Youth Mass Protests Spark 113 Arrests and One Death
Contact: Osman Hummaida, Executive Director
Phone: +44 7956 095738
E-mail: osman@acjps.org
(1 February 2011)
Demonstrations organised by the “Youth of 30 January for Change Alliance”, a
coalition of members of student movements such as Girifna, Nahoa Alshari, and Aid ala Aid and supported by the
National Consensus Forces, a group of mainstream opposition groups, mobilised
thousands of activists through social networking in
The demonstrations in
Despite the challenges, the
demonstrations mark the first time that the opposition has publicly supported
the youth movement in
·
In
·
In
o
Hamza Albalul, Alahdath
o
Rashid Abdulhab, Ajras Alhurria
o
Ali Haj Alamin, Ajras Alhurria
o
Sara Taj Alsir, Al Sahafa
o
Ahmed Sir Alkhatim, Akhbar
Alyoum
o
Mohamed Marzouh, cameraman, Alakhbar
o
Mohamed Aamir, cameraman, Alakhlas
o
Fatima Alkhzali, Al Gerida
o
Anas Abdurrahman, freelance journalist
Joint forces also arrested forty
protestors, who were taken to the Al Shemali Police Station in
1.
Mahmoud Ali Alumdaa
2.
Mustafa Mohamed Ali
3.
Abdelrahman Ahmed Alhassan
4.
Mohamed Abdelrahman
5.
Ahmed Ali
6.
Mustafa Mohamed Ali
·
Mohamed Abdelrahman, a student at Omdurman Islamic University, was
shot and killed by joint police and NISS forces when he joined demonstrations
at
·
At
o
Hadim Alzhari
o
Mohamed Ahmed
o
Albaid Abaquir
·
At 4:30 PM, the NISS arrested Nasr Mahmoud Nasr, age 55, a member of
the Umma Party and Trade Union organiser, from his home. Walid Alhidaia and
Thuria Habib were also arrested from their homes in
For its part, the Police
Media Office made a statement addressing the number of detainees, claiming that
70 people had been arrested, 40 of whom were students released on bail. Permits
are requested for demonstrations, which are often denied. A spokesperson stated
that the police did not use force excessive to what was “necessary”.
Initial monitoring by the African Centre
indicates that the number of detainees is much higher than the number cited by
police, and some of the demonstrators have been transferred to NISS custodies in
1.
Yousef Mubark Alfadil
2.
Slah Mubark Alfadil
3.
Dr. Hussam Malik
4.
Bshir Hussain
5.
Louis Awil Weriak (a Southerner, he has reportedly been tortured and is
currently being held incommunicado and separate from other members of the
group. Mr. Weriak is a member of the Faculty of Pharmacy at the
6.
Zinab Badraldeen
7.
Ahmed
8.
Slah Almubark
9.
Rshad Ahmed
10.
Mohamed Banaga
11.
Musab Zain Alabdeen
12.
Mutaz Mohamed
13.
Ashraf Aiz Aldeen
14.
Ahmed Fuaad
15.
Mohamed Alhider
16.
Muntasir zain Alabdeen
17.
Omar Abdlbagi
18.
Smah Mohamed Adam
19.
Sidig Abdlgbar
20.
Rashid Mohamed Abdalla
21.
Ruaa Ahmed Osman
22.
Mohamed Awad
23.
Ahmed Babikir
24.
Dina
25.
Smah Bushra
26.
Sara Taj Alsir
27.
Samir Hassan
28.
Marwa Alfaki
29.
Rawa Salah
30.
Thruat Swar Aldahab (tortured in police custody)
31.
Abdalla Alaidrous
32.
Amina Alsid
33.
Suhaib Abbas
34.
Mrwa Alriah
35.
Mahir Hussein Alfil
36.
Mohamed Wada
37.
Ahmed Batik Mohamed Ali
38.
Abdlaziz Kabala
39.
Nasir Aldeen Yousef
40.
Mohamed Alasir
41.
Nuhan Alnagar
42.
Nafisa Alnour Hajar, lawyer
43.
Mohamed Adil
Similar protests occurred on 30 January in El Obeid Market in El Obeid,
The following day, 31
January, solidarity demonstrations were organised in Kosti,
o
Mohsin Abdelgadir, teacher and frequent contributor to SudaneseOnline
o
Basil Mohsim, student
·
On 31 January at 4:15, the NISS arrested student members of the
National Alliance on
o
Mohamed Abdelrahman (NISS officers beating him taunted him, saying
“are you the one who died?”, as his name is the same as the student killed at
o
Abdulla Mathi
o
Rashid Abo Hassan
o
Ahmed El Tijani
o
Gahmat Mohamed Osman
Severe censorship on news
publications and internet media were also instilled in an effort by the NISS to
prevent information on the demonstrations and subsequent crackdowns from being
widely distributed.
On 31 January, the NISS
prevented Ajras Alhurria and Al Sahafa from being published. Though the
NISS had visited the printing house the evening of the 30 January and approved
the Ajras Alhurria edition to be
printed the following day, they were prevented from distributing copies in the
morning. Al Sahafa’s offices were
visited the morning of the 31 January. The website Sudaneseonline, a news and
forum site where many of the announcements were posted, has been blocked since Sunday,
as has the website tinyurl.com, used to shorten links for Twitter. Twitter is
not as frequently used as Facebook, so it remains unclear if the blockage was
due to the events in
Opposition groups have launched a scathing
criticism of the arrests, blaming the NCP for Southern secession, and worsening
economic conditions. A leading member of the National Consensus Forces, Mubarak
al-Fadir al-Mahdi, demanded Bashir’s immediate resignation and that the NCP
make arrangements for a transitional government to counter further disintegration.
Nafie Ali Nafie, the presidential assistant, stated that the demonstrations
were a failed attempt by the opposition, while the pro-government Sudan Vision wrote that “our message to
those opposition dinosaurs is to unite their ideas and objectives for the
benefit of the citizens if they are really looking for the welfare of the
Sudanese people”. In fact, the opposition has only grown stronger and more unified
in recent months. The National Consensus Forces have agreed to only negotiate multilaterally
with the NCP.
The incidents of 30 and 31 January
indicate the seriousness of
All of these incidents
indicate that the NCP plans to curtail the small space open for political
freedoms during the interim period, and refuse to engage in a dialogue with the
opposition for a new constitutional arrangement. President Bashir’s implicit
referral on 19 December in El Gedarif to the NCP’s tactics of its early days in
power of managing political unrest by repression appears to have come to pass.
The African Centre is extremely worried that the little respect left towards
human rights and democratic pluralism and cultural diversity will recede at the
end of the interim period, threatening the very existence of the North of the
country. In a memorandum issued on the eve of the protests, the National
Consensus Forces promised that if the NCP continues to avoid calls for dialogue
on the future of the North, the National Consensus Forces will “dedicate
themselves to tried and tested methods of civil political action to mobilize
popular support behind demands to bring about change in government structure
and policy”.
Civil and political rights
are critical to the interim period, which despite being in its last hours is a
unique opportunity for the NCP and Northern opposition groups to define
themselves. Yesterday’s events (and other incidents monitored by the Centre)
illustrate that these ongoing rights violations are a pattern to silence
dissident voices and limit access to information. The nature of crackdowns and
the suppression undertaken by Sudanese authorities on peaceful efforts by civil
undermines the NCP’s credibility further. The responses undertaken by police
forces and the NISS exemplify the extent to which the NPC are unwilling to
tolerate any other voices on the road to democratic transformation.