NewsAfricaSudan (Former Sudan)Sudan: End Censorship and Repression

Sudan: End Censorship and Repression

  • PDF
  • Print
  • E-mail

This Wednesday, 18 February 2009, Human Rights Watch made a statement on harassment, repression and censorship in Sudan which supports our findings and stances which we made in our news release 'Justice for Sudan' on 20 January 2009, which stated that "During the past two weeks, several sources have exclaimed that the Darfur government is set on sabotaging justice and have used different methods to obstruct the International Criminal Court (ICC) to issue an arrest warrant for President Omar al-Bashir. These methods include creating confusion, intimidation and harassment. Justice for the World strongly condemns these tactics that aim to obstruct justice."

Human Rights Watch said this Wednesday in its statement that the Sudanese government has been censoring the media and cracking down on human rights activists and journalists who speak out on human rights and justice, and that harassment, repression and censorship has worsened in the last year, particularly since the International Criminal Court's (ICC) request for an arrest warrant for President Omar al-Bashir in July 2008.

The 21-page report of Human Rights Watch documents the government's efforts to repress those who seek to report on issues it considers sensitive, including human rights, the conflict in Darfur, and the ICC's investigation.

"Today in Khartoum it is unsafe to criticize the Khartoum government or to call for justice for the victims of horrific crimes in Darfur," said Georgette Gagnon, Africa director at Human Rights Watch. "We are deeply concerned that President Bashir will use the issuance of an ICC warrant against him as an excuse for an even more brutal crackdown on free expression."

Over the past several months, National Intelligence and Security Services (NISS) agents have detained and ill-treated three high-profile activists who had spoken out in support of human rights and international justice. Two were beaten severely while in custody. In the last year, security agents have also arbitrarily arrested and detained at least three journalists who have written or published articles that directly or indirectly criticize the majority National Congress Party (NCP).

The Khartoum government controls most of the country's broadcast media, which are largely owned or run by the government. In addition, the National Press Council, which is responsible for licensing and registering journalists and newspapers, is controlled by the government through the minister of information and communications.

The report describes how since February 2008 NISS agents have systematically visited the few independent newspapers operating in Khartoum each day to review final editions of papers and remove all or parts of articles they regard as sensitive or critical of the government. The NISS has temporarily suspended at least five newspapers following such articles, two of them repeatedly.

The combination of government control, daily censorship of independent media, and abuse and harassment of journalists by the NISS, is a severe barrier to freedom of expression and access to information in Sudan. Any violations of freedom of expression are particularly of concern with national elections scheduled for mid-2009. The elections - Sudan's first in more than 20 years - are required under the Comprehensive Peace Agreement that ended the war between North and Southern Sudan in 2005.

"Free and fair elections require a free and open media," said Gagnon. "Khartoum's repressive practices and abuse of those who criticize it put such elections at great risk."

Visit our Campaign for Darfur for more information or take action now.

Share
 

Add comment

This website is 'do follow' enabled: You comment, I follow!


Security code
Refresh

Free Newsletter

 

More African News

Articles to recommended news resources.

  • Gadhafi Son Refusing Lawyer

    17 May 2012 | 8:02 pm

    Gadhafi Son Refusing Lawyer Saif al-Islam Kadhafi, son of former Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, flashes the V-sign for victory as he appears in front of supporters and journalists in the Libyan capital Tripoli in the early hours of August 23, 2011. (Dario Lopez-Mills/AFP/Getty Images)[…]

    Read more...
  • Somalia faces acid test ahead of new order

    11 May 2012 | 10:00 pm

    Oped on Somalia by Crisis Group analyst Abdirashid Hashi.

    Read more...
  • Equatorial Guinea: Opposition Figure Wrongly Convicted

    7 May 2012 | 8:47 pm

    Tweet Widget Facebook Like The conviction of a prominent member of Equatorial Guinea’s beleaguered political opposition is a travesty of justice. A trial court in the city of Bata found Wenceslao Mansogo Alo, a medical doctor, guilty of professional negligence[…]

    Read more...

To partner with us and share resources, please contact us.

This Month's Visitors Top 10
Unknown flag 83.5%Unknown
United States flag 4.5%United States
Russian Federation flag 2.0%Russian Federation
Germany flag 1.5%Germany
United Kingdom flag 1.5%United Kingdom
Ukraine flag 1.2%Ukraine
Netherlands flag <1.0%Netherlands
France flag <1.0%France
Poland flag <1.0%Poland
China flag <1.0%China

Visits from 132 countries
Since 16 Aug 2010