|  | 
  |  نداء عاجل من أمنيستى إنترناشيونال بخصوص الأطباء المعتقلين |  | 
 | Quote: UA: 127/10 Index: AFR 54/020/2010 Sudan Date: 10 June 2010
 URGENT ACTION
 DOCTORS DETAINED, RISK TORTURE
 Six doctors have been arrested for their activities as members of a committee calling for better
 pay and working conditions for doctors in Sudan: they are prisoners of conscience. They are at
 risk of torture or other ill-treatment.
 Doctors Alhadi Bahkit and Walla Aldin are members of the Doctors' Strike Committee organising strike action to
 demand improvement of their salaries and working conditions. They were arrested on 1 June by officers of the
 National Intelligence and Security Services (NISS). The men were held for three hours, during which, according to
 sources in Sudan, they were severely beaten. Dr Alhadi Bahkit was rearrested shortly afterwards, and has been
 detained without charge ever since. His family were able to visit him on 7 June. He apparently seems in poor health.
 The president of the doctors' committee, Dr Ahmed Alabwabi, was also arrested on 1 June, and has been detained
 without charge since then.
 On 2 February the NISS attacked doctors and medial students from the University of Khartoum protesting against
 the detention of the members of the Doctors' Strike Committee, badly injuring several of them.
 Four more doctors have since been arrested. Ashraf Hammad was reportedly arrested on 2 June, Mahmoud
 Khairallah on 6 June, Abdelaziz Ali Jamee on 7 June, and Ahmed Abdallah Khalafallah in the evening on 8 June.
 They have all been detained without charge since then.
 NISS agents have apparently been looking for members of the Doctors' Strike Committee, as well as journalists
 reporting on their cases, forcing them to go into hiding.
 Sudan's 2010 National Security Act provides NISS agents with extensive powers of arrest and detention. Detainees
 can be held for up to four-and-a-half months without judicial review and NISS agents have immunity from
 prosecution for any human rights violations carried out as part of their work.
 PLEASE WRITE IMMEDIATELY in English, Arabic or your own language:
 Calling on the authorities to release Dr Alhadi Bahkit, Dr Ahmed Alabwabi, Dr Ashraf Hammad, Dr Mahmoud
 Khairallah, Dr Abdelaziz Ali Jamee, and Dr Ahmed Abdallah Khalafallah immediately and unconditionally;
 Calling on them to provide all six doctors with any medical attention they may require;
 Calling on them to reform the 2010 National Security Act to remove the excessive powers of the NISS, in
 particular powers of arrest and detention without judicial oversight for four-and-a-half months.
 PLEASE SEND APPEALS BEFORE 22 JULY 2010 TO:
 President
 HE President Omar Al Bashir
 Office of the President
 People’s Palace
 PO Box 281
 Khartoum
 Sudan
 Fax: +249 183 774 339
 Salutation: Your Excellency
 NISS director
 Mohamed Atta Al-Moula Abbas
 Director of the NISS
 NISS Headquarters
 Khartoum, Sudan
 Salutation: Dear Director Abbas
 And copies to:
 Dr Abdelmuneim Osman Mohamed
 Taha
 Advisory Council on Human Rights
 PO Box 302
 Khartoum
 Sudan
 Also send copies to diplomatic representatives accredited to your country. Please check with your section office if sending appeals after the above
 date.
 Date: 10 June 2010
 URGENT ACTION
 DOCTORS DETAINED, RISK TORTURE
 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
 A committee of doctors was first formed in 2003, to improve the working conditions of doctors in Sudan. Following a three-day
 strike in 2003, the government accepted a 12-point agreement with the committee, which included a salary increase.
 After delays in the implementation of the salary increase and the rest of the agreement, another strike, organised by the new
 Doctors' Strike Committee, was held on 1-3 February 2010.
 After further delay, the committee arranged a 17-day strike which began in March and continued into April, which the police
 responded to with frequent harassment of the doctors. The doctors ended the strike when the Ministry of Health agreed to
 implement the 2003 agreement and increase salaries.
 The Ministry of Health withdrew the agreement on 15 May and reduced the salary increase. The doctors' committee called a
 meeting on 2 June to decide how to proceed. Three doctors had been arrested the previous day.
 Police prevented many doctors from entering the building where the meeting was due to take place. The doctors moved the
 meeting to a nearby building, but the NISS told them to leave, and beat many of them as they were leaving.
 Medical students from the University of Khartoum led a peaceful march in support of the doctors' committee. Many of the
 students were also beaten by NISS officers.
 One of the changes that were dictated by the Comprehensive Peace Agreement between the government of Sudan and armed
 opposition groups from southern Sudan, was the reform of the 1999 National Security Forces Act which provided NISS agents
 with extensive powers of arrest and detention, leading to human rights violations such as arbitrary arrest and detention, torture
 and other forms of ill-treatment. The 2010 National Security Act was adopted to reform the 1999 National Security Forces Act,
 yet retained the same powers of arrest and detention for NISS agents.
 UA: 127/10 Index: AFR 54/020/2010 Issue Date: 10 June 2010
 | 
 |  |  
  |    |  |  |  |