Posted by Jenn Christian on Apr 20, 2012
Today, the Enough Project filed a petition before the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, known as the African Human Rights Commission, against Sudan. The petition alleges that the government of Sudan’s indiscriminate aerial bombardment of civilian populations in the states of South Kordofan and Blue Nile, its ground attacks against these populations, and its denial of international humanitarian aid to the two states violate, among other things, the rights to life and property afforded all Sudanese citizens under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, or the African Charter.
Sudanese victims of Khartoum’s violations of international law in
South Kordofan and Blue Nile are unable to seek recourse against the
government before domestic or international bodies, as these civilians
are either in refugee camps or trapped within on-going hostilities in
the two states and on the verge of starvation. Enough has therefore
submitted a petition to the African Human Rights Commission on their
behalf, with pro bono legal counsel from the law firm Brown Rudnick. The
petition requests that the African Human Rights Commission, among other
things, declare that Sudan has violated the rights of Sudanese
civilians provided for in the African Charter, alert the African Union
to the actions of the government of Sudan, and take all measures within
its powers to “avoid irreparable damage being cause to the victim[s].”
The facts alleged in the petition come within the context of ongoing
conflict between the Sudan Armed Forces, or SAF, and government-backed
militia, on the one hand, and the Sudan People’s Liberation
Movement-North, or SPLM-N, on the other, which has engulfed South
Kordofan since June 2011 and Blue Nile since September 2011. During this
period, not only have the SAF and government-backed militia engaged in
battle with the SPLM-N, but they have, as well, purposefully targeted
civilian populations through aerial and ground attacks and
extra-judicial killings.
More than 366,000 people have been severely affected or internally
displaced by the violence since June, while another 140,000 have fled to
either Ethiopia or South Sudan. Khartoum’s attacks have occurred during
harvest and planting seasons, preventing civilians from tending their
crops and severely undermining available sources of food in the two
states. Compounding these increasingly dire conditions is Khartoum’s
steadfast refusal to permit international humanitarian aid to reach
populations in SPLM-N controlled areas, leaving populations in southern
Blue Nile and South Kordofan at emergency levels of food insecurity—one
level short of famine.
Enough has transmitted copies of its petition to 11 U.N. Special
Rapporteurs, the Independent Expert on the Situation of Human Rights in
Sudan, and the U.N. Working Group on People of African Descent
requesting that these officials take appropriate actions within their
respective competencies, including forming a working group to
collectively assess the situation in South Kordofan and Blue Nile.
Yesterday, we remembered the Holocaust and declared, as we have done
for nearly 75 years, “never again.” In dong so, we must take a critical
look at what we have done for the people of Sudan in realizing this
declaration. The world has stood by far too long and watched Sudanese
officials, such as President Bashir, Defense Minister Hussein,
and South Kordofan Governor Haroun, commit heinous crimes against the
people of Sudan. While the ICC has issued arrest warrants against these
three officials for their roles in crimes committed in Darfur, they
continue to commit the same crimes today in South Kordofan and Blue Nile
with impunity. Enough’s submission of a petition to the African Human
Rights Commission is one step towards holding these and other Sudanese
government and military officials accountable for their crimes. The
international community must, as well, increase efforts to hold Sudanese
officials accountable for their violations of international human
rights and humanitarian law in Darfur, South Kordofan, Blue Nile, and
Abyei.
Photo: A family camps under trees after being displaced from their home in Sudan's Blue Nile state (Enough / Nenad Marinkovic)
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