By Human Rights Watch
Sudanese
authorities should investigate reported abuses, including sexual abuse,
of female Darfuri students during a government raid on an all-female
dormitory. The authorities should release or charge all those remaining
in detention.
On October 5 and 6, 2014, government security forces forcibly evicted
about 70 female students from the Zahra dormitory complex in Khartoum,
beating and arresting many students. The police verbally and physically
abused students, those who have been released told Human Rights Watch.
Students who were arrested on both days were taken to the National
Security and Intelligence Service (NISS) offices, where officers beat
and interrogated them about their political affiliations before
transferring them to the Omdurman prison for women.
“Sudanese security forces apparently think they can intimidate Darfuri
students by beating them up and throwing them out of their dorms,” said Daniel Bekele, Africa director. “There is no justification for treating students that way.”
Students caught up in the raid told Human Rights Watch the security
forces groped them, taunted them, and threatened to assault them
sexually. A women’s rights group, No to Women’s Oppression, reported
that security officials raiding the dorms forced some women to undress
in the dorms, photographed them, and threatened to use the photos
against them.
The eviction and arrests occurred in the context of growing tensions
between Darfuri students and university administrators over a range of
issues. Sudanese security forces have repeatedly cracked down violently
on Darfuri students protesting government policies, including attacks on
civilians in Darfur and the death of a student protester last March.
In late September, authorities ordered the students to vacate the
complex for maintenance, but many – particularly those from Darfur –
protested, saying they had nowhere else to go. The operation began on
October 5, during the Eid al Adha holidays. Witnesses told Human Rights
Watch that a group of plainclothes security officials surrounded the
dormitory and arrested at least 20 students outside the dorms, sometimes
dragging them into cars.
The next day, a large mixed group of uniformed and plainclothes security
forces, together with student welfare administrators and pro-government
students wielding sticks, raided the dorms, breaking down doors,
beating students, arresting at least 11 more, and forcing others to
flee, witnesses said.
“When I was in the room collecting my things six policemen came into the
room and beat me with batons on my chest and on my arms and back,” one
student said. “I screamed and I ran out and left my things among it
precious things like money.”
Another student, Hawa Suliman, was so badly beaten during her arrest
that she required medical treatment, witnesses who saw her later in
detention told Human Rights Watch.
Following their arrest at the dormitory on both days, many detainees
were taken to the National Security and Intelligence Service (NISS)
offices, where officers beat and interrogated them about their political
affiliations before transferring them to the Omdurman prison for women.
“There were around 20 security men beating us nonstop, some with batons,
others with their legs, and others with their hands,” a student
arrested on October 6 told Human Rights Watch. “They were beating all of
us every place in our body.”
Another student recalled: “They asked me about individuals and they said
that I am a leader, and I work in politics with the Sudanese Congress
party […] they told me that they will be following me, and that I must
work with them and give them information […] and that I must be in
contact with them within the next week or they will arrest me again and
this time will be different.”
The total number of students detained, and their date of detention, is
not clear. Sudanese activists monitoring the situation believe several
were released within days, but that 15 are still detained in the
Omdurman women’s prison, held without charge and without access to
lawyers or family visits. In addition, the whereabouts of at least 20
students are unknown.
Authorities should make known the whereabouts of all detained students
and release or charge them immediately, said Human Rights Watch. The
unacknowledged detention of individuals or the concealment of the
whereabouts or fate of those detained by state agents constitutes an
enforced disappearance, which are absolutely prohibited under
international law.
Sudanese authorities should put an end to these violent and repressive
tactics, which violate both Sudanese and international law, Human Rights
Watch said. They should immediately investigate all reported abuses
against the students and hold those responsible to account.
“Students who have been released described horrific treatment at the
hands of the security forces,” Bekele said. “The violence against these
young women during the eviction only increases the fears for those who
have not been able to contact their families or lawyers.”
Police Beat, Arrest Female Students in Sudan — For Protesting Sexual Abuse
Click for Articles With Similar Topics:
civil liberties,
civil rights,
Human Rights Watch,
police brutality,
police state,
sex abuse,
students,
Sudan
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)



No comments:
Post a Comment