UNITAMS head ‘profoundly distressed’ by killing of aid worker in Blue Nile, Sudan

The Special Representative of the Secretary-General and Head of the United Nations Integrated Transition Assistance Mission in Sudan (UNITAMS), Volker Perthes, has strongly condemned the killing of an aid worker in Sudan’s Blue Nile state, saying that “such acts will not diminish the resolve of the United Nations to continue supporting the people and the government of Sudan in their quest for peace and stability”.

On 27 January 2023, a contractor for Addition Organisation for Disaster and Development (ADD), a local NGO and UN partner, was killed and an ADD staff member was injured after their vehicle came under fire at a checkpoint in Blue Nile

“I am deeply saddened by the news of the killing of a peacebuilding adviser who has been working for the United Nations. I express my deepest condolences to his family, friends and colleagues,” Perthes said in a statement published yesterday.

The UNITAMS statement confirms that the at the time of the killing, the victims were on their way to carry out peacebuilding activities in Giessan as part of a UN project to support post-conflict recovery, conflict resolution and conflict prevention in Blue Nile state.

“I am profoundly distressed by the loss of life of a peacebuilding adviser, who, together with the UN, was committed to building bridges between communities. Aid workers must be respected and protected,” Perthes says.

In his statement, he calls on the Sudanese authorities to take swift action to identify the perpetrators of this attack and bring them to justice, and reaffirms that “such acts will not diminish the resolve of the United Nations to continue supporting the people and the government of Sudan in their quest for peace and stability”.

Source: Radio Dabanga

NUP head: ‘Sudan’s Framework Agreement faces great challenges’

There are great challenges facing Sudan’s Framework Agreement, Maryam El Sadig El Mahdi, leader of the National Umma Party (NUP), which is part of the FFC-CC coalition, acknowledged at a Khartoum seminar on Monday. Yassir Arman, head of the SPLM-Democratic Revolutionary Movement and FFC-CC member, told the seminar that Sudan needs “a new national project to achieve democratic transformation,” and that “women’s issues form an important part in the transformation.”

Speaking during a seminar at the Teiba Press Centre in Khartoum on Monday, NUP leader and former Minister of Foreign AffairsEl Mahdi said that the main objective of the Framework Agreement, signed by more than 40 political parties and groups with the military junta on December 5 last year, “is to collect the largest number of members of the Sudanese spectrum in quantity and quality”.

She explained that the most important challenges facing the Framework Agreement “are the non-participation of a number of actors, including resistance committees and other civilian bodies, in addition to the lack of trust between the signatories”.

She further stressed the need for larger participation of women.

‘Democratic transformation’

Yassir Arman, head of the SPLM-Democratic Revolutionary Movement and FFC-CC member, stressed the need for “a new national project to achieve democratic transformation” during the seminar. “Women’s issues form an important part in the transformation,” he added.

According to Arman, allies of the ousted regime of Omar Al Bashir regime form the main threat to the democratic transition. ”The current political conflict is not between the military and civilians, but rather between the deep state and the forces of the revolution.”

Arman further denied accusations levelled against the FFC-CC of standing with the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces against the Sudan Armed Forces. He said that “the RSF are great forces, and their issues and concerns must be addressed within the framework of the democratic transition process that serves the interest of Sudan”.

He also denied any negotiations between the FFC-CC and the FFC-DB, pointing out that talks took place between the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) led by Jibril Ibrahim and the Sudan Liberation Movement faction led by Minni Minawi (SLM-MM).

Source: Radio Dabanga

Sudan Supreme Court orders release of USAID diplomat’s killer

The Supreme Court of Sudan has reportedly issued a decision to release Abdelraouf Abuzeid Mohamed Hamza, who was sentenced to death in 2009, together with three others, for their involvement in the murder of United States Agency for International Development (USAID) employees John Granville and his Sudanese driver Abdelrahman Abbas Rahama during the first hours of 2008.

Abdelmalik Abuzeid, Abdelraouf’s brother, wrote on his Facebook page on Monday: “My brother Abdelraouf is free by a decision of the Supreme Court”.

John Granville and Abdelrahman Abbas Rahama died in a hail of bullets in the early hours of January 1, 2008, when gunmen opened fire on their car as they left a New Year’s Eve party in the Sudan capital Khartoum. They were both employees of the US Agency for International Development (USAID).

Four days after the murder, the Ansar Al Tawhid (Supporters of Monotheism) claimed responsibility via a post on a website used by Islamists. In September, five Sudanese men admitted their roles in the killing.

In June 2009, four suspects were sentenced to death by hanging. One year later, they broke out of Kober prison. A Sudanese police officer was killed during the escape. Hamza was recaptured three weeks later. Another was killed in Somalia in May 2011.The US government voiced its conviction that the convicts escaped their maximum-security prison ‘with inside help’.

Islamist militant Gusei El Jani was subsequently received a 12-year sentence for assisting the killers, but he was granted early release in April 2016, to which the US Embassy in Khartoum voiced it’s ‘concern’.

As reported by Radio Dabanga at the time, the US Department of State’s Rewards for Justice Program has authorised rewards of up to $5 million each for information leading to the capture of the two men still at-large, Abdelbasit El Haj, and Mohamed Mekkawi.

Source: Radio Dabanga