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Solidarité internationale et luttes sociales en Afrique subsaharienne |
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Dernière mise à jour : 10 septembre 2007 |
Soudan
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Darfur Attack Underscores Urgent Need for International Protection Force
As reports confirm a deadly attack by Arab militias on a camp for internally displaced people in Darfur, Sudan, Africa Action today expressed outrage at Bush Administration claims this week that the security situation in the region is improving and that the U.S. is providing strong leadership in responding to the crisis. Africa Action emphasizes that the government-sponsored genocide is continuing in Darfur, and that the U.S. is failing to take the necessary steps to provide protection to civilians and humanitarian operations in the region. [Lire] - 30 September 2005 Chronology of a Failure to Stop Genocide: Bush Administration Policy on Darfur since September 9, 2004 On this day last year, the White House declared that genocide was taking place in Darfur, Sudan. This announcement was the result of political pressure from Congress and citizen pressure from across the U.S. The legal finding was itself based on overwhelming evidence from a study of the region completed by the State Department the previous month. The U.S. remains the only government to acknowledge the crisis in Darfur as genocide, thereby invoking special responsibilities to act. [Lire] - 9 September 2005 Hundreds Mark ’A Day for Darfur’ with White House Rally Ongoing Genocide Seen as Consequence of Failed Presidential Leadership To mark the one-year anniversary of the Bush Administration’s declaration of genocide in Darfur, Sudan, hundreds of activists joined leadership figures at a rally outside the White House today to denounce the continuing failure of political leadership from President Bush on this crisis. The death toll in Darfur now stands at more than 400,000 people, with a further 2.5 million people displaced and left homeless as a result of the ongoing government-sponsored genocide. [Lire] - 8 September 2005 Detainees Suffer Arbitrary Arrest, Execution Sudanese Government Should Commute Death Sentences, Grant Fair Trials The Sudanese government has executed prisoners who were minors at the time of their arrest, Human Rights Watch said today. Despite the human rights commitments the government has made in the peace process with southern-based rebels, death penalty defendants are routinely denied fair trials, and arbitrary arrests and detentions remain commonplace in Sudan. [Lire] - 7 September 2005 Les droits des personnes déplacées de Khartoum doivent être respectés Amnesty International condamne la réinstallation forcée de la totalité des habitants du camp de Shikan pour personnes déplacées à l’intérieur de leur pays, le 17 août 2005. [Lire] - 23 août 2005 The rights of Khartoum’s displaced must be respected Amnesty International condemns the forced mass relocation of the entire Shikan Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camp, which took place on 17 August 2005. [Lire] - 23 August 2005 Human Rights NGOs Statement on Events in Khartoum On 1st, 2nd and 3rd August 2005, violence erupted in the Sudanese capital of Khartoum and other towns in Sudan following the official announcement of the death of Dr. John Garang De Mebior, First Vice-President and leader of the Sudan People Liberation Army/Movement (SPLA/M) in a helicopter crash in southern Sudan. Some 130 people have been killed, and thousands of others have been injured and have fled their homes and businesses over the course of the last few days whilst many others have witnessed the destruction of their homes, property and businesses. Approximately 1500 civilians have been detained. [Lire] 5 August 2005 Communal Violence Threatens Peace Process Government Should Quell Incitement, Facilitate Independent Investigation An independent and impartial investigation of the recent violence in Khartoum and Juba is needed to avert further communal violence, restore confidence on all sides and bolster the peace process, Human Rights Watch said today after three days of ethnically targeted attacks by both southerners and northerners in Khartoum and southern towns. [Lire] - 4 August 2005 Des militantes des droits humains harcelées par la Sécurité nationale Trois avocates travaillant plus particulièrement sur les problèmes des femmes au Soudan ont été interrogées par le service de la Sécurité nationale au cours des deux derniers jours. Elles venaient de participer, à Port-Soudan, dans l’est du pays, à un atelier sur les droits humains organisé localement et auquel participaient des organisations non gouvernementales (ONG) et des avocats du pays. [Lire] - 26 juillet 2005 Human Rights activists harassed by National Security Three female lawyers working on women’s issues in Sudan have been brought in for questioning by the National Security service over the past two days. The lawyers had participated in a local Human Rights Workshop, composed of local lawyers and NGO groups, in Dar al-Katah, Port Sudan, Eastern Sudan. [Lire] - 26 July 2005
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