doubling prices. Citizens began to demonstrate in the streets on September 23rd, and in the last two weeks, authorities detained 700 people and started to crackdown on the media.

“I think she got arrested because she spoke her mind about what she believes in,” Abdel said. “She believes that the people killed in the protests were killed unjustly. There was no reason for them to die.”

“They are being pushed down by their government,” he said. “She believed for the future of our children, these things cannot go on.”

The government responded more aggressively and excessively to the demonstrations than many expected. Amnesty International reports more than 200 people were killed in the protests, although others on the ground believe the number is much higher.

“The recent crackdown on activists of all sorts is a desperate attempt at intimidation—much like the killings in the first few days of this current uprising—and to quell the unrest,” said Yousif Khalid, an activist who requested his name be changed because he fears government reprisal.

The government isn’t only silencing individuals’ voices. Several Sudanese newspapers were forced to shut down, and the government pressured others to depict the protesters as “saboteurs.” Four days after the protests started, the government shut down Al-Arabiya’s TV office in Khartoum. According to the Associated Press, several newspapers stopped publishing to avoid government pressure. Sudanese Foreign Minister Ali Ahmed Karti defended the clampdown. Last Sunday, hetold Al-Arabiya, “Media make revolutions. If the revolution is created by media, we have to be serious in dealing with it.”

Dr. Harry Verhoeven, an African politics professor at Oxford University, told me on the phone that he heard that several newspapers’ editors-in-chief were called in for a meeting and told not to report on the protests.

Dr. Verhoeven said, “Media freedom expands and contracts in Sudan. There is quite a bit of vibrancy and good journalism, and you'd sometimes be amazed what people can write or say, but coming too close to the red lines or hitting the wrong note at times of crisis is very dangerous.”

“The regime prefers not to kill or torture, but to shut down publications temporarily or to ensure no advertiser will lend its funds to the newspaper—an equally effective, but far less costly tactic,” he said. “There is also a long tradition of pre-publication censorship, during which NISS agents visit the newspaper the evening before publication and scan everything. This was officially lifted less than a year ago, but the threat—and occasionally practice—remains and as such encourages self-censorship.”

In recent weeks, journalists questioned these tactics. “Why do you insist on lying?” said journalist Burham Abdel-Moneim in a press conference after Interior Minister Ibrahim Mahmoud Hamed claimed photos posted on social networking sites of slain student protesters were fabricated and depicted protests in Egypt, not Sudan. Authorities immediately imprisoned Burhan after the conference, and the Washington Post said Information Minister Ahmed Belal Osman could be heard muttering, “... will take measures against you.”

A Facebook page dedicated to freeing Burham received over 5,000 likes in less than two hours. Burham was released a few hours later, but hasn’t spoken about what happened to him. When he gave an interview later that evening, he appeared shaken. Even the anchor asked him if he was OK. Yousif said, “He was not as bold. Even the anchor asked him, ‘What was the matter?’ I think they threatened him with his family. Of course, he claimed he was all right. The interview was cut short.”

Another Sudan-based journalist, who has understandably requested to remain anonymous, emailed me. The journalist wrote, “[sic] I am afraid these days to pitch any article because the security forces are chasing the activists and the journalists, although they closed my newspaper two years ago and prevented me and other journalists from working at the other newspapers. But they [are] watching us all the time. When these demonstrations started, I published two articles about them, and I am not sure what will happen to me when they [see] my articles.”

Another particularly harrowing account came from Rania Mamoun, an award-winning novelist. On aSudanese blog, she described being arrested with her brother and sister on September 24th:

I was hit by a large number of soldiers, who circled me like flies. The beating was intense and meant to hurt and abuse and many rods were used that I lost count. I can trace the effect on my body where marks are many. They dragged me on the ground and called me all sorts of names then threatened me with gang rape. I was even harassed by one of them, imagine.

With the continued beatings I reached the stage where I did not feel pain with every new strike that followed. Numbness, stiffness, or my body sagging or becoming a bag of cotton has enabled me to become indifferent or senseless. To be made senseless by beating is the ultimate level of pain and torture.

Authorities beat Rania's brother, breaking his collarbone, and then left him on the prison floor, where he bled until he lost consciousness.

To accomplish these efficient clampdowns, the NISS acquired an incredible network of informers in hotels, taxis, petrol stations, ministries, and youth gatherings. They also acquired very advanced ICT systems to monitor phone and internet activity—many activists believed these systems rely on the assistance of national telecom companies. “[No telecommunications company] will refuse to give security services the information they ask for,” said Yousif. “Applications like Whatsapp, [which are] very popular in Sudan, rely on your real phone number to give you an account. See where I'm going with this?”

The protests in Sudan fizzled out because the NISS was able to oppress demonstrators through different forms: arrests, detention, threats, and information obtained through technology. In this way, Dr. Verhoeven said the Sudanese security forces have been more successful at suppressing uprisings than their “colleagues in North Africa.”

Dr. Verhoeven remained skeptical that these protests could cause a political shift. “Even though lots of my friends in Sudan are trying to convince me that this time is somehow different, this time their tactics are really calibrated, and this time they are really fed up with the regime, I am not convinced of that yet,” he said. He saw this situation play out many times before, but is waiting to make a judgment call. As he noted, so far, more people were killed during these protests than previous demonstrations.

However, many disagreed with Dr. Verhoeven. After seeing non-activists take to the streets, Yousif believed discontent had spread far enough and deep enough for the government’s political intimidation to be insufficient to stop the protests.

When Abdel thought about the detention of his wife, he considered himself strangely fortunate. He said, “I am getting a lot of support, from family, from people outside, like yourself, calls with Amnesty. There are a lot of other people who have no clue what to do. I am a lucky one. I hope the opportunities I have to get her out, I can use to help others.” Despite not hearing news about his wife for days, he continued to actively post on social media and organize protests with other families in front of the NISS headquarters.

Rania’s essay ended with a defiant statement that reminded me of Abdel’s beliefs: “Your beating and your torture does not frighten me nor break me. It will not force me to retreat, but rather strengthens me and inspires me. You ask me: Are you not afraid? And I say: I’ve become stronger.”

As Abdel waited for news about his wife, his strength continued to be tested.

More about Sudan:

Sudan Revolts: Internet Blackouts and Protesters Dead in the Streets

Capturing the Violent and Complex Birth of South Sudan

Inside Sudan

Statement by the Confederation of Sudanese Civil Society Organisations (CSCSOs) on the recent events in Sudan


Statement by the Confederation of Sudanese Civil Society Organisations (CSCSOs) on the recent events in Sudan



October 2013


The Confederation of Sudanese Civil Society Organizations (CSCSOs) has been following with increasing concern the recent mass protests and the Sudan governments’ heavy handed response to these protests as well asthe loss of innocent lives. The protests were triggered by the Governments decision to lift fuelsubsidies as a measure to deal with a faltering economy, this ‐ despite numerous warnings and advice to the contrary voiced by various economic experts and institutions as well as leading figures affiliated with the ruling party. These measures which completely disregarded the opposing public opinion and sentiment heavily voiced by both traditional as well as formal sectors of society as well as in the press in the weeks preceding the decision, could not have been enacted were it not for the repressive context of the state being governed solely and exclusively by the regime of the National Congress Party. A regime which has continuously denied the Sudanese people their fundamental rights and freedom and continuesto enactlegislation which runs contrary to the constitution as well as international treaties and conventions ratified by the Sudanese people. Such legislation including but not limited to the National Security and Intelligence Act, the Press and Publications Act, the Voluntary and Humanitarian Act, and manymore. The institutionalized ethnic and religious differentiation and marginalization of those sectors of Sudanese society which carry significant weight, in addition to injustice, discrimination and corruption have led to the cessation of South Sudan and continue to fuel conflict in greater Darfur, Blue Nile State and South Kordofan State. Conflicts which have drained the country’s wealth and resources and have caused immense human loss and suffering and now pose a real threat to the further disintegration of the state. Conflicts which have locked the Sudanese people in a vicious cycle of poverty, ignorance and lack of well‐being. Itis within this broader context that the masses have taken to the streets in the capital Khartoum as well as other major towns and cities in the country, voicing their discontent at these suffocating economicmeasuresthat will onlymake theirlives evenmore unbearable. The Confederation of Sudanese Civil Society Organisations whilst strongly rejecting these latest economic measures and lending its unwavering support to the protestors who are likewise expressing their right to voice their opinion on the matter, appeals to the protestorsto respect the boundaries of freedom/rights of assembly/protest and to exercise discipline, public order and regard for the rights of others. Moreover, violence, the destruction of public and/or private property, and violence against those bodies responsible for upholding law and order are to be condemned. Likewise we call upon the bodies responsible for upholding law and order to respect the rights and freedom of peaceful assembly and expression of the people and refrain from the use of violence and let halforce. Furthermore, we demand of the Judiciary and Police Authorities to launch an independent and transparent investigation on the use of live ammunition against the demonstrators and the resulting death and injury of many of them. These investigations and their outcomes should be made public and those responsible should be held accountable.We call upon the ruling party and its various organs to review its current governance practices which has violated basic rights and freedoms, impoverished the population and undermined the country’s security and territorial integrity. In addition to placing people’slivelihoods in jeopardy,the ongoing protests also come in response to the lacking rule of law, respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms, and an absence of democratic systems and good governance. The continued abuse of power,repression of citizens and bad ill‐advised policies will only lead to the collapse and disintegration of the country and the misery of its people. Confederation of Sudanese Civil Society Organisations 26 September 2013 The Confederation of Sudanese Civil Society Organizations (CSCSO) is an autonomous, independent and politically non‐partisan body established to support and safeguard the space and rights of its member organizations.

Photo and Video From Demonstration Against Sudan Bloody Regime

Photo and Video From Demonstration Against Sudan Bloody Regime 


Over the past 7 days since the start of demonstrations in Sudan on 23 September, at least 200 people have been killed by the Sudanese authorities, hundreds more injured and at least 800 arrested. Newspapers and media outlets have been suspended or censored and known members of political opposition parties, other activists and journalists have been detained.

 We organized Demonstration by sudanese Human Rights Organization and Civil Society Group and Sudanese in Sweden .
Sergels Torg
Saturday 05/Oct/2013
From 10:30 to 13:00
































بيان لجنة الثورة السودانية في السويد

بيان لجنة الثورة السودانية في السويد






جماهير الشعب السوداني 

في هذه اللحظة التي نقف فيها قبالة السفارة السودانية في استكهولم، للتنديد بالعنف الموجه ضد المحتجين السودانيين في الخرطوم ومدني ونيالا وكافة نواحي السودان، في هذه اللحظة عينها ما زالت أعين أمهات وآباء الشهداء دامعة، وما زالت قبور الشهداء رطبة، وما زالت السجون والمعتقلات المعلنة والسرية تحتشد بالمناضلين الأحرار، وما زالت الحكومة الانقاذية المجرمة ترتجف من الخوف، وما زالت آلة القمع تدور، وما زالت الحركة الاسلامية تكذب وتتحرى الكذب حتى انكشف المستور وبانت سوءتها. في هذه اللحظة تغرق الخرطوم ودارفور ومدني ونيالا وكل الوطن السوداني في حداد كبير غير مسبوق على من سقطوا من الشهداء في انتفاضة سبتمبر الكرامة. في هذه اللحظة ما زالت كراسات وفاء غارقة في الدم وما زالت صرخات الشهداء عالقة في الهواء، وما زالت قلوب السودانيين تنزف الألم والغضب و الحزن. اننا نعزي الشعب السوداني كله في شهداء سبتمبر ونعزي أنفسنا أن النصر قريب.
اننا من هنا، من هذه المنصة التي تبدو وما هي ببعيدة عن موقع الأحداث، نؤكد أننا مع خيار الشعب السوداني، وأننا لسنا ببعيدين عن آلامه ومآسيها. إن الشهداء الذين سقطوا في ميدان الحرية والكرامة هم اهلنا وابناؤنا واخوتنا ودمنا ولحمنا. لقد كانوا وما زالوا مستقبل السودان الجديد. السودان الحر الكريم الذي دفع ثمن حريته من دم ابنائه وبناته، بلا من ولا أذى. إننا مع أشواق الشعب السوداني وندعم تطلعاته المشروعة في الحياة الكريمة وفي المساواة وفي التآخي وفي المشاركة الفعالة في حكم نفسه. ومشاركتنا لا تقتصر على التنديد والترحم على الشهداء، بل هي وعد بأن نفعل كل ما يسعنا من اجل دعم وتعضيد ثورة سبتمبر المباركة إلى أن تزول هذه الطغمة الفاشلة المجرمة وتذهب إلى حيث تستحق، إلى محاكم العدالة قبل مذبلة التاريخ.


إننا عن حق وبمشروعية كاملة نطالب عمر حسن أحمد البشير بالتنحي الفوري عن الحكم، نسأله مشفقين على مصير السودان أن يتحرى العبر والدروس مما حدث في الدول المجاورة وليس ذلك بالتاريخ البعيد. عليك ايها الرئيس التنحي الآن ودون تأخير تفادياً للمزيد من القتل والعنف والترهيب. كما نطلب من كل فرد عمل على توطيد هذا النظام والإبقاء عليه مراجعة ضميره في هذه السانحة الأخيرة والتخلي عن دعم آلة العنف التي تقتل الأبرياء والاطفال تزلفاً لكراسي السلطة وخوفاً من مواجهة العدالة.
كما نوجه رسالتنا واضحة لا لبس فيها ولا غموض لأفراد وموظفي السفارة السودانية في السويد من السودانيين وكل موظفي السلك الدبلوماسي السودانيين في جميع الدول أن انجو بأنفسكم من التهلكة، وأنفضوا يدكم من هذه المذبحة التي طالت حتى تلاميذ المدارس وقتلت الأبرياء بطلقات مدروسة تعرف طريقها إلى المقاتل في الصدور والروؤس. لا تلوثوا أنفسكم بدم هؤلاء الشهداء .وليكن معلوماً إذا بقيتم تمثلون هذه الحكومة فأنتم لا تمثلون السيادة السودانية بل تمثلون الإجرام وانتهاك حرمة الدم وحق الحياة الذي كفلته كل القواميس وكل الأديان. إذا لم تغسلوا ايديكم الآن عن هذه المجازر فأنتم شركاء لا ريب فيها، واعلموا أن التاريخ لا يرحم القتلة ولا المتآمرين ولا الشياطين الخرس الساكتين عن الحق. وإن خفتم على أنفسكم وعلى اكل عيشكم وعيش ابناءكم تذكروا أن هناك ما يزيد على ثلاثمائة ألف قتيل في دارفور، ومئات آلاف القتلى في جبال النوبة، والنيل الأزرق وكجبار و الآن الخرطوم ومدني ونيالا، تذكروا أن الانقاذ ليست إلا تاريخ متواصل من الدم والجثث، كل هذه الجثامين في رقباكم، ويا له من حمل تنؤ به الجبال.
إننا نشد من أزر المناضلين في الداخل. ونعرف أن القوى الثورية ستجد طريقها للعمل الثوري الناضج المخلص من اجل الديمقراطية وقد بدأت جهود التنسيق في الداخل من اجل توحيد الكلمة السودانية على درب الحرية السواء. ونقول لكم سنفعل ما بوسعنا للتنويه بعدالة قضية المحتجين المتطلعين إلى الحرية في السودان وعدالة مطالب السودانيين في سودان خال من العنصرية والفقر والحرب والجوع والتجهيل. إن رفع الدعم عن الوقود لم يكن إلا الشرارة التي أشعلت نار الاحتجاجات ولكن ثورة السودانيين الآن هي المنتهى الطبيعي والضروري للتراكم الذي حدث على مدى خمس وعشرين عاماً من الظلم والتخبط في السياسات واستعداء الدول الشقيقة واستعداء المحيط الاقليمي والدولي والفساد الذي أزكم الأنوف واعترفت به قيادات الانقاذ نفسها. إن غضبة اليوم هي رد فعل متوقع لكل الظلامات التي أسبغتها الإنقاذ على السودان دون وجل ولا إشفاق على مصيره. لقد تراجع أداء السودان على كل المستويات وصار في ذيل كل قائمة سوية وعلى صدر كل قائمة سوداء. إن السودان في عهد الإنقاذ هو بين آخر خمس دول في كل مؤشرات الحكم الرشيد والتنمية المتوازنة بينما يحتل بثبات موقعاً متقدماً في الحروب الداخلية و الأداء الاقتصادي الضعيف والفساد وكبت الحريات.
إننا ندعو لإطلاق سراح كافة المعتقلين فوراً ودن قيد أو شرط. اطلقوا سراح المعتقلين الذين يزيد عددهم على الألف معتقل وفقاً لتقارير المنظمات الحقوقية في الداخل. أطلقوا سراح المعتقلين من المراهقين والصبيان دون الثامنة عشر ، اطلقوا سراح المعتقلين ذوي الاحتياجات الخاصة، اطلقوا سراح المعتقلين من الأمهات اللائي حرمن من ابنائهن أو اضطررن لسجن فلذات اكبادهن معهن. كما ندعو لتشكيل لجان قضائية محايدة للتحقيق الفوري في اغتيال المحتجين.
اننا ندعو الدولة السويدية والدول الاسكندنافية والاتحاد الاوربي والامم المتحدة والمنظمات الحقوقية وجيران السودان في محيطه الافريقي والعربي وكافة المجتمع الدولي إلى تشديد الضغط على الحكومة السودانية لرفع يدها عن المحتجين في الشوارع الذين ليسوا بمخربين ولا لصوص ولا اجانب بل سودانيين يمارسون بأكثر الطرق سلمية حقهم في الاحتجاج السلمي. ونهيب بكل السودانيين مواصلة النضال بكافة الأشكال السلمية من اجل الوصول بالسودان إلى الحكم الرشيد الديمقراطي المبني على العدالة والمساواة وتكافوء الفرص والتنمية المستدامة.


عاش كفاح الشعب السوداني
والخلود لكل شهداء الحرية



لجنة الثورة السودانية في السويد
ستكهولم
الاربعاء 2 اكتوبر 2013م