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Friday, 10 September 2010 03:19

A group in Darfur suspect LRA attack

lra_350 A group in Darfur said they have been attacked by what they believed to be the Uganda's Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) in Western Sudan. The Deputy Chairman of Liberation and Justice Movement, Haider Falokoma Atim, told Reuters News Agency that a group of LRA rebels attacked their forces on Wednesday in Dafak area in South Darfur.

Published in Sudan

JUBA, Sudan (AP) -- Hundreds of people are marching through the streets in Southern Sudan to mark the four-month point before an independence referendum is held.

A top Southern Sudan official, Pagan Amum, said Thursday that the south already has given many concessions to northern Sudan, including a 50-50 split of oil fields that lie in the south's territory.

Amum's comments came a day after U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Sudan was a "ticking time bomb."

More than 2 million people died in the North-South civil war in Sudan. It ended in 2005 with the signing of a peace accord that promised the southern referendum in 2011, which could split Africa's largest country in two.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Published in Sudan
Thursday, 09 September 2010 17:45

Angola: Radio Presenter Gunned Down

Committee to Protect Journalists

 

Following Sunday's murder in Angola of Alberto Graves Chakussanga, a radio journalist with a station critical of the ruling MPLA government, authorities must conduct a thorough and transparent investigation exploring all possible leads and bring those responsible to justice, the Committee to Protect Journalists said on Wednesday. 

Chakussanga's neighbors and relatives found the journalist lying in a corridor of his home in Luanda's Viana district with a bullet in his back early Sunday morning, according to local journalists. He had been the presenter of a weekly, Umbundu-language news call-in program on private Radio Despertar.

The motive for the killing was not immediately clear. Colleagues told CPJ that the only item missing from the house was a bottle of cooking gas. No arrests have been made.  "We condemn the murder of Alberto Chakussanga," said Africa Advocacy Coordinator Mohamed Keita. "We call on Angolan authorities to consider every possible motive for this killing including his journalism."  Chakussanga had a following with the Ovimbundu, Angola's largest ethnic group who originate from the south of the country, a stronghold of former rebel movement UNITA, according to local journalists. Radio Despertar was launched in December 2006, under the terms of a 2002 peace deal between the ruling MPLA and UNITA. 

In a press conference on Tuesday, Rui Falcão, secretary of information of the MPLA politburo, accused Radio Despertar of repeatedly inciting the population to commit "civil disobedience" since Monday in support of the opposition former rebel movement UNITA, according to news reports. The accusations were based on interviews and commentary that criticized the government's performance. In a press statement today, Radio Despertar rejected the allegations as "unfounded and slanderous," and asserted its editorial independence. Local journalists said the station has been critical of both UNITA and the authorities, and they allege that the government electronically interferes with its frequency in parts of Luanda.

Chakussanga, 32, was also a lecturer at the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Agostinho Neto state university and at the Angolan police academy, according to local journalists. A few hours before his death, Chakussanga had left his pregnant wife at a hospital where she gave birth later that day to a baby boy, colleagues said.

Published in Sudan

by Peter Martell

 

KHARTOUM (AFP) – Sudan has resolved an angry dispute with the south by returning the payment of crucial oil revenues to hard currency, a senior southern government official said on Thursday.

Last month, southern finance minister David Deng Athorbei accused former civil war enemies in the north of "deliberately" weakening the fledgling southern economy, by switching the south?s share of oil revenues from foreign currency to the Sudanese pound.

The central bank in Khartoum denied payments had changed.

However, southern finance ministry undersecretary Salvatore Garang Mabiordit confirmed the payment in foreign currency had returned.

"There were meetings 10 days ago at a senior level to work this issue out, and we are thankful that the payments have now returned to normal," said Mabiordit, speaking from the southern capital Juba.

"This had been a big problem and a big concern, but it has now been resolved."

Sudan is sub-Saharan Africa?s third largest oil producer, providing as much as 98 percent of the southern government?s income.

However, the grossly underdeveloped south is still recovering from decades of war with the north, during which about two million people were killed in a conflict fuelled by religion, ethnicity, ideology and resources, including oil.

Juba had said it would be unable to pay for key imports without its hard currency income from oil.

Under a 2005 peace agreement, the north and south are committed to splitting oil revenues equally, with the national unity government in Khartoum transferring the share in foreign currency.

The south is due in January to vote in a referendum on independence, set up under the peace deal, and many expect southerners to overwhelmingly back full independence.

The return of payments is seen as a positive step in the tense relationship between Khartoum and Juba, with international pressure growing on both sides to resolve post-referendum negotiations, including deals on potential oil sharing.

The central bank had previously blocked hard currency payments in 2008, a situation resolved at the time by the intervention of senior southern leaders.

The bulk of Sudan's crude reserves lie in the south, but the oil is exported on pipelines that only run north.

On Wednesday US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called Sudanese leaders in a bid to defuse what she called the "ticking time bomb" of an "inevitable" secession of the south.

"We're trying to begin negotiations to work out some of those intractable problems. What happens to the oil revenues?" she asked.

Several key oil fields lie along the still contested north-south border, another issue of concern.

The border was meant to be defined six months after the 2005 peace deal was signed, but negotiations by the committee established to demarcate it are in "deadlock," International Crisis Group said last week.

The Brussels-based think tank warned that some border areas "remain dangerously militarized" as the oil issue raises the stakes for drawing boundaries.

"Given the location of many oil deposits, border uncertainty has also contributed to mistrust, as southerners have questioned whether Khartoum was sharing as much revenue as required," the ICG report warned.

Published in Sudan

By Mabior Philip

Parliament - Juba, Sudan (Borglobe)....Legislators in the Juba-based Southern Sudan regional parliament are setting on for a secession campaign ahead of a vote that will split an already volatile Sudan in to two nations.

Southern Sudan, a region most ravaged by two decades-long civil war, but currently dependent on revenues from oil, is to hold a sensitive vote in January next year, to either confirm the unity of the Sudan as set in a 2005 peace deal or opt for secession from the dominantly Islamic north to establish her own independent nation.

Legislators yesterday convened an unusual sitting to strategize on how to prevent the embattled north from rigging the results of the vote.

Speaker of the parliament, James Wani Igga, said the legislators should go to their own constituencies, tell the electorates why separation is the favorable choice, defuse tension, sensitize on how to vote, and to monitor irregularities in the vote.

The legislators noted with worries that a mistake was made in allowing southerners outside the south to vote for they will not be under monitoring of the regional government.

They said the north will let all the northerners and Arab communities outside Sudan register and vote for unity, which may not be the choice of southerners.  “If those outside vote unity then it shall be final”, said Parliamentary Affairs Minister, Micheal Makuei Lueth.

The number of Southerners in the north was estimated at half a million in the 2008 census, but the northern officials said they had already registered 4.5 million, which the legislators said was the beginning of rigging.

“The north will encourage the registration of as many as possible and later discourages voting of as many others so that the 60% is not attained”, Wani Igga said

Published in Sudan

Sudanese students breaking down barriers through football TWO Greenwood Senior High School students who hail from Sudan took part in an AFL multicultural promotion, playing in Sydney as members of the World XVIII.

Year 12 students Ater (Reuben) Riak and Awai (Peter) Ajang trained in Melbourne for the promotional matches held as part of the under-16 national AFL championships in July.

The boys are mainstream students at the school, having progressed from the Intensive English Centre on the same campus.

“The all-expenses-paid trip was a great boon for the boys as they were able to tour some of the famous eastern states sites as well as making new friends in the touring party,” school publicity officer John Rule said.

“Peter has been playing Aussie Rules with a local team for a few years but Reuben had not played before. The coaches were impressed with the two lads’ speed, athleticism and ability to learn quickly.

“The boys’ desire to be chosen for the team was very strong and they trained extremely hard to make the cut.

“Reuben has expressed a desire to develop his Aussie Rules skills further by playing in a local competition, along with his soccer commitments. The AFL is to be commended for its foresight and generosity in giving talented youngsters a chance to achieve and dream of greater things.” - In My Community

 

Published in Sudan

By Heba Saleh

Washington Post Foreign Service

CAIRO - A previously unknown group of activists in Egypt is putting up posters and collecting signatures urging Gamal Mubarak, the son and presumed successor of the country's leader, to run for president in next year's election.

The campaign appears to be a test of support for the younger Mubarak amid general unease about the prospect of a dynastic succession.

But the Popular Coalition for the Support of Gamal Mubarak says its campaign is a citizens initiative with no support from the man it seeks to elevate, who has often denied having presidential ambitions.

In Cairo's working-class area of Bab el-She'reyya, near the stone walls surrounding the old Islamic heart of the city, the campaign has splashed dozens of Gamal posters on the white tiles outside a cafe.

"Gamal Mubarak is a smart politician," said Magdy el-Kordy, the campaign's coordinator. "He feels the pulse of the people. We have launched the motto, 'Gamal Mubarak, the hope of the poor.' "

That campaign has been accompanied by another proclaiming support for Gen. Omar Suleiman, Egypt's intelligence chief and another possible contender for the succession.

President Hosni Mubarak, 82, who has been in power since 1981, underwent gallbladder surgery in Germany in March. His absence for several weeks revived talk of his presumed plans for the younger Mubarak to succeed him. The elder Mubarak has not yet indicated whether he will contest presidential elections due next year.

"We feel that the era of Hosni Mubarak is about to end, even if it is not necessarily next year," said Mostapha Kamel el-Sayed, a political analyst. "We are not sure of the succession or of how the political scene will evolve."

He said he thinks the poster campaigns are a possible sign of a division within the ruling National Democratic Party over whether the younger Mubarak should be the next leader.

The posters promoting Suleiman labeled him "the alternative." An online statement presumed to be from the anonymous activists appealed to Egypt's "honorable army" to save the country from "the shame and disgrace of the succession which the president's son seeks."

The posters were taken down within hours by the authorities, who also banned newspapers from reporting on them.

Suleiman, 74, has never expressed an interest in being president and is not thought to be behind the poster campaign on his behalf.

Constitutional changes adopted in 2007 in effect bar independent candidates from running for president. The largest opposition force in the country is the banned Muslim Brotherhood, whose candidates run as independents.

- Financial Times

Published in Sudan
Wednesday, 08 September 2010 14:12

Police probe string of indecent acts

CBC News

 

Calgary police are investigating whether three indecent acts committed early Saturday morning are related.

In each case, young women were groped by a man who exposed himself to them.

Shortly after midnight, two women in their late teens were walking in the area of 13th Avenue and Second Street S.E. when they were approached by a man who exposed his genitals. He then grabbed the buttocks of one woman.

The women screamed and hailed a cab, which took them out of the area.

At 3:40 a.m., a 28-year-old woman was walking southbound on 14th Street toward 22nd Avenue S.W. when a man approached her, exposed his genitals and rubbed against her.

She screamed and pushed him away, at which time the suspect ran northbound.

At about 4 a.m., a woman in her 30s was walking southbound on Fifth Street near 21st Avenue S.W. when she was approached by a man who reached out and grabbed her breast. He appeared to be masturbating.

The woman pushed him away, shouted and left the area. The man was seen walking toward 21st Avenue.

In each case, the victims called police immediately. Officers arrived and patrolled the area but didn't find a suspect.

None of the women were injured.

Calgary police said in a news release that this type of behaviour can escalate if not stopped.

Anyone who may have witnessed these incidents, or who has any information, is asked to call police at 403-266-1234 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477.



 

Published in Sudan
Wednesday, 08 September 2010 06:54

Death penalty for 2 murderers of Chinese workers

chinese-workers A Court in Khartoum has sentenced two men, Ali Idris Bahr Ali Hamedein and Ahmed Adam, to death for killing four kidnapped Chinese oil workers and a Sudanese soldier.

Published in Sudan
ONE of the world's most brutal terrorist groups, Joseph Kony's Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), is on the move from the Congo, terrorising civilians.The below listed report from Time.com, Tuesday, 07 September 2010, contains a shocking video entitled "The Lord's Resistance Army Hunts Children in Sudan".Click here (and wait for end of short advert) to hear Ed Robbins reporting for Time.com from Western Equatoria State, southern Sudan.Replay the video and listen carefully to a message for everyone. The message is from a deeply traumatised Sudanese boy. The boy's name is Moses. Moses was abducted, attacked, hurt all over and stabbed with a bayonet by LRA terrorists. The terrorists forced Moses to kill a young girl. The girl was aged 7 or 8. If he did not kill the girl, they would kill him. The heart wrenching message from Moses says:"I'M ASKING EVERYONE PLEASE, PRAY TO MAKE IT END"See further devastating reports and photos here below.- - -Balancing Counterterrorism and Democracy in UgandaTime.com - Tuesday, 07 September 2010By Ioannis Gatsiounis in Kampala, Uganda Photo: Mourners bury Alice Kyalimpa, a victim of the July 11, 2010, terrorist attacks that tore through a restaurant and rugby club in Uganda's capital Ronald Kabuubi/Reuters. Source: Time.com report September 07, 2010 "Balancing Counterterrorism and Democracy in Uganda". To view the full report, click on the link above or visit http://www.time.com. If the report has moved, click here [insert link] to view a copy filed on September 07, 2010 at Uganda Watch, a sister site of this blog Sudan Watch.- - -LRA KILL 8 IN YAMBIO, W. EQUATORIA, S. SUDAN -More Ugandan PDF forces to be deployed WES Yambio: LRA Raid And Kill 8 citizensReport from South Sudan Analysis (SOSA) - Monday, 06 September 2010: (YAMBIO) – Ugandan Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) rebels have killed 8 people during weekend raids in Southern Sudan’s Western Equatoria state, a local official said.Around 6 LRA fighters attacked the market village of Rii-Bodo on Saturday, killing 8 civilians, said Lexon Amozai, State Director of Sudan Relief and Rehabilitation Commission in Western Equatoria State.The horrifying murders come in the wake of an LRA ambush at a near-by small stream of Nahua.On Friday the rebels launched a similar assault on the village of Gangura.“They killed 8 people there, among them two women. There were no soldiers deployed there, so they attacked the civilians,” Mr Amozai said.A Uganda-led coalition including Congo and South Sudan launched a joint offensive against LRA strongholds in Congo’s isolated Garamba National Park on December 14 after LRA leader Joseph Kony again failed to sign a deal to end his rebellion. However, the operation has failed to arrest Joseph Kony.In the same weekend related attacks were carried on Sunday at James Diko and Naakiri Bomas under Bangasu payam during a final funeral of one of the LRA Victims.Kony is wanted by the International Criminal Court in The Hague for war crimes.Bangasi Joseph Bakosoro, state governor of Western Equatoria state with deeply sorrow and regrets expressed his dissatisfaction for the death of 8 WES citizens of Rii-Bodo on Saturday.In a press statement, Col Bangasi said that, “it is painful to see such barbaric killings by the notorious LRA fighters on the innocent citizens of western Equatoria more especially as referendum gets around the corner.”He called upon all the youth to stand up in order to provide security to the state from the marauding LRA and the state Government in collaboration with the UPDF and SPLA.Security sources say soon the state government “will deploy forces around the payams and Bomas.”Bakosoro assured the citizens that, “more forces of the Ugandan People Defense (UPDF) forces will be deployed around the most attacked areas of the Bomas.”He cautioned the forestry department to ensure that “all timber cutters are removed from the forest of the state because it makes no sense for the LRA to be killing people leaving them (timber companies) unharmed hence some might be spices of the LRA.”Meanwhile the Minister of Local Government and Law Enforcement Agencies Colonel Wilson Sidigi said that he will ensure that support is given to the villagers’ security.Sidigi promised that he will organize with the County Commissioners of Yambio and Nzara to encouraged the youth to stand firm as the security of the State is in the hands of every citizen of the state.- - -LRA Kill Eight In YambioReport from SRS - Sudan Radio Service - Tuesday, 07 September 2010: (YAMBIO) – About eight people were killed in attacks allegedly perpetrated by the Lord’s Resistance Army over the weekend in outskirts of Yambio town.The Western Equatoria state Minister of Information and Communication, Gibson Bullen Wande, spoke to SRS from Yambio on Tuesday.[Gibson Bullen Wande]: “The LRA appeared between Gangura and a place called Baite, attacked the village and killed three people, so now we are seeing how we are going to handle it. Then on Saturday in the evening, the LRA appeared about 7 kilometers away from Yambio town in a place called Riibodoo. They came into the house of a chief with his in-laws. All of them were beaten to death and one person was abducted. So the total number of people that we have established to have been killed during the two attacks of last week has now come to eight so far.”Gibson Bullen Wande was speaking to SRS from Yambio on Tuesday.- - -LRA rebels kill eight in South Sudan raid, local official saysReport from Sudan Tribune - Tuesday, 07 September 2010By Richard Ruati - excerpt:(YAMBIO - September 6, 2010) - The Ugandan rebels Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) has killed eight people in raids over the weekend in South Sudan’s state of Western Equatoria, a local official has said.The LRA, which is a sectarian religious and military group from northern Uganda, has a history of committing atrocities in the region.It began as an Acholi tribe rebel movement seeking to overthrow the Ugandan Government. What it stands for now is a matter of debate but in 2005 the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued its first five arrest warrants for LRA leader, Joseph Kony, his deputy and three of his commanders.Around six LRA fighters attacked the market village of Rii-Bodo at about 2:00 am (local time) on Saturday, 4 August, and killed civilians, said Lexon Amozai who is the state director of the Sudan Relief and Rehabilitation Commission in Western Equatoria State. The murders took place after an LRA ambush at the nearby Nahua stream.On Friday, the rebels launched a similar assault on the village of Gangura. "They killed eight people there, among them two women. There were no soldiers deployed there, so they attacked the civilians," Amozai said.A Uganda-led coalition including Congo and South Sudan launched a joint offensive against the LRA strongholds in Congo’s isolated Garamba National Park on December 14, after LRA leader Kony again failed to sign a peace deal. However, the operation has failed to arrest Kony.On Sunday, August 5, related attacks were carried out in James Diko, Naakiri Bomas and during the funeral of one of the LRA victims in Bangasu. [...]Security sources say that the state government’s deployment of "forces around the payams [villages] and Bomas,” is imminent.- - -"I'M ASKING EVERYONE PLEASE, PRAY TO MAKE IT END" Photo: Gulu victim. The LRA use torture to instil fear. Uganda's rebel LRA has become synonymous with torture, abductions and killings. (BBC photo/Sudan Watch archives) Photo: Two young boy's get treated for severe burn wounds in the Lira hospital in northern Uganda, Feb 23, 2004, after a massacre believed to be committed by the LRA in the Barlonyo camp 26 kilometers north of the town that killed at least 200 people. (AP Photo/Karel Prinsloo/Sudan Watch archives) Photo: Ochola John was deformed by rebels from the LRA. (BBC) Click here to read the victim's heartbreaking testimony published in a BBC News online report dated 29 June 2006. If the report has moved, click here to read a copy filed on 30 June 2006 at Uganda Watch, a sister site of this blog Sudan Watch. Photo: Leader of the LRA peace delegation Martin Ojul, left, is welcomed back home at Koch Goma in Amuru. (AP Photo/Time.com) Source: Report from Time.com - Saturday, 10 November 2007, by Alexis Okeowo in Gulu. Excerpt:Sixteen years ago, Irene Abonyo was held down to the ground and her lips and ears viciously sliced off by rebels in northern Uganda. But 70-year old Abonyo is in a forgiving mood. She attended a steamy, overcrowded town-hall meeting to see, on better terms this time, one of the world's most terrifying rebel groups, the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA). After a dialogue, she went over to shake the hand of a former LRA fighter. He held her hand, but refused to have his picture taken with the disfigured woman. "I will still forgive," Abonyo explains. "They are embarrassed of what they have done." Full story at: www.time.com- - -"I'M ASKING EVERYONE PLEASE, PRAY TO MAKE IT END"Last month, Human Rights Watch said the LRA had killed more than 250 people in the Central African Republic and the Democratic Republic of Congo over the previous year and a half. It said nearly 700 others were kidnapped and forced to be either soldiers or sex slaves. Full story at Voice of America News, Tuesday, 07 September 2010 - LRA Kills 8 in Southern Sudan. Photo: Southern Sudanese wait for food, shelter, security and medicine at the village of Nzara, along Sudan's border with the Democratic Republic of Congo, on 18 August 2010. Thousands have fled their nearby villages since a recent series of attacks by guerrilla fighters believed to be from the Lord's Resistance Army. (Peter Martell/AFP/Getty Images) Full story at www.time.comThank you for reading Sudan Watch. 0 0 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 7 7 8 8 9 9 0 0 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 7 7 8 8 9 9 0 0Authors: Editor

Read more: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/VBuP/~3/rq8m9jYHVcg/urgent-message-to-presidents-bashir.html

Published in Sudan
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