Gender: Female
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Age: 30
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City: SF Bay Area, California
State: California
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Tuesday, September 01, 2009
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Minawi, Hassabu Discuss Repatriation, Reconstruction in Darfur Posted on Tuesday, September 01 @ 00:15:00 BST by admin Staff writer Senior Assistant to the President, the head of the Transitional Darfur Regional Authority (TDRA), Mini Arkoi Minawi, focused on voluntary repatriation and reconstruction program in Darfur and means and ways of attracting national and international support to provide the required needs.
In a press statement following the meeting of Minawi with the Humanitarian Aid Commissioner, Hassabu Mohammed Suleiman, it said that the meeting approved federal – state levels coordination to promote IDPs voluntary return programs and work to attract the necessary funding to complete the projects in Darfur. Hassabu praised the Arab, Islamic organizations, Chinese, Turkish, and Darfur for their extended support fund, adding, "We are not talking about the camps, but the voluntary return to the villages and provision of basic services and programs of social peace, reconciliation, rehabilitation, reconstruction and provision of alternative income sources for the displaced and refugees." The Commissioner affirmed stability of the humanitarian situation in Darfur and engagement of local people in their livelihood activities, notably agriculture, hence stability of social security in the region. In another development, Minawi received the report of the Technical Committee in charge of demarcating boundaries between North Darfur State and the Northern State, pledging to provide the committee with facilities needed. In a press statement the Committee Chairman, Awad Saeed Al Saadoun stated that the committee has completed its work in harmony, developed a program for the second phase of exploration and the commencement of work and tabled its budget before the presidency. http://www.sudanvisiondaily.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=49080
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Sunday, August 16, 2009
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Political assassination in Yambio
By Justin Ambago Ramba
August 15, 2009 — Yambio woke up on Saturday 15/08/2009 to the
shocking news of the brutal death of Mrs. Mariam Biringi the
Chairperson of the Women’s Desk in the National Congress Party (NCP),
that occurred at around 11:00 pm. Mrs Biringi who was a teacher by
profession comes from the Moru tribe, was attacked and held at gun
point for over three hours by armed people who number around 5 to 7 men
and according to family members who witnessed the assassination said
that the murders were dressed in military uniforms.
During the three hours ordeal before Mariam was killed, her
attackers threatened her and took away unknown sum of money.
Unfortunately though some people managed to report the incident to the
local police at a time when this respectable teacher, politician,
community leader and a lovely mother was begging for her life, the
police never turned up for her rescue. She was walked out of her
compound and gunned down in the street where her body was left lying up
till 10:00 am on Saturday. The thugs set the whole compound on fire
before walking away with their loot without being intercepted by the
police knew exactly what was taking place as they were informed right
away from the start of the attack.
Nevertheless the general consensus is that Mariam’s death is
politically motivated as the political parties are busy campaigning for
the forth coming elections. As the general atmosphere remains tense,
the other non SPLM politicians are now made to rethink their positions
in as far as their own safety is concerned.
Western Equatoria State once the most peaceful and the most
beautiful in the whole Sudan has been reduced under the SPLM rule to a
no man’s land. Yambio the capital of the state is now both the head
quarters for the state government and the main garrison for the Ugandan
rebels of the Lord’s resistant Army, making it a place of mafia type
crimes, abductions and harassments by anybody carrying a gun.
The assassination of Mariam Biringi should be understood in the
context of the general insecurity engulfing the semi – autonomous south
Sudan. With a very weak government in juba, and underpaid security
staff, and unclear political vision by the dominant SPLM, the survival
of the citizens even within the main town is entirely a matter of luck.
Once out in the remote states like Western Equatoria, Jonglei or
Warrap, survival becomes only for the fittest as jungle law and
impunity are quite rampant.
Mariam Biringi was not a criminal, nor was she an enemy to any body.
And being a member of the NCP should not allow of her brutal and
inhumane assassination. The government has already said that they are
investigating in the case, which is nothing by hypocrisy. How can the
same police and the same security authorities who turned deaf ears and
never turned up for her rescue do any thing tangible after her death
when they were notified of her being held at gun point before her being
killed .
This case which is more of a political assassination given the
circumstances will in fact mark the beginning of Somalisation of south
Sudan even before holding the much anticipated elections. Political
leaders from now onwards will have to have private security personnel
if they have to survive the campaign period and worse still would be
how to remain alive till April 2010.
However people should never be put off by what has happened and the
bottom line remains that the elections must be held and this weak
government must be changed. Is it not rather strange that Salva Kiir
awarded governors, Kuol Manyang and Jemma Kumba as his best governors
while the people of Jonglei and western Equatoria states are being
killed and abducted in their thousands? And now how does Mrs. Jemma
Kumba feel while heading a state that make stands out for the first
political assassination of a female politician?
It is sad that though we look forwards to see the assassins of
Miriam Biringi being brought to the book, still our deeply seated
distrust in a the current incompetence in the security services in
south Sudan ends demoralizing any person who still maintains any little
hope for a peaceful democratic south Sudan, that is run by people who
have value for human life. May those who orphaned Mariam Biringi’s
children never ever live to see the light of the next day.
Oh God Almighty, may her soul rest in eternal peace.
Dr. Justin Ambago Ramba (MB, BCh, DRH, MD) Secretary General ,
United South Sudan Party (USSP). He can be reached at:
justinramba@doctors.org.uk
http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article32146
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Thursday, August 06, 2009
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‘Trousers’ trial of Sudanese journalist adjourned amid protests
Wednesday 5 August 2009.
August
4, 2009 (KHARTOUM) — A Sudanese court today postponed the trial of a
female journalist accused of wearing “indecent” clothes as police beat
women protesting in her support.
 - Sudanese
journalist Lubna Hussein, right, who faces 40 lashes on the charge of
"indecent dressing", flashes a victory sign to her supporters as she
enters the court in Khartoum Tuesday Aug. 4, 2009 (AP)
Lubna Hussein, a journalist and at the time a public information
officer at the UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS), was arrested last month by
Public Order Police (POP) with more than half a dozen girls and were
charged with violating dress code under Article 152 of Sudanese law.
The crime is punishable with up to 40 lashes and a fine of 250 Sudanese pounds ($100).
Hussein, unlike most of the other girls, refused to admit the charge and asked to go to trial.
However, her situation was complicated with the immunity she
possesses being a UNMIS employee. The journalists said she waived her
immunity rights and resigned from the UN.
The judge today adjourned the session so that the court can receive
opinion of the Sudanese foreign ministry on the whether her resignation
automatically revokes her immunity at the date the incident happened.
One of the defense lawyers Jalal al-Sayed argued before the court
that she enjoyed immunity incident to her UN employment status, against
Hussein’s wishes.
Hussein emerged from the courtroom flashing the victory sign
expressing dissatisfaction that the case was temporarily put on hold.
“The court should not have delayed the trial,” she told journalists.
“I am not afraid of flogging. ... It’s about changing the law,” Hussein told The Associated Press (AP).
Hussein further said she would take the issue all the way to Sudan’s
constitutional court if necessary, but that if the court rules against
her and orders the flogging, she’s ready "to receive (even) 40,000
lashes" if that what it takes to abolish the law.
The journalist was received by a crowd of around a 100 women, many
wearing trousers, including prominent figures such as Rabah Al-Sadiq
Al-Mahdi, daughter of former Sudanese prime minister, who waited
outside the courtroom holding signs protesting the ‘indecency’ law
provisions.
But Sudanese police fired tear gas and beat the protestors as well
as some of Hussein’s female lawyers including Manal Awad Khogali.
The Sudanese media, subject to state censorship, are not covering the case of Hussein.
However, today Sudan official news agency (SUNA) reported today on a
forum held to discuss “public appearance” that discussed provocative
dressing by women in a subtle reference to Hussein’s case.
Rabie Abdel-Attie, a leading figure at the ruling National Congress
Party (NCP) government, called the uproar over the case politically
motivated and said only the constitutional court can decide to repeal
the law.
“There is no need for all that noise. There are clearly political motivations behind this thrust,” he said.
The Sudan People Liberation Movement (SPLM) deputy Secretary General
Yasir Arman accused POP of “taking advantage of the women they arrest
and bargain with them for their honor and exploit their fear from their
families.
The POP has reportedly filed a police complaint and began
proceedings to lift the immunity of Arman in order to try him before
the court in light of his comments.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he was "deeply concerned"
about Hussein’s case and that flogging is a violation of international
human rights standards.
The case threatens to become an embarassment for Sudan amid growing international attention.
An observor told Sudan Tribune from Khartoum that he expects the
court to dismiss the charges on grounds of immunity as a "face saving"
alternative to the government.
(ST)http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article32041
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Thursday, July 30, 2009
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Woman defies Sudan's pants law - may face lash
Mohamed Osman, Associated Press
Thursday, July 30, 2009
(07-30) 04:00 PDT Khartoum, Sudan --
A Sudanese female journalist facing 40 lashes for wearing
trousers in public in violation of the country's strict Islamic laws
told a packed Khartoum courtroom Wednesday she is resigning from a U.N.
job that grants her immunity so she can challenge the law on women's
public dress code.
Lubna Hussein was among 13 women arrested July 3 in a raid by
members of the public order police force on a popular Khartoum cafe for
wearing trousers, considered indecent by the strict interpretation of
Islamic law adopted by Sudan's Islamic regime. All but three of the
women were flogged at a police station two days later.
But Hussein and two other women decided they wanted to go to trial
and Hussein invited human rights workers, western diplomats and fellow
journalists to Wednesday's hearing.
Some of her female friends showed up in court Wednesday wearing trousers in a show of support.
"This is not a case about me wearing pants," said Hussein, who
works in the media department of the U.N. mission in Sudan and
contributes opinion pieces to a left-leaning Khartoum newspaper.
"This is a case about annulling the article that addresses women's
dress code, under the title of indecent acts. This is my battle. This
article is against the Constitution and even against Islamic law
itself," she said after the hearing.
Hussein said the U.N. mission was trying to stand by her, invoking
a clause in an agreement between the Sudanese government and the world
body's representatives in Sudan that obliges authorities to ask
permission before starting legal proceedings against a member of its
staff.
Islamic Shariah law has been strictly implemented in Sudan since an
army coup led by President Omar el-Bashir seized power in 1989,
toppling an elected but ineffective government. Activists and lawyers
say the implementation of the law is arbitrary.
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/07/30/MN4A190VKM.DTL
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Wednesday, July 22, 2009
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South Sudan artist rocks Bor TownTuesday 21 July 2009.By Philip Thon Aleu July 20, 2009 (BOR TOWN) – A local artist sang for leisure-seeking residents of Bor Town on Sunday night, boasting in one song that Abyei is southern territory. Musicians in Bor town on July 19, 2009; Aluel Dhol Deng (left) and Johnson Jock Lal (right).Johnson Jock Lal, who was born in Khorfulus, Jonglei State, is on the first ever tour to capital Bor Town. He was accompanied by Aluel Dhol Deng, a developing female artist from Aweil in Northern Bhar-el Ghazal. Ms. Aluel attracted a tremendous crowd of young people when her song lauded her home town to this end: a music talent from Mading Aweil to be enjoyed Mading Bor. For Johnson, who had sold thousands of albums in the Dinka and Arabic languages, his presence here was a long-awaited. Hundreds of people gathered at While Nile Hotel at dusk for the entertainment that ended just past midnight. With the entry fees of 10 Sudanese Pounds, most young people made it to see Mr. Johnson who had composed liberation, love and unity songs for among the Southern Sudanese and beyond. At the sideline of the night dance, Johnson, 33, told the Sudan Tribune that he composed his first song ten years ago in 1999, but had kept many songs to himself while 13. Married with children, Mr. Johnson described his talent as inborn, but he says that fellow Southern artists like John Kudusay, Nyankol Mathiang and Gordon Kong motivate him further. “I usually chat with them and I like their songs,” he said when asked of close friends who inspire his work. The artist Nyankol, who has inspired Mr. Johnson, was born in the contested oil-rich region of Abyei. She composed songs that sought clarification from Southern leaders for why Abyei was left out of Southern Sudan even though it is a Dinka land. Johnson seconded this in his song that Abyei really is a Dinka land. The Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA) is to rule on Wednesday, July 22 on whether Abyei is a southern territory. The music industry is highly admired by young people who grew up in exile during the war but home productions are less popular. However, having one event at night in Bor Town, where deeply rooted cultural norms reject such entertainments, attracted all ages of people. Foreign tapes are highly preferred by youths but the elderly and villagers always prefer local musicians. Typically, local artists dwell on themes of liberation and traditional division of people with each tribe or clan claiming superiority in bravery and such sorts of thing. (ST) Sudan Tribune
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Tuesday, July 14, 2009
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France condemns flogging of Sudanese womenTuesday 14 July 2009.July 12, 2009 (PARIS) — The French government today deplored reports of flogging Sudanese women over “indecent clothing” and called on Khartoum to respect international conventions in this regard. Eric Chevallier, spokesman of the French foreign ministry“France strongly condemns whipping of 10 Sudanese women announced yesterday. We are particularly concerned by information that many others could be sentenced to similar sentences,” Eric Chevallier the spokesman of the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs said. “France, which is fighting for the abolition of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment and violence against women, calls on the Sudanese authorities to stop the proceedings against these people” he added. Yesterday Lubna Hussein, a journalist and a public information officer at the UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS) told Sudan tribune that she was one of nine girls taken by the Public Order Police (POP) on Sunday from a ballroom in an area east of Khartoum for wearing trousers. The arrests took place under the Criminal Penal Code which states that anyone wearing “indecent clothing” shall be punished with no more than 40 lashes or a fine or both. Ahead of her were four other girls including non-Muslim Southerners under the age of 18 who were sentenced to 10 lashes and a fine of 250 Sudanese pounds. Hussein and two other women were spared the sentence because they asked for the presence of their lawyers and their cases are still pending. The French official urged Sudan “to sign and ratify the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women”. North Sudan is governed by Islamic Shari’a law which imposes several restrictions on public appearance of women. (ST) Copyright © 2003-2008 SudanTribune - All rights reserved.
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Monday, July 13, 2009
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No position taken on ICC Darfur warrant: AU panelSunday 12 July 2009.July 11, 2009 (WASHINGTON) — A Darfur panel formed by the African Union (AU) last February, denied that they have made any formal position on the arrest warrants issued by the International Criminal Court (ICC) against Sudanese figures. Mbeki and Abubaker at a public session in rebel-held areas.On Friday, Reuters quoted the panel head Thabo Mbeki as saying that the three individuals indicted by the ICC must stand before court and defend themselves. “The consensus reached is that those charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity should appear in court and defend themselves," he said. “The warrant has been issued. There is nothing that can be done.” Reuters reported. However, the AU commission issued a statement on Saturday describing the Reuters report as “completely false and highly irresponsible”. “No member of the Panel has made any such pronouncement. Indeed, no member of the Panel could make any such pronouncement as the Panel has not yet completed its work” the statement read. Reuters issued a corrected version of the original report stating that the AU panel made no determination on the ICC Darfur warrants. However, the news agency left the quotations attributed to Mbeki without changes. Yesterday a senior official at the African Union – United Nations mission in Darfur (UNAMID) who asked not be named told Sudan Tribune that the report created “a great deal of tension and fear of backlash”. The eight-member commission was established by the AU last February in response to the imminent issuance of arrest warrant for Sudanese president Omer Hassan Al-Bashir which came a month later. The AU criticized the arrest warrant and last week the summit in Sirte, Libya decided that its who are ICC members not to cooperate in apprehending the Sudanese president despite their legal obligations to do so. Multiple sources told Sudan Tribune that Mbeki has lobbied intensely to prevent the Sirte summit from endorsing the Libyan backed proposal arguing that it will undermine the work of his commission. The panel acknowledged in its statement that “some of the interested parties with whom the Panel has met had called for ICC trials”. The delivery of the panel’s report to the AU was delayed from July until September. Yesterday Mbeki speaking from the Ethiopian capital said that the panel is working within the AU public position calling for deferring Bashir’s indictment. “Our principal — the body that formed us (AU) — has said ‘delay the serving of those warrants’,” Mbeki said according to Agence France Presse (AFP). “We will address the justice issue in a comprehensive manner that has been suggested by our interlocutors,” he added during a press conference at the AU’s headquarters. The former South African president added that the issue of justice needed different handling than the ICC. “Of course there are people who are saying... that people who have been charged by the ICC should indeed appear before the ICC,” he said. “But the central issue is that everybody agrees that this matter of justice is important and has to be addressed in different ways with a different sort of intervention,” he said. Some critics have said that the AU panel is trying to protect Bashir from prosecution. The AU decision last week was condemned by Darfur rebels and human right organizations as condoning impunity. The panel’s mandate has not been made public but it includes assessing Sudanese judiciary as well as reconciliation and compensation mechanisms. (ST) Copyright © 2003-2008 SudanTribune - All rights reserved.
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Sunday, July 12, 2009
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Al-Bashir in Egypt for Darfur talks
Cairo - Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir arrived in Cairo on Sunday for talks with Egyptian President Hosny Mubarak about recent Egyptian efforts to strike a peace deal in Darfur.
Al-Bashir is also set to brief Mubarak on Sudan's efforts to implement a 2005 comprehensive peace agreement in southern Sudan, Sudan's ambassador to Egypt and permanent representative to the Arab League, Abdel-Moneim Mabrouk, told reporters.
Renewed fighting between the tribes of southern Sudan has left more than 1 000 people dead since the beginning of the year.
David Gressly, the head of the United Nations' mission to southern Sudan, last week expressed concern about the violence, but stressed that progress had been made.
"The continuing violence in some parts of the region is a direct consequence of two civil wars, a very high level of armament among the civilian population and continued frictions between neighboring communities over vital resources like water and pasturage," he told reporters on July 8.
Mubarak and al-Bashir are also expected to discuss preparations for Sudanese presidential and parliamentary elections scheduled for January 2010, and developments in the International Criminal Court's arrest warrant for al-Bashir, Mabrouk said.
Egypt, a close ally of the Sudanese government in Khartoum, hosted delegates of several Sudanese rebel groups, including the Sudan Liberation Army and the United Resistance Front, on Saturday.
Al-Bashir is scheduled to stay in Egypt through the summit of the Non-Aligned Movement, scheduled to take place Wednesday and Thursday in the Sinai resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh, Mabrouk said. - Sapa-dpa  Published on the Web by IOL on 2009-07-12 15:08:26
© Independent Online 2005. All rights reserved. IOL publishes this article in good faith but is not liable for any loss or damage caused by reliance on the information it contains.
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Saturday, July 11, 2009
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UPDATE- Sudan, AU, UN meet Sunday to discuss Darfur hybrid forceSaturday 11 July 2009.(Adds paragraphs about recruitment of national staff and rewriting of cooperation on helicopters) July 10, 2009 (KHARTOUM) – A Sudan, African Union and United Nations committee charged with the deployment of the hybrid mission in Darfur will meet during the week end. During its sixth meeting to be held in Khartoum, the Tripartite Mechanism will discuss issues pertaining to the deployment of peacekeepers in Darfur. The issue of the five tactical helicopters is expected among the agenda of the meeting. The helicopter provided by the Ethiopian government would be based in South Darfur capital Nyala. The UNAMID needs to secure cooperation of the Sudanese authorities for these tactical helicopters. Sudanese delegation will be chaired by Mr. Mutrif Sidiq, undersecretary at the foreign ministry who is also in charge of UNAMID file. The African Union will be represented by Ambassador Ramtane Lamamra, AU Commissioner for Peace and Security , while the United Nations will be represented by UN Under- Secretary General for Field Support, Ms Susana Malcorra. The 26,00O stronghold force now has some 15,000 troops in Darfur. Despite the restricted mandate and the lack of troops, the mission exerts huge efforts to be in good terms with the Sudanese authorities and to deal in confidence with the displaced in Darfur camps as well as the rebel groups. The mission also injects significant amounts of money in the local economy through contracts concluded with Sudanese suppliers. The AU-UN operation awarded 179.5 million of US dollar to Sudanese vendors since last March, said UNMID spokesperson, Noureddine Mezni. To implement its mandate the mission, the mission recruited 2259 Sudanese staff representing 65 per cent of the authorized national posts. In addition, there are 3,088 individual contractors working for UNAMID at HQ, Sectors and Team Sites. The mission committed its self to prioritize Darfuris in the recruitment of national staff. UNAMID has also continued to implement outreach efforts to universities, professional organizations and others in order to attract applicants from all groups. Mezni expressed hope that this meeting will find rapid solution to a number of issues including the UNAMID radio. The hybrid mission considers the radio as a crucial tool to enhance confidence building process in Darfur. (ST)
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Friday, July 10, 2009
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Sudanese English daily prevented from circulation outside Khartoum for two daysFriday 10 July 2009.July 9, 2009 (KHARTOUM) — Sudanese authorities have prevented, for two day, the distribution outside Khartoum of a daily newspaper after its refusal to run a story related to the alleged killing of a local official of the SPLM-DC. Since mid 2008, Security agents review the content of the draft copy of Sudanese newspapers, including ’The Citizen’ every evening before the printing. They often deduct articles, which they claim threaten national security. Also they used to submit news articles edited by the Sudanese Media Center (SMC) which is sponsored by the security and intelligence services. Editors who refuse to cooperate with this media face daily obstruction from the security agents. During two days, Wednesday and Thursday the security agents confiscated the copies of The Citizen at Khartoum airport to prevent its circulation in the rest of the country outside the capital, particularly in southern Sudan. Nhial Bol Aken, the Editor in Chief of the Independent English language The Citizen said on Thursday "Today, they held the newspapers for two hours, and then released them when it was too late to fly them to the different states." On Wednesday the security had confiscated the issue for the first time. According to Nhial, on July 2, security agents brought a report from the SMC alleging that a member of the SPLM-DC of the former foreign minister Lam Akol had been killed by the SPLM in Upper Nile. "I told them that we would need to verify the story before we could publish it. They started complaining about our coverage, about SPLM activities. They told one of our officials that if we don’t cooperate with them they would sabotage our work," he said. The chief editor said the security official removed a number of news items and opinion articles from The Citizen during the last week. The daily is circulating in Khartoum where it is printed and six states in southern Sudan. According to National Press Council figures, the newspaper averaged 12,000 copies daily. "Consequently, our circulation was restricted to Khartoum," Nhial said. The Sudanese capital accounts for about 30 percent of the newspaper’s sales. (ST) Sudan Tribune
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Thursday, July 09, 2009
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Ghana Backs Blocking Arrest Warrant Against Sudanese President By Scott Stearns Accra 08 July 2009
Ghana's President John Atta Mills (undated photo) Ghanian President John Atta Mills says African leaders are refusing to cooperate with an International Criminal Court arrest warrant against Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir because it is best for Africa.
President Mills says last week's decision by the African Union to ignore the International Criminal Court's arrest warrant for the Sudanese leader was hotly debated at the alliance meeting in Libya.
"At the end, we arrived at a decision by consensus," he said. "And let me say that when you belong to a group where you believe in democracy, the decision taken by the group is binding on you, not that I dissented."
President Mills says he was convinced by the argument that the court's case against President al-Bashir differs from cases against former Congolese rebel leader Jean-Pierre Bemba and Ugandan rebel leader Joseph Kony.
The International Criminal Court issued its arrest warrant in connection with charges that the Sudanese leader is responsible for human rights abuses in Sudan's troubled Darfur region.
Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir (File) President Mills says arresting President al-Bashir would hamper efforts to bring peace to that region, where more than 200,000 Sudanese refugees already live in camps across the border in Chad.
"We need a lasting solution for Darfur," he said. "And the President of Sudan, al-Bashir, is a major part of the solution. So that is why we called for postponement. That is why we expressed the view that with him out, it is going to be very difficult to get any solution in that country. We did that because we thought that was the best for Africa."
The human rights group Amnesty International says the African Union decision undermines its credibility and shows disdain for those in Darfur who have suffered. By supporting a person facing an international arrest warrant for war crimes, the group says the African Union is making a mockery of itself as an international body.
Since the warrant was issued, President al-Bashir has traveled only to countries that have not signed on to the international court and therefore do not fall under its jurisdiction. Khartoum says it believes the African Union decision to ignore the warrant means Mr. al-Bashir is free to travel within Africa without fear of arrest. http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-07-08-voa73.cfm
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Wednesday, July 08, 2009
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Sudan's truckers undaunted by banditsBy Guillaume Lavallee NYALA, Sudan (AFP) — They risk being robbed or kidnapped, but Sudan's truckers still deliver food aid to thousands displaced by conflict in Darfur, where banditry is often overshadowed by the fighting between army and rebels. "We were delivering food to those displaced and were heading back when armed men blocked the road and stole our truck at gunpoint," said Salim Keydum, a trucker from Kordofan in central Sudan who does the Darfur route. Last year, he was leading a convoy heading from Nyala to El-Fasher, one of Darfur's most dangerous routes, when an armed group stopped his convoy in the town of Manawashi and took him and others hostage for two months. "We spent five days in one place and the rest of the two months in another place. "It was the rainy season, we stayed under a tree where there were scorpions. "We were finally released but they took equipment, petrol, money. They only gave us back our driving license," he recalls. The truck drivers in Darfur are a target of choice for bandits and rebels who steal their vehicles to sell on the black market. While the rare abductions of Western aid workers dominate the headlines, the kidnap of truck drivers often goes unnoticed in the press, despite the numbers. The United Nations says more than 250 humanitarian vehicles were robbed in 2008 and around 200 people kidnapped. The trucks are driven by non-governmental organisations, UN agencies or freelance truck drivers contracted to UN agencies. "I was kidnapped, one of the abductors kept hitting me in the back with the butt of the rifle to force me to cross the valley, but I managed to divert their attention and escape," recalls Mussa Hamed Mussa, a mechanic working for the World Food Programme. The organisation said Darfur "represents more than 70 percent of WFP's budgeted activities in Sudan." While the conflict between rebels and government forces has calmed down in the past year, banditry has become endemic on the roads of Darfur, where at least 2.7 million people displaced by the conflict are able to live thanks to humanitarian aid. The United Nations says up to 300,000 people have died since ethnic minority rebels in Darfur rose up against the Arab-dominated regime in Khartoum to demand equality in February 2003. Sudan says 10,000 have been killed. The war began when African ethnic minority rebels took up arms against the Arab-led Khartoum regime and state-backed Arab militias, fighting for resources and power in one of the most remote and deprived places on earth. The conflict has since deteriorated with the emergence of a multiplying array of rebel groups, breakaway militia groups and bandits. Last year, WFP was forced to halve its deliveries to Darfur due to banditry. Other groups such as German Agro Action (GAA) also suspended food distribution in 2008 to 450,000 people in North Darfur state because of insecurity. "The road north of Nyala is the most dangerous but we're not scared," insisted Issa, surrounded by drivers in long oil-stained tunics, near Nyala's main road where truckers sip on sweet tea as they wait to make their next journey. "I own a truck," said Issa proudly leaning against his Hino, an enormous orange Japanese-made vehicle. The WFP subcontracts a large part of its transport operation to Sudanese companies and hires its drivers through employment agencies, a cheaper option than giving them staff positions with the United Nations. "I earn around 1,200 Sudanese pounds (500 dollars, 355 euros) a month," said Mahmud Mohammed Ali, a driver hired by Capital employment agency to work for WFP. "It's a well paid job compared to private transport companies," he said, one of many to yearn for a UN staff job. Copyright © 2009 AFP. All rights reserved.
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Tuesday, July 07, 2009
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Darfur JEM severs contacts with AU Mbeki panelTuesday 7 July 2009.July 6, 2009 (WASHINGTON) — The Darfur Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) announced today that it will not deal with the African Union (AU) panel that is looking into ways to resolve the conflict into the Western region of Sudan. Former South African President Thabo Mbeki (AP)The eight-member commission headed by the former South African president Thabo Mbeki was established by the AU last February in response to the imminent issuance of an arrest warrant by the International Criminal Court (ICC) against Sudanese president Omer Hassan Al-Bashir. The AU rallied behind Bashir and criticized the warrant saying it will severely impede peace efforts throughout Sudan. The commission has been tasked with looking into ways to balance accountability with bringing peace into Darfur and will submit a report to the AU in July. Last week the AU summit held in Libya issued a resolution saying that its ICC members will not cooperate with the court in the apprehension of Bashir though states such as Botswana announced they will not abide by this decision. JEM issued a statement today saying that the AU decision is a “blatant bias against the victims and siding with the perpetrator”. “They chose to convert the AU from an organization aimed at serving the aspirations of the people of the continent in unity, development and prosperity….to one where they show solidarity to protect themselves and their reign and standing against the interests of the people”. The Darfur rebel movement said that as Mbeki’s panel established by the AU is “an offspring from the original [AU organization] which calls for impunity…to find ways to save the villain from international prosecution”. “Even though we held our pens and tongues in the past period besides addition to our dissatisfaction with Mbeki’s unrelenting support to Bashir and his refusal to receive any rebel groups or listen to its point of views during his term of power, but the AU decision in Sirte destroyed the last hope for any cooperation between the movement and Mbeki’s panel”. JEM said that in line with the Darfur IDP’s refusal to deal with the panel adding that the conflict can be resolved through justice and returning rights. The Darfur movement said it apologizes to other “genuine” members of Mbeki’s panel who came “to help the people of Sudan to get out of the crisis it is in”. (ST)
http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?page=imprimable&id_article=31739
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Monday, July 06, 2009
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Botswana will not abide by AU decision on Sudan’s Bashir: OfficialMonday 6 July 2009.July 5, 2009 (WASHINGTON) — The government of Botswana criticized the decision by the African Union (AU) granting a continent-wide reprieve to the Sudanese president Omer Hassan Al-Bashir from arrest pursuant to the International Criminal Court (ICC) warrant.  On Friday, the leaders of 30 African countries that have ratified the Rome Statute issued a resolution in Sirte, Libya announcing that they will not honor their obligations under the convention relating to apprehension of ICC indicted individuals. The Sudanese foreign minister spokesperson Ali Al-Sadiq said that Bashir is now free to travel to any African country without fear of arrest. Al-Sadiq further said the decision is binding to all African countries without having to wait for the parliaments to ratify the resolution. But the Botswanaian foreign minister Phandu Skelemani made surprise statements suggesting that the resolution was forced upon its members. Skelemani said he tried to make his country’s stance known at the summit and had his hands up for a comment, along with many others, but the chairman of the AU Muammar Gadaffi chose to close the question. “At the summit it is not everyone who spoke. We had our hands up, but one member moved that the question should be put,” he said to Agence France Presse (AFP). African diplomats said that the Libyan backed text was agreed to at the foreign ministers level through a vote and at the leadership meeting with a consensus. “Consensus usually means unanimity, but in this case there was some dissent," said Benin Foreign Minister Jean-Marie Ehouzou, who said objections by Chad or others would likely be added as caveats to the final summit declaration. The Botswanaian official said that the position of his government on the issue was clear. “Before this summit Botswana’s stance was made public. We said we will hand Al-Bashir over to the ICC if ever he came to our shores,” Skelemani said. The ICC was established specifically to help end impunity for the perpetrators of the most serious crimes of concern to the international community by, for instance, prosecuting those suspected of committing genocide, crime against humanity and war crimes, Skelemani said. “The people of Africa and Sudan in particular have been victims of these crimes. Botswana strongly holds the view that the people of Africa, including the people of Sudan, deserve to be protected from the perpetrators of such crimes,” he said. The Rome Statute which forms the basis of the ICC puts legal obligation on the members states for the apprehension of individuals wanted by the court if he arrives in their territories. This year Botswana and South Africa have publicly announced that they will apprehend the Sudanese head of state if he visits. However Djibouti and Comoros Island announced that they will not honor their obligations under the Rome Statute. But the Sudanese foreign ministry spokesperson suggested that South Africa’s stance has changed. “Maybe at one point, the new South African government expressed some negative views ... As South Africa was part of the decision at Sirte, it implies that this means he would be able to travel there” Al-Sadiq said. The legal aspects of the decision at the Sirte summit are unclear. International treaties ratified by a state are binding in whole unless it decides to withdraw from it altogether. The London based Al-Sharq Al-Awsat quoted the South African president Jacob Zuma as saying that the African stance on the issue did not change against the ICC adding that peace be achieved in Darfur before thinking about reaching a decision on Bashir. Darfur rebels and human rights organizations condemned the decision saying it grants impunity to a war indicted individual. In 2004 the UNSC formed a UN commission of inquiry to look into Darfur abuses headed by former President of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) Italian Antonio Cassese. The five-member commission included three African figures from Ghana, South Africa and Egypt. The commission concluded that the government did not pursue a policy of genocide in the Darfur region but that Khartoum and government-sponsored Arab militias known as the Janjaweed engaged in “widespread and systematic” abuse that may constitute crimes against humanity. They further said that Sudanese judiciary is “is unable or unwilling” to prosecute those crimes and thus recommended referring the situation to the ICC. The UNSC issued resolution 1593 under chapter VII in March 2005 referring the situation in Darfur to the ICC. At the time Tanzania and Benin voted in support of the resolution while Algeria abstained. (ST) http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?page=imprimable&id_article=31722
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Sunday, July 05, 2009
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Women’s centres re-open in Darfur with help from AU-UN mission Women lining up for a WFP food distribution at Abu Shouk camp, El Fasher, North Darfur 2 July 2009 – Female internally displaced persons (IDPs) will again be able to learn job skills, take literacy classes and receive awareness programmes on reproductive health after the joint African Union-United Nations Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) helped reactivate women’s centres at an IDP camp in the Sudanese region.UNAMID’s Gender Advisory Unit has worked with the North Darfur state Ministry of Social Affairs to relaunch the centres at the Abu Shouk IDP camp on the outskirts of the state capital, El Fasher. The centres, which will be run by a local non-governmental organization (NGO), had closed last year. The Abu Shouk centres are expected to carry out several activities aimed at helping women gain livelihoods, including tailoring, candle-making and handcrafts. There will also be adult literacy classes, and awareness programmes on women’s reproductive health, and sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV).
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=31359&Cr=darfur&Cr1=
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