كتب الكاتب الفاتح جبرا المتوفرة بمعرض الدوحة
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الخرطوم تشرع فى إفتتاح مهزلـــــــــة محكمة "جرائم دارفور"!
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فى تحرك أشبه ب"ممارسة العادة السرية" أعلنت حكومة الخرطوم أنها بصدد تقديم 162 شخصاُ أسمتهم بالمتهمين فى دعاوى جرائم الحرب فى دارفور. و ستفتتح المحكمةالمهزلة اليوم الثلاثاء! جاء الاعلان المهزلة على لسان ما يعرف بوزير عدل النظام السودانى على محمد يس و الذى ذكر (حالماُ) بأن مهزلته سوف تكون بديلاُ عن محكمة الجنايات الدولية‘ و ان حكومة السودان قد إبتعثت بخطاب الى الامين العام للامم المتحدة كوفى عنان تشرح فيه الاجراءات (اى الهرولة) التى اتخذت لانشاء المحكمة ( المهزلة). و جاء فى اعلان الوزير انه من ضمن المتهمين 92 شخصاُ من ولاية جنوب دارفور‘ 38 من شمال دارفور و 32 من غرب دارفور. أما "عصافير" النظام المدللة فتنجوا بريشها كما فى الاحلام تماماُ!! بالتصرف من الجزيرة نت. محمد عثمان دريج
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Re: الخرطوم تشرع فى إفتتاح مهزلـــــــــة محكمة "جرائم دارفور"! (Re: Mohamed osman Deraij)
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Quote: One human rights group reacted to the announcement with scepticism.
Amnesty International said the Sudanese court lacks credibility unless Khartoum carries out "serious legal reforms ensuring independence of the judiciary". "We fear that the establishment of the special court may just be a tactic by the Sudanese government to avoid prosecution" by the ICC, said Kolawole Olaniyan, the director of Amnesty's Africa programme. "On the one hand, the Sudanese government is claiming that it is able to punish the crimes it is accused of condoning for the last two years," he said in a statement |
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Re: الخرطوم تشرع فى إفتتاح مهزلـــــــــة محكمة "جرائم دارفور"! (Re: Mohamed osman Deraij)
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Quote: AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL PRESS RELEASE
AI Index: AFR 54/059/2005 (Public) News Service No: 160 13 June 2005
Tomorrow's opening of a special court set up by the Sudanese Government to try alleged Darfur war criminals is "doomed to failure," Amnesty International said today, unless the country undergoes serious legal reforms ensuring independence of the judiciary and brings about an end to the current climate of intimidation.
"We fear that the establishment of the special court may just be a tactic by the Sudanese government to avoid prosecution by the International Criminal Court,"said Kolawole Olaniyan, Director of Amnesty International's Africa Programme.
"On the one hand, the Sudanese government is claiming that it is able to punish the crimes it is accused of condoning for the last two years; on the other hand, it continues to crack down on those who expose or criticise such human rights violations."
On Sunday, the independent Khartoum Monitor newspaper was closed down, based on a two-year-old High Court ruling revoking its license. The ruling stemmed from an appeal by the Sudanese security forces. Enforcement of the ruling came as the Sudanese authorities threatened legal action against the daily over an editorial critical of killings by the police of war-displaced persons in a squatter camp near the capital city.
Similarly, at the end last month, two staff members of the medical aid agency Medecins Sans Frontieres were charged with "publishing false information" and "crimes against the state" by Sudanese authorities -- two months after the organisation published a report exposing the plight of victims of rape in the war-torn Darfur region.
"What we have here is a court system that is willing to silence newspapers and aid workers who are attempting to speak the truth about human rights violations in Sudan. How can we trust that same system to bring to trial those accused of these violations?" asked Kolawole Olaniyan.
Amnesty International said that to ensure fair, impartial and independent trials over the grave crimes committed in Darfur, the Sudanese authorities should:
abolish Articles 31 and 33 of the National Security Forces Act, which allows the security forces to keep people in prolonged incommunicado detention and gives them immunity for acts of torture; abolish the Specialised Criminal Courts in Darfur, which accept evidence obtained under torture, limit the right of appeal of those accused, and can hand down sentences of death, amputation or flogging; abolish Article 10 of the Law of Evidence, which allows courts to use evidence obtained under duress; provide guarantees for the safety and confidentiality of victims and witnesses of human rights violations in Darfur and the rest of Sudan; and ensure that everyone has equal access to justice and that legal fees in criminal cases are not a barrier to obtaining effective remedies.
Background
The creation of a national court for crimes in Darfur comes a week after the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) announced the opening of its investigation into the war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in the Darfur region in the past two years. The Sudanese government has stated that no Sudanese suspect would be handed over to the ICC. |
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Re: الخرطوم تشرع فى إفتتاح مهزلـــــــــة محكمة "جرائم دارفور"! (Re: Mohamed Suleiman)
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العزيز محمد عثمان
سلأمات .. و كيف الحال،
يعتقدون بانهم سيوقفون اجراءات المحكمه الجنائيه الدوليه و لكنهم واهمون، قرار الأحاله قد اعتمد من المجتمع الدولي، و المحكمه الدوليه ستواصل التحقيقات و سوف تتم المحاكمه بها و تبعا لقوانينها و بقضاتها،
يريدون تطبيق القانون الأن !! المجتمع الدولي سيراقب محكمتهم، و قد تكون عليهم لأ لهم،
اذن هي محاكمتين " و مالو .. كويس برضه" ..
معزتي
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Re: الخرطوم تشرع فى إفتتاح مهزلـــــــــة محكمة "جرائم دارفور"! (Re: Mohamed osman Deraij)
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الآخ محمد عثمان
المماطلة و التسويف و اللف و الدوران و المسرحيات الهزيلة المكشوفة
وذر الرماد على الآعين .... فى التعامل مع المحكمة ٍِِِِِِِِ الدولية سيؤدى
فى خاتمة المطاف المتوقعة الى الآغتيالات السياسية و التصفيات
الجسدية ..... التى ستدخل كعرف جديد فى السياسة السودانية ....
على عصافير النظام المدللة أن تعرف أن لاهاى أرحم لها بلايين
المرات من أن تذبح " ضم التاء" غدرا و معها أولادها المكتنزين شحما و دهنا
و سحتا ............ المراهنة على طيبة و تسامح الشعوب السودانية
استنادا على قدلة السفاح نميرى فى شوارع الخرطوم ... تلك مراهنة
خاسرة .... ليست كل مرة تسلم الجرة ...... و سنرى
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Re: الخرطوم تشرع فى إفتتاح مهزلـــــــــة محكمة "جرائم دارفور"! (Re: إيمان أحمد)
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Quote: UN Secretary General Kofi Annan's special representative in Sudan, Jan Pronk, welcomed the creation of the court but warned it could not replace the International Criminal Court in The Hague.
"It was a positive step but it was late... The train has left the station and the Sudan government will have to do it both ways... A national court cannot be a substitute to an international one," Pronk told reporters. |
الأمم المتحده : لن تقوم المحكمه المحليه مقام المحكمه الجنائيه الدوليه و لن تستبدلها، فقد غادر القطار المحطه و علي الحكومه السودانيه اتباع الطريقين
Darfur crimes court delays start-up
Wednesday June 15th, 2005 00:03.
KHARTOUM, June 14 (AFP) --
Sudan delayed the start-up of a court to try alleged Darfur war criminals, with the tribunal already under fire by rebels and rights groups who see it as a deliberate bid to avoid international justice.
The court will now begin work on Wednesday, its chairman Mahmud Saeed Abkem was quoted by the official SUNA news agency as saying. No reason for the delay was given.
"The hearings will be public and open... and the court will give the accused the chance to defend themselves," Abkem said.
UN Secretary General Kofi Annan's special representative in Sudan, Jan Pronk, welcomed the creation of the court but warned it could not replace the International Criminal Court in The Hague.
"It was a positive step but it was late... The train has left the station and the Sudan government will have to do it both ways... A national court cannot be a substitute to an international one," Pronk told reporters.
Justice Minister Ali Mohammed Yassin announced Monday that some 160 suspects would appear before the Sudanese court to try war crimes committed in the western region of Darfur.
"The court will be an alternative to the International Criminal Court," he said, a week after the ICC said it had launched an inquiry into the atrocities perpetrated in the war-torn region.
Between 180,000 and 300,000 people have been killed and 2.4 million made homeless since an uprising in early 2003 prompted Khartoum to unleash militias in a scorched-earth campaign.
President Omar al-Beshir has vowed never to hand over any Sudanese to international jurisdiction.
The new court will be based in El Fasher, the main city in North Darfur state, but Yassin said most of the suspects to go on trial hailed from South Darfur.
Darfur's two rebel movements fiercely condemned the move as an attempt by Khartoum to circumvent international law.
"The Sudan Liberation Movement does not accept this special court. The so-called 160 suspects the court is planning to try are petty criminals," said SLM spokesman Mahjoub Hussein.
"The government is again playing games and trying to buy time. We want the criminals from the government and the only authority we recognise to carry out this process is the International Criminal Court," he told AFP.
The SLM's smaller rival, the Justice and Equality Movement, also demanded that any Darfur crimes should be dealt with by the ICC.
"The Sudanese judicial system is not qualified to carry out this sort of trials," the group said.
It charged that the penal code did not have sufficient provisions to handle the cases and questioned the independence of Sudan's judiciary.
"The International Criminal Court alone should decide if the government should prosecute those criminals," the JEM said.
Both groups stressed that those they wanted to see put on trial were the 51 suspects identified in January by a UN fact-finding mission.
Amnesty International warned that the Sudanese court "lacks credibility" unless Khartoum carries out "serious legal reforms ensuring independence of the judiciary".
"We fear that the establishment of the special court may just be a tactic by the Sudanese government to avoid prosecution" before the ICC, it said.
"On the one hand, the Sudanese government is claiming that it is able to punish the crimes it is accused of condoning for the last two years.
"On the other hand, it continues to crack down on those who expose or criticise such human rights violations."
(عدل بواسطة hala alahmadi on 06-14-2005, 10:29 PM)
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