Kuwait Times

Families of Sudan protest ‘martyrs’ await justice

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Sudan has celebrated one year since the start of peaceful protests that ended a dictatorsh­ip, but families of the slain “martyrs of the revolution” are still waiting for justice. The autocrat who ruled for three decades, Omar Al-Bashir, is now behind bars, but many who served in his security forces have legal immunity from prosecutio­n. “The killers are known, we want justice,” said Samah Ahmed, 27, the sister of Tarek, who was killed on December 21 last year. “If we don’t achieve justice, it means nothing happened.”

Tarek, then aged 22, was among the first to take to the streets in the dusty industrial city of Atbara, the cradle of the uprising 350 km northeast of Khartoum. It was here on the on the banks of the River Nile that Sudanese held their first rallies in Dec 2018 against a government decision that tripled the price of bread. The protests swept across the African nation and by April, they had toppled Bashir-but Tarek never witnessed that triumphant moment.

His mother, Naimat Abdel Wahab, 52, recalled seeing his bloodied body in the local hospital, a day before he had been due to sit his final engineerin­g exam in college. “I tried to call him, ‘Tarek, Tarek’, and called him by his nickname,” she said. “When he didn’t answer, I saw that he had passed away. “His friends who were with him at the protest saw who shot him and they are ready to testify in front of any court.”

‘Remove immunity’

Doctors linked to the protest movement say more than 250 people were killed during the months of demonstrat­ions. Amnesty Internatio­nal, which says at least 177 people were killed, has called on Sudan’s new leaders to ensure that those in the security forces “who committed horrific crimes or used excessive force against protestors” must be held accountabl­e. However, under Sudanese law, members of the Sudanese army, police and intelligen­ce services still enjoy immunity from prosecutio­n.

This also applies to the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a paramilita­ry group that was involved in repressing Khartoum sit-in protests and is also accused of crimes in the Darfur conflict that erupted in 2003. That immunity can only be waived if the military superiors of the accused authorize it after a specific request from the Prosecutor General’s Office. That office issued a statement last Thursday - on the day Sudanese celebrated the first anniversar­y of the protests - calling on the security forces “to remove the immunity faster”.

However, it did not specify whether any requests for the lifting of immunity had already been made to the various security forces. The transition­al civilian government of Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok has stepped up measures to dismantle the former regime and to meet the aspiration­s of protesters. In September, Hamdok formed a committee to investigat­e the crackdown on the Khartoum sit-in, which is due to report back within three months.

And days ago Sudan announced it would investigat­e 50 former regime figures over the Darfur conflict, for which Bashir is wanted by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court on charges of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity. But for now, some key figures remain in the state apparatus, among them RSF chief Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, who is a member of the civilian-military council overseeing the post-Bashir transition. — AFP

 ??  ?? The family of Mukhtar Abdallah poses for a picture with a banner bearing his portrait in Atbara city, on the banks of the River Nile, northeast of Sudan’s capital Khartoum on Dec 15, 2019. — AFP
The family of Mukhtar Abdallah poses for a picture with a banner bearing his portrait in Atbara city, on the banks of the River Nile, northeast of Sudan’s capital Khartoum on Dec 15, 2019. — AFP

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