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According to the information received, from the
Sudan Organisation Against Torture (SOAT), on July 27, 2006, Mr. Mossaad
Mohamed Ali, lawyer and Coordinator of the Amel Centre for Treatment and Rehabilitation
of Victims of Torture in Nyala, Ms. Rasha Souraj, Ms. Ebtisam
Alsemani and Ms. Najat DafaAlla, all three volunteer lawyers at
the Amel Centren received a letter from the National Security Bureau (NSB)
notifying them that the Attorney General in Nyala had filed a case against
them for “offences against the State”. The letter accused the defendants of
sending false reports and disclosing information of military nature. The
letter further warned the three lawyers that the case had been passed to the
police and that they were likely to face arrests upon completion of the
police investigation.
On July 29, 2006, Mr. Ali, Ms. Souraj and Ms. Alsemani received an official
order from the Attorney General’s office directing them to attend an
interrogation at the Attorney General’s Office on July 30, 2006, along with
their colleague Ms. Najat DafaAlla, on offences under Part 5 (Offences
against the State and Undermining the Constitutional Order) of the 1991
Sudanese Penal Code. On receiving the orders, the defendants submitted on the
same day a formal request to the Attorney General to defer the interrogation
until July 31, 2006, to allow the lawyers time to prepare a defence. The
request was accepted.
On July 31, 2006, the defendants attended the office of the Attorney General
as agreed. When they arrived, the security officers asked Mr. Ali and Ms.
DafaAlla to come back on August 1, 2006. Ms. Alsemani and Ms. Souraj, who are
currently in Khartoum, will be interrogated upon their return to Nyala on
August 12, 2006.
On August 1, 2006, Mr. Ali and Ms. DafaAlla reported to the security offices
where they were separated, interrogated by a police officer for approximately
30 to 35 minutes on the events in Otash camp, and accused of spreading false
information and of being a threat to public security. It is indeed believed
that the defendants are being investigated for their work in defending the
rights of five people from the Otash internally displaced camp, who were
detained after they had participated in a demonstration against the Darfur
Peace Agreement, on May 30 and May 31, 2006. Indeed, after being informed
about these arrests, the defendants had submitted a public application on
June 3, 2006 to the “Security Committee”1 requesting information
on the detainees and their whereabouts. The letter also urged the Committee
to release the detainees in the absence of valid charges or if valid charges
exist, for them to be charged.
Before their release, Mr. Ali and Ms. DafaAlla were informed by the police
officer that the police service will evaluate the facts and will refer the
case to the Attorney General to bring the case to the courts.
On 9 September 2006 at 12:15pm Mohamed Badawi, human rights lawyer and
coordinator of the Amel Centre for the Treatment and Rehabilitation of
Victims of Torture in el Fashir was summoned to the office of the National
Security in el Fashir. Mr. Badawi immediately reported to the Security
Offices and remained there until 3.30pm when he was released without charge.
Mr. Badawi was not interrogated but was ordered to report again to the
offices the following day, 10 September 2006 at 9.15am.
Mr. Badawi reported to the National Security
Offices in el Fashir at 9.15am on 10 September 2006 where he was held until
3pm. He was interrogated by Security Officers about the activities of the
Amel Centre, the relationship between the Amel Centre and international
organisations and the relationship between the Amel Centre and the Communist
Party. He was released without charge.
Background
information:
On May 15, 2006, at 09.30 am, officers from the
NSB in Nyala, Southern Darfur, summoned for questioning Mr. Mossaad Mohamed
Ali. Mr. Ali was then detained for thirteen hours in a cell in the NSB
offices in Nyala, before being released at 10 pm. During the period of his
detention, he was neither questioned nor charged with an offence.
See : idhae-uk-page4.1.soud7.htm
On May 16, 2006, in the early morning, Mr. Ali was again summoned to the
security offices, where he remained in detention up to May 20, 2006, when he
was released. Mr. Ali was denied access to his family and to legal counsel.
Security officers also denied the United Nations Mission in Sudan (UNMIS)
access to Mr. Ali. No reason was given for the summoning and the subsequent
arrest and incommunicado detention of Mr. Ali.
Action
requested:
Please write to the authorities of Sudan urging
them to:
i. guarantee under all circumstances the physical and psychological integrity
of Mr. Mossaad Mohamed Ali, Ms. Rasha Souraj, Ms. Ebtisam Alsemani and Ms.
Najat DafaAlla;
ii. put an end to any act of harassment, including judicial harassment,
against Mr. Mossaad Mohamed Ali, Ms. Rasha Souraj, Ms. Ebtisam Alsemani,
Najat DafaAlla and all human rights defenders in Sudan;
iii. conform with the provisions of the Declaration on Humans Rights
Defenders, adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations on December
9, 1998, in particular article 1, which states that “everyone has the right,
individually or in association with others, to promote the protection and
realisation of human rights and fundamental freedoms at the national and
international levels”, and article 12.2, which provides that “the State shall
take all necessary measures to ensure the protection by the competent
authorities of everyone, individually or in association with others, against
any violence, threats, retaliation, de facto or de jure adverse
discrimination, pressure or any other arbitrary action as a consequence of
his or her legitimate exercise of the rights referred to in the present
Declaration”;
iv. more generally, ensure in all circumstances respect for human rights and
fundamental freedoms in Sudan in accordance with international human rights
standards.
Addresses:
- His Excellency Lieutenant General Omar Hassan al-Bashir,
President of the Republic of Sudan, Presidential Palace, PO Box 281,
Khartoum, Sudan, Fax: +249 183 783 223
- Mr. Al Zubeir Beshir Taha, Minister of Interior, PO Box 873,
Khartoum, Sudan, Fax: + 249 183 779383
- Mr. Mustafa Lam Akol Ajawin, Minister of Foreign Affairs,
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, PO Box 873, Khartoum, Sudan, fax : + 249
183 779 383
- Dr. Abdelmuneim Osman Mohamed Taha, Rapporteur, Advisory Council
for Human Rights, PO Box 302, Khartoum (Sudan), Fax No.: + 249 183 77 08
83
- His Excellency Salva Kiir Mayardit, First Vice-President,
People’s Palace, PO Box 281, Khartoum, Sudan, Fax: + 249 183 771025
- His Excellency Ali Osman Mohamed Taha, Vice-President, People’s
Palace, PO Box 281, Khartoum, Sudan, Fax: + 249 183 771025
- Dr. Abdelmuneim Osman Mohamed Taha, Advisory Council for Human
Rights, PO Box 302, Khartoum, Sudan, Fax: + 249 183 77088
- Mr. Ali Mohamed Osman Yassin, Minister of Justice and Attorney
General, Ministry of Justice, Khartoum, Sudan, Fax: + 249 183 788 941
- His Excellence Ambassador Mr. Mohamed Elhassan Ahmed Elhaj,
Permanent Mission of the Republic of Sudan to the United Nations in
Geneva, Avenue Blanc 47, 1202 Geneva, PO Box 335, 1211 Geneva 19,
Switzerland, Fax: +41 22 731 26 56, Email: mission.sudan@bluewin.ch;
mission.sudan@ties.itu.int.
PLEASE SEND APPEAL IMMEDIATELY
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