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Re: حكومة الا نقاذ تعمل علي ابادة شعب جبال النوبة فهل انتم معها؟ (Re: abdelrahim abayazid)
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6. Following a relatively uncontroversial electoral process deemed credible by international observers the counting of ballots by mid-May 2011 indicated a narrow victory in the gubernatorial elections by Ahmed Haroun, the incumbent Governor of the state. Even before the official announcement, the result was contested by the SPLM, citing irregularities, and alleging that the elections had been rigged and stating that it could not therefore accept its outcome. The SPLM subsequently announced its boycott of the legislature and that it could not recognize any of the elections’ results. As a result, the rift between the parties intensified. 7. On 23 May, President Bashir ordered the Joint Defence Board established under the CPA to dismantle the JIU in Southern Kordofan and Blue Nile by the end of the month and informed SPLA-N forces in the two states that they had to either disarm or move south of the 1956 border. The dispute over the election results and the threat of forceful SPLA disarmament increased the tension and fear among members of SPLA-N over their safety and security. 8. In the early hours of Sunday, on 5 June, the SAF blocked the major roads into and out of Kadugli town. Fighting reportedly began between SPLA-N and SAF in the early morning hours 35 kilometres to the east of Kadugli in the area of the town of Um Durein. Later in the day, fighting broke out between SPLA-N and SAF in Kadugli. The SAF claimed that the SPLA-N instigated the fighting by taking over a police station the previous evening and seizing small arms. In turn, the SPLA-N claimed that the SAF had attempted to disarm the SPLA-JIUs by force. 9. The security situation deteriorated on 7 June, with shelling of Kadugli town by the SAF of densely civilian-inhabited areas. This led to the displacement of thousands of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) who had taken refuge in churches and hospitals and in the UNMIS compound, where they were sheltered in an area adjacent to the compound known as the ‘protective perimeter’ set up specifically to receive them and provide security and humanitarian assistance. The SAF took control of the Kadugli airport, including UN assets located at the airport, and closed the facility to all civilian air traffic. UNMIS Human Rights interviewed numerous witnesses who indicated that the SAF, together with militia elements of the PDF, were conducting house-to-house searches and subjecting residents to identity checks. It is alleged that these searches targeted individuals based on their ethnicity and political affiliation and that they subsequently resulted in arrests and, in some cases, summary executions in many pro-SPLM areas of Kadugli town. 10. UNMIS Human Rights received reports from multiple independent sources of #####ng of civilian homes, UN agencies/offices and humanitarian warehouses, and destruction of property by militia elements of the Popular Defence Force (PDF) as they fought alongside the SAF. On 7 June, UN Security began the relocation of staff from UN Agencies, Funds and Programmes and international NGOs to the UNMIS compound. By 8 June, the protective perimeter at UNMIS compound had received an influx of 6,000-7,000 IDPs seeking refuge from the ongoing fighting; approximately another 1,000 civilians fled Kadugli to the north.
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