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News Story
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Sudan: Protestors
describe torture by security officers
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Human Rights Watch
March 4, 2011
(New York) - Sudanese national security
officials subjected large numbers of youth protesters to severe
physical and sexual abuse following protests in January and
February, 2011, Human Rights Watch said today. Based on
testimony and information collected by Human Rights Watch, the
students and youth, some as young as 18, were subjected to harsh
beatings, electric shocks, and other abuses that amount to
torture. Security officials are also implicated in the rape of a
female youth activist in February.
Sudan should publicly condemn the use of torture,
including sexual violence and other abuses committed by national
security officials after the protests, Human Rights Watch said.
These crimes should be promptly investigated and those
responsible brought to justice. The government should also
immediately release or bring to trial those still in detention
and ensure the rights of detainees are fully respected.
"These heinous allegations clearly show that Sudan's abusive
national security apparatus is using torture and harassment to
silence dissent," said Daniel Bekele, Africa director at Human
Rights Watch. "The Sudanese authorities need to take immediate
measures to stop torture, ill treatment, and harassment by the
national security officials."
Ill-treatment and Torture
Following the largely peaceful demonstrations in
February, inspired by popular uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia,
riot police and national security forces used
excessive force to suppress public protests and dissent,
Human Rights Watch found. Authorities arrested more than 100
people on January 29, 30, and 31 in Khartoum and Omdurman alone.
Although police and security authorities released many
detainees within hours, security officials detained several
dozen people in the Bahri office compound in North Khartoum for
weeks, some in a makeshift detention cage and others in a large
room, and subjected them to beatings, sleep deprivation,
electric shocks, and other forms of physical and mental abuse
including death threats and threats of rape, some of the
detainees told Human Rights Watch.
Yousif Elmahdi, a 27-year-old son of an Umma opposition party
leader, was blindfolded and made to crouch facing a wall and
severely beaten with metal rods, batons, and whips. He heard the
"agony and screams" of other detainees in the same compound and
saw their injuries later, he told Human Rights Watch.
"These boys, some as young as 18, were so very clearly beaten
to a pulp. They had blood on their shirts and were heavily
limping and crawling," he recalled.
Another student, who asked not to be named, was arrested in a
public square in Khartoum on the morning of February 3 and held
in Bahri for two weeks.
"Many people were seriously beaten and tortured, crying the
whole night," he said. "Sometimes they got electric shocks, or
were beaten with sticks and bars. I saw two were so badly beaten
they had to be treated in the hospital."
Over the following weeks, security officials arrested other
student activists suspected of involvement in organizing the
protests or publicizing the abuses of detainees by national
security officials.
Ali Mohammed Osman, a student member of the Sudan People's
Liberation Movement who was carrying fliers calling for the
release of protesters, was arrested by a group of security
agents in Omdurman on the night of February 14 and interrogated
for more than 24 hours.
He told Human Rights Watch that he was blindfolded, forced
into a truck, and taken to a detention center, where he was
threatened, interrogated, and beaten on his back and shoulders
with sticks and a plastic pipe and forced to remain standing all
night. The beatings caused severe injuries, requiring him to
seek medical care upon his release.
National security officials forced detainees to sign
statements pledging not to participate in more protests or talk
about conditions of detention before releasing them, those
interviewed told Human Rights Watch. Several detainees went into
hiding after their release, fearing retaliation. Security
officers attempted to re-arrest Osman on two occasions after he
publicly reported his mistreatment. Another youth activist,
currently in detention, was re-arrested after he posted
information on Facebook about mistreatment he saw in detention,
according to released detainees.
At least 13 protesters, including four journalists, are still
in detention at Bahri and are at risk of similar ill-treatment,
Human Rights Watch said. The released detainees told Human
Rights Watch that many who are still in detention had already
been subjected to torture and mistreatment, including electric
shocks, sleep deprivation, and being forced to strip down to
their underwear.
Sexual Violence
Security officials are also implicated in sexual
violence and harassment of female activists, including the
brutal rape of Safia Ishaq, a young activist and artist. Ishaq publicly
reported on social media that on the morning of February 13
two security agents forced her into their vehicle and took her
to a building in Khartoum, where they interrogated her about her
political affiliation, beat her until she fell unconscious, and
then raped her.
Her ordeal, which has attracted considerable domestic and
international attention, prompted Sudanese civil society groups
to report other cases of verbal and physical sexual harassment
of women activists by national security officials. Marwa al-Tijani,
arrested on February 3, reported that security officers beat her
and a group of other female activists in detention, calling them
"whores" and other insults.
Female members of the Popular Congress Party told journalists
that national security officers had physically harassed them
when they were gathered peacefully on February 16 to protest the
detention of fellow party members. In January, security
officials arrested the opposition figure Hassan al-Turabi and 20
other party members after al-Turabi publicly warned the Sudanese
government that there would be an uprising if it continued to
refuse to make reforms.
"The Sudanese authorities should not tolerate rapes,
assaults, or any other form of harassment," Bekele said.
"Authorities should take these reports seriously, investigate
them promptly, and hold officials accountable."
Sudan's National Intelligence and Security Service (NISS),
with its broad powers of arrest and detention, has a reputation
for targeting political activists and subjecting them to
ill-treatment and torture while in detention. National security
officials also carry out enforced disappearances, detaining
people in secret detention centers and not allowing any family,
lawyer, or doctor visits.
Although the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement, which
brought an end to Sudan's long civil war, required the Sudanese
government to reform the national intelligence and security
service, the National Security Act of 2010 retained the security
service's broad powers of arrest and detention for up to four
and a half months without judicial review, in violation of
international standards.
Human Rights Watch urged the government to reform the
security service in line with international standards. The
government should ensure that every detention is properly
registered and that anyone detained is treated in accordance
with the law, including having access to legal counsel and
medical care.
"Sudan can only achieve and maintain stability by respecting
human rights and the rule of law," Bekele said. "It should rein
in its abusive security forces and let people voice their
opinions freely."
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