Several human rights organisations have accused Sudan authorities of arbitrary arrests, extra-judicial executions and ill-treatment of detainees following the 10 May rebel attack on Sudan’s capital.
In separate statements released since the attack, human rights watchdogs accused the Sudanese government of ethnic profiling during the arrests that followed the withdrawal of rebel forces.
A government officials denied the allegations, and described them as “hasty”.
On 10 May, the Darfur-based rebel group, the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), attacked Omdurman, a city within the northern region of Sudan’s capital Khartoum, arriving just kilometres from army headquarters and the presidential residence before being repelled by Sudanese armed forces.
The attack was the first time rebel forces had penetrated the capital. Over 200 people were reported to have died in the fighting.
The Darfur Centre for Human Rights and Development, a UK-based organisation, reported in a May 21 press release that more than 3,000 people had since been detained. The arrests took place in house-to-house searches or at checkpoints that were established immediately after the attacks.
Amnesty International reported on 21 May that these arrests had largely been targeted at Darfuris, particularly of the Zaghawa ethnic tribe, to which both the leader of JEM, Khalil Ibrahim, and the Chadian president Idriss Deby, who has been accused by Sudan of supporting the rebels, belong.
Amnesty also reported eyewitness accounts of the physical abuse of detainees and the death of a 31-year-old man in custody.
Human Rights Watch, in a statement released on 12 May, stated that at least two people were summarily executed in the streets of Omdurman, including one woman who was shot in the face as she protested to police against the arrest of her brother.
Aegis Trust, in a press statement on 13 May, reported eyewitness accounts of this execution, and other killings by Sudanese security forces in the course of arrests at an Ombdurman home.
Ali Al-Sadiq, a spokesman for the Sudanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, dismissed the allegations of abuse and ethnic profiling as untrue. "If anyone is detained they will be dealt with by the Ministry of Justice, he will face the law," Ali told IRIN in a telephone interview on 26 May. "It is not the policy of the government to target members of the Zaghawa tribe," he said. "These reports were prepared very hastily."
Sudanese police and security services continue their search for members of the Justice and Equality Movement, though it has been reported that most have returned to JEM-held territory in Darfur.
Photo: Derk Segaar/IRIN |
Darfur rebels: Justice and Equality Movement rebels attacked Omdurman on 10 May |
The government has also offered a US$250,000 reward for any information leading to the capture of Ibrahim.
In a statement released to SUNA, the Ministry of Justice said it would be trying the accused through the Attorney General’s Office for Combating Terrorism. Government sources told SUNA that the accused would be provided with sufficient legal guarantees for their defence.
According to Article 31 of the Sudanese National Security Forces Act, individuals can be detained for up to nine months without access to judicial review.
bm/bp/mw
This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions