Submit your comments on this article |
Africa Horn |
Kassala protests after man dies in Sudan intelligence custody |
2024-09-02 |
Protests erupted in Kassala; eastern Sudan![]() , on Sunday after a young man died in the custody of the General Intelligence Service (GIS), allegedly due to torture, activists said. Demonstrators blocked major roads in Kassala and staged a sit-in at the public prosecutor's office, demanding justice for 25-year-old Alamin Mohammed Nur, who was arrested on Friday and pronounced dead hours later. The public prosecutor has filed a case of premeditated murder and demanded the GIS identify those responsible. Protesters are refusing to receive Nur's body for burial or end their demonstrations until the perpetrators are arrested and GIS leaders are dismissed. A relative of the dear departed told Sudan Tribune that Nur, a merchant, was arrested without cause. An autopsy report revealed bruises consistent with torture, he said. The GIS has reportedly agreed to provide the prosecution with the names of agents involved in Nur's arrest and interrogation. Security forces fired shots to disperse protesters who surrounded the GIS headquarters in Kassala, witnesses said, though no injuries were reported. The Bani Amer Youth Gathering, a local group, called for the dismissal of top GIS officials in the state and held them responsible for the death. The East Sudan Bar Association also demanded that those responsible be held accountable. Sudan's military and security agencies have been accused of widespread arrests and abuses against civilians in areas under their control, particularly those suspected of supporting the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a paramilitary group that has been battling the army since April 2023. |
Posted by:Fred |
#2 *happy sigh* Learning! |
Posted by: trailing wife 2024-09-02 13:33 |
#1 Kassala is an interesting place situated among some fantastic dolmans. The area has had close ties with Ethiopia and Eritrea, and has a large non-Arab but Muslim population. It was a stop-off between Khartoum and Port Sudan. This incident indicates that the Arab Military control over the population of eastern Sudan may be tenuous outside of Port Sudan itself and the area to the north of that city. Port Sudan now serves as the de facto capital of the Sudan, which is a humpty-dumpty failed state if there ever was one. The military will survive as long as Cairo continues to support its existence -- which it does given the long-standing ties to Egyptian expats whose farms provide the food Egypt, with its burgeoning population, must have. |
Posted by: Sligum Hupomoling9524 2024-09-02 08:52 |