Darfuris 'arrested, tortured'
2008-05-25 18:52
Khartoum - Southern Sudanese leaders, human-rights activists and political groups joined forces on Sunday to accuse Sudan's government of torturing suspects and making "arbitrary" arrests in a crackdown after a rebel attack on Khartoum.
Sudan's government dismissed the allegations as "absolutely
not true" and "rubbish".
The new grouping - which included two prominent members of
Sudan's coalition government - said an unknown number of
Darfuris had been rounded up after the insurgent Justice and
Equality Movement (JEM) raided the capital on May 10.
'Stop arbitrary arrests'
"We are saying the security forces should stop the arbitrary
arrest of Darfuris," said Yasir Arman, of the Sudan People's
Liberation Movement (SPLM), former southern rebels who formed a
coalition government with the ruling northern National Congress
Party after a 2005 peace deal.
"It is a violation of the constitution and it is damaging
and harming the social fabric of our society
"We also condemn in
the strongest terms the torture of detainees, which is a grave
violation of the constitution," said Arman, the SPLM's deputy
secretary general.
Another political group, SLM-Minnawi, said a number of their own senior officers had been arrested by armed Sudanese security agents at one of the group's Khartoum bases late on Saturday.
A spokesperson said agents fired into the air before they forced their way into the house at 23:30 on Saturday and started beating people.
'No idea why this happened'
"This is a very serious incident," said Mohamed Basheer
Abdalla, chief of staff to the movement's leader Minni Arcua
Minnawi.
"We have no idea why this happened. We still don't know
exactly who was arrested. We think it was up to 10 senior
officers."
Dr Mutrif Siddig, Under Secretary at Sudan's foreign
ministry, said some "suspects" had been detained after the JEM
attack, but dismissed allegations of mass arrests and torture.
Government denied allegations
"This is absolutely not true," he said. "There has been very strong direction from the leadership that Darfuris should not be held responsible for what JEM did, especially the Zaghawas."
Call for fair trials
Amnesty International this week said it had the names of more than 150 mostly-Darfuris arrested "apparently without charge" since JEM launched its unprecedented attack on Omdurman, a suburb of Khartoum.
The newly formed 'National Committee for the Protection and Defence of Individuals and Groups Affected by 10 May Events' is the most prominent group to speak up from inside Sudan's borders.
In a statement, the group called for fair trials for all arrested.