Investigative journalist barred from entering Sudan

The authorities at Khartoum International Airport allegedly prevented film director Philip Cox from entering Khartoum from Turkey on Saturday morning.

Sudanese online news outlet Medameek reported later that day that the authorities sent Cox back to Turkey on the aeroplane he arrived on, refusing to allow him to enter the country.

Cox’s ban from entering Sudan comes as part of a widespread crackdown on journalists by Sudan’s security and military forces. Last month, in a statement on the occasion of the first anniversary of a coup that derailed Sudan’s transition to civilian rule, the Sudanese Journalists Syndicate said that the press and media in Sudan have been facing “a terrible regression in terms of press freedom”.

The documentary tells a story of a Sudanese activist who dresses up for ongoing protests against the October 2021 military coup in the country. When asked why he dresses as Spiderman, the activist said it is his own way of resisting the Sudanese regime, especially after his best friend was killed during demonstrations on November 17 last year. “I have had to fight since childhood to simply exist, like so many in my country,” he said.

Cox was arrested in Darfur in March 2017 by the paramilitary Border Guards, along with Sudanese author Daoud Ibrahim Hari. He was released at the request of the British Embassy, and at the time he produced a documentary that won several awards and was broadcast by the British Channel Four. The documentary film dealt with Philip Cox’s harsh experience with the detention in Darfur at the hands of militiamen, shedding light on the horrific human rights violations in Sudan during the long rule of the regime of the ousted dictator Omar Al Bashir.

Source: Radio Dabanga

El Burhan confirms negotiations on new Sudanese constitutional framework

The head of the Sovereignty Council and the Sudan Armed Forces (SAF), Abdelfattah El Burhan, claimed on Sunday that the new civilian government will not be partisan and the mainstream Forces for Freedom and Change (FFC) have agreed not to return to power. He also denied rumours about having signed any bilateral settlement.

The speech, held in front of a crowd of soldiers at the El Markhiyat base in Omdurman, follows a statement published on Thursday by leading members of the AU-IGAD-UN Trilateral Mechanism about negotiations between the mainstream FFC and Sudan’s military junta on a new constitutional framework. The trilateral mechanism statement said “we now have a workable document upon which further consensus can be built,” explaining that they will facilitate a new set of negotiation meetings.

In his speech, El Burhan said that the SAF has received the new constitutional framework document. “It is true that there has been a document presented to us in reference to the new proposed transitional constitution. We sent in our comments, which are to preserve the army’s dignity, unity and independence, and that we will not allow anyone to tamper with the armed forces or interfere with them.”

El Burhan affirmed the military’s adherence to civilian authority that would be guarded by the army, and added, addressing the soldiers, “If the civilian government deviates from its path, [it should be aware that] you’re here with your weapons”.

The army leader also accused “certain parties” of inciting SAF officers and soldiers “to carry out a subversive act” and warned them against inciting officers or interfering in the affairs of the army. “Anyone who interferes in army affairs is our enemy. They may be Islamists, communists, or Baathists… We repeat our warning to them, stay away from the army,” he said.

“We are all one hand against those who work against the armed forces, and anyone who interferes in the affairs of the army, we will cut off his tongue and hands,” he warned.

El Burhan, leader of the October 25 military coup d’état last year, renewed his demands for political forces in the country to agree on “a single vision,” based on the new Constitutional Charter developed by the Sudan Bar Association. He urged the parties to sit down and make amendments to the initiatives that were put forward, noting shared values of awareness and patriotism between some leaders of the FFC and the military.

He added that the army’s aim for Sudan is stability and unity, and confirmed his expectation that “the next government will be independent.”

He said that the military broke their partnership with FFC last year because they tried to interfere with the army. The military has always denied that they committed a coup on October 25 last year, claiming they took power because the government was deviating from its path.

The trilateral mechanism has reportedly called on the military to present a united front in supporting the draft constitution, adding that fundamental issues such as transitional justice “need to be addressed”.

Khartoum resistance committee coordinators confirmed that they were not part of the meeting that the trilateral mechanism said they held with resistance committees on Thursday.

According to Kholood Khair, broadcaster and managing partner of Insight Strategy Partners, Sudan’s negotiations continue to be concerned with positions and transitional structures, rather than transformative change, because its parties remain caught in a system which favours the military. “This upcoming deal does nothing to break the mould and therefore is no real challenge to the military’s domination of Sudan’s politics, in fact, its very much the opposite. So, El Burhan – and his new Ray-Bans – can rest easy,” tweeted Khair on November 6.

Source: Radio Dabanga