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24 persons are sentenced to death by hanging in Darfour,Sudan
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Thursday May 01, 2003 08:53 by World Organisation Against Torture - World Organisation Against Torture
The International Secretariat of OMCT requests your URGENT intervention in the following situation in Sudan:on April 26th, 2003, twenty- four people belonging to the Arab tribes of Darfour were sentenced to death by hanging, having been convicted of armed robbery by the Special Court, number 1, in Nyala, south Darfour province. These men were reportedly arrested and charged following an attack on the village of Singita, in the Kas district of Darfour on December 31st, 2002. Brief description of the situation The International Secretariat of OMCT has been informed by the Sudanese Organisation against Torture, a member of the OMCT network, of the unfair trials and sentencing to death of twenty-four persons in the Darfour region of Sudan. According to the information received, on April 26th, 2003, twenty- four people belonging to the Arab tribes of Darfour were sentenced to death by hanging, having been convicted of armed robbery by the Special Court, number 1, in Nyala, south Darfour province. These men were reportedly arrested and charged following an attack on the village of Singita, in the Kas district of Darfour on December 31st, 2002. The twenty-four men who have been sentenced to death are: Al Doum Adam Abakar Ali, claimed to be 75 years old (m); Mohamed Omer Suliman Ahmed, claimed to be 71 years old (m); Ahmed Issa Haroon Abd Al Rahman (m); Suliman Al Doum Adam (m); Yaqoub Abd Allah Khair Allah (m); Abakr Aina Jaber (m); Abakr Fadel Mohamed Assil (m); Issa Ahmed Ibrahim Mohamed (m); Zakaria Ahmed Adam Hamidan (m); Zakaria Ahmed Adam Mohamed (m); Ali Omer Mohamed Baraka (m); Mousa Hussain Ahmed Azhaq (m); Abu Al Kassim Omer Adam (m); Al Mahdi Abd Al Jaber Adam (m); Fadel Adam Hamdan (m); Mohamed Issa Haroon Abd Allah (m); Hamed Ahmed Mousa (m); Ahmed Rahma Mohamed Asseil (m); Ismail Saleh Al Tahir Mohamed (m); Al Noor Rahma Mohamed Assil (m); Al Taieb Mohamed Ahmed (m); Abaker Idris Adam (m); Abd Al Rahim Mohamed Abd Allah and Al Tahir Ahmed Adam (m). Three lawyers have submitted appeals on behalf of the defendants. According to the information received, twelve other people, including one woman, were acquitted by the court. One man was fined five million Sudanese pounds and one child was reportedly sentenced to three years imprisonment and referred to a child reform centre. In the last year there has been a sharp increase in the use of the death penalty as a punishment in Sudan. Almost all cases in which the defendants have been sentenced to death and/or executed have reportedly occurred in the Darfour region of the country. Since April 2002 nineteen men from Darfour have been executed and at least 133 more are awaiting execution. All nineteen men were executed as punishment for armed robbery, which, under the Sudanese interpretation of Shari'a law, is punishable by death by hanging or death by hanging followed by crucifixion. These Special Courts, which are unique to Darfour, were established in May 2001 to deal with offences such as armed robbery, murder, weapons possession and smuggling. The Special Courts consist of two military judges and one civil judge. Lawyers are usually forbidden to stand before the Special Court and plaintiffs are given the right to appeal only when sentenced to death or amputation. Under such circumstances, the appeal must be made within seven days of the sentence to the District Chief of Justice, whose decision is final. According to the information received, the Sudanese Minister of Justice has publicly admitted that the Special Courts are not following correct judicial procedures. Fair trial guarantees ensured by international human rights standards are therefore ignored by the Special Courts. In the last year, the crime most frequently resulting in death sentences has been armed robbery. While OMCT welcomes the acquittal of twelve persons in this case, it remains gravely concerned for the physical and psychological integrity of the twenty-four persons that have been sentenced to death, not only because there are concerns that these sentences may be carried out despite having resulted from unfair trials, but also because the detainees risk being subjected to ill-treatment or torture during their detention, as such practices have been documented by OMCT on numerous occasions in the recent past in Darfour. OMCT is particularly concerned by the recent increase in the use of the death penalty as a punishment in Sudan. OMCT stresses that it is strongly opposed to the death penalty as an extreme form of cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment and a violation of the right to life, as proclaimed in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international human rights instruments. OMCT is gravely concerned that the Special Courts that are trying these cases do not allow for fair trials. OMCT recalls that the procedures and sentences of the Special Courts are inconsistent with international human rights law under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) that Sudan has ratified, and the United Nations' Convention against Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment of Punishment (CAT) that the Government of Sudan has signed. OMCT therefore calls on the Sudanese government to: immediately repeal the death sentences in question and; release the detainees in the absence of valid charges against them, which are in line with international law or, if such charges exist, to re-try the defendants before a competent and impartial tribunal, while respecting their procedural rights at all times, in accordance with the internationally recognized standards of fair trial. Separately, OMCT deeply regrets the lack of a resolution on Sudan during the 59th session of the UN Commission on Human Rights, which brings about the end to UN human rights monitoring in the country, at a time when massive and widespread violations of human rights continue unabated. Action requested Please write to the authorities in Sudan urging them to: i. guarantee the physical and psychological integrity of the 24 persons that have been sentenced to death in Darfour on April 26th, 2003; ii. immediately repeal these death sentences ; iii. order that the afore-mentioned persons be released immediately in the absence of valid legal charges or, if such charges exist, bring them before an impartial and competent tribunal and guarantee their procedural rights at all times; iv. prohibit the use of Special Courts in Darfour, as they fail to comply with national judicial procedures or internationally recognised fair trial standards and guarantees; v. guarantee the respect of human rights and the fundamental freedoms throughout the country in accordance with international human rights standards. Addresses · His Excellency Lieutenant General Omar Hassan al-Bashir, President of the Republic of Sudan, President's Palace, PO Box 281, Khartoum, Sudan. Fax: + 24911 783223 · Mr. Ali Mohamed Osman Yassin, Minister of Justice and Attorney General, Ministry of Justice, Khartoum, Sudan. Fax: +24911 788941 · Mr. Mustafa Osman Ismail, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, PO Box 873, Khartoum, Sudan. Fax: +24911 779383 · Mr. Yasir Sid Ahmed, Advisory Council for Human Rights, PO Box 302, Khartoum, Sudan. Fax: + 24911 779173 · His Excellency Ambassador Mr Ibrahim Mirghani Ibrahim, Permanent Mission of Sudan to the United Nations in Geneva, PO Box 335, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland, Fax: +4122 7312656. E-mail: [email protected] Please also write to the embassies of Sudan in your respective country. Kindly inform us of any action undertaken quoting the code of this appeal in your reply.
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Jump To Comment: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8happening under an Islamic government and Sharia law. The anti US people seem very willing to accept stoning pregnant women to death and brutal dictatorship as long as it serves their propaganda purposes.
Freedom is untidy but not cruel.
It's OK for the Saudi regime to behead people and ban women from driving because they are the friends of the US. Freedom is a messy thing, it means different things for different people in different places. George Bush is free and he can tell the rest of us what it means to be free. So he can tell us that in Iraq freedom means shut up and in Saudi freedom means women can't drive. This is a good thing because it is democracy. I know this because I saw it on Sky News.
signed Josef the fool
Aged 8 3/4
Josef,
I know you love the US and the way they bring their form of 'democracy' with the barrel of
a gun to other countries, but you should not forget that while Bush was governer of Texas he
presided over the execution of 152 prisoners.
The executions in Sudan are certainly wrong and inhumane, but I don't see how you suddenly pull the
rabbit out of the hat and use this as a justification for the war on Iraq.
And by the way, had it not been for the massive peace movements and anti-war protests, I reckon the
US would have carpet-bombed Bagdhad and indiscrimately killed an even far greater number, not that
the effects of DU are not going to do it anyhow in slow motion.
That alliance was forged some time ago during the Cold War and thet can't very well go through every rotten regime in the world (so many!) and set them straight. But, they have an opportunity to give a fresh start to Iraqis which is why they will remain until a real government of the people is established.
Executions in the US are for murder only and only carried out after an exhaustive appeal process. Prisoners spend well over 10 years on Death Row. I'm not in favour of capital punishment (not on religious grounds but the possible miscarriage of justive aspect) but at least it's done in the most humane way possible.
Josef the Fool is a Bully. That's a bullying tactic which is typical of most of the far left people I've encountered.
They spoke latin in Iraq which made it OK to invade them but the Saudis don't speak latin so they are good guys. Everyone know that the US had to invade Iraq because the Iraqi regime had millions of tons of nerve gas, anthrax and even radio active material that they were about to use. We know this because the US army has found all this stuff and put it on display already. They even brought UN weapons inspectors in to prove that these were real finds and not just plants.
Why were it not for the fast action of big brother in protecting us then Saddam could have invaded Texas by now!
Also everyone knows that the S11 suicide squads were mostly from Iraq and that the Iraqi regime had given millions of dollars to that the well known Iraqi citizen Bin Laden so he could carry out these attacks. As the Saudis don't speak Latin none of this money or the suicide squads could have come from there.
This proves that the US had lots of excuses to go after those latin speaking Iraqis but no excuse for going after the Saudis. Anyway the US and Britain and still selling billions of dollars worth of military equipment to the Saudis including torture equipment like electric batons. This is so the regime there can give the people a taste of US freedom.
I know this to be true because big brother told me it was so and I love big brother. Big brother is from the oil business which just happens to be the biggest Saudi export. But they don't speak latin so that is OK
It's well known that far more blacks end up on death row than whites in the US. The justice
system is so rotten and in favour of those with money and the right skin colour or rather against
those with no money and the wrong skin colour, it does no justice to pretend that it is otherwise.
But this is how Bush treated Karla Tucker (quoted from related link)
>>
Bush mocked Tucker's appeal for clemency. In an interview with Talk magazine, Bush imitated
Tucker's appeal for him to spare her life - pursing his lips, squinting his eyes, and in a
squeaky voice saying, "Please don't kill me." That went too far for former GOP presidential
candidate Gary Bauer, himself an evangelical Christian. "I think it is nothing short of
unbelievable that the governor of a major state running for president thought it was
acceptable to mock a woman he decided to put to death," said Bauer.
A former Texas Department of Public Safety officer, a devout Roman Catholic, told this reporter
that evidence to the contrary, Bush was more than happy to ignore DNA data and documented cases
of prosecutorial misconduct to send innocent people to the Huntsville, Texas lethal injection
chamber. He said the number of executed mentally retarded, African Americans, and those who
committed capital crimes as minors was proof that Bush was insensitive and a "phony Christian."
When faced with similar problems in Illinois, Governor George Ryan, a Republican, commuted the
death sentences of his state's death row inmates and released others after discovering they were
wrongfully convicted. Yet the Republican Party is pillorying Ryan and John Ashcroft's Justice
Department continues to investigate the former Governor for political malfeasance as if Bush
and Ashcroft are without sin in such matters. Hypocrisy certainly rules in the Republican Party.
>>
The more you look at it the more Bush et al have in common with the fundamentalists who have
distored Islam, in Sudan.
It's nothing to do with the judicial system.
I'm amused at your "source". "But it's in print and it fits my prejudices - it must be true".