UN Human Rights Council 49: UK statement for the enhanced interactive dialogue on Sudan

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TDPel Media

Thank you, Madam Vice President. The United Kingdom thanks the High Commissioner for her update. It is now four months since the military coup in October. The human rights situation in Sudan continues to worsen. We stand with the brave people of Sudan in their struggle to realise their democratic aspirations, and we strongly condemn the continued violence against peaceful protestors, as well as the sexual violence perpetrated against women and girls. This excessive force by the Sudanese security forces must stop, and there must be accountability for all human rights violations committed since … Continue reading “UN Human Rights Council 49: UK statement for the enhanced interactive dialogue on Sudan”

Star-Ledger took throwing away the masks too literally | Letters

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NJ.com

I am writing to object to the photograph on the top of the front page of the March 4 Star-Ledger. It is a closeup of a discarded disposable surgical mask sitting on a sidewalk, meant to illustrate “a new phase” of the COVID-19 pandemic in New Jersey. My pandemic hobby has been cleaning up the litter in my neighborhood. I walk every day with a couple of empty grocery bags and I fill them with a wide variety of abandoned trash. Most litter is no-fault: papers and food containers that escape from the top of the trash barrel. Some is seriously careless or negligent: candy wrappers, fast food bags,… Continue reading “Star-Ledger took throwing away the masks too literally | Letters”

NDA SSC-27 reunites, pledges continuous service to Nigeria

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By Sumaila Ogbaje Members of the 27 Short Service Combatant Course of the Nigerian Defence Academy (NDA) on Saturday, held their grand reunion and pledged to continue to render services to the nation. The Chairman, Retired Maj.-Gen. Okechukwu Ugo, said the members had come a long way since 1986 when they were commissioned into the service, saying that 2022 marked their 36th anniversary. Ugo said the members had served the nation in various capacities in the armed forces with some reaching the peak of their career some of whom had continued to serve the country even in retirement. According to … Continue reading “NDA SSC-27 reunites, pledges continuous service to Nigeria”

“Equality cannot be achieved in a day”–Christine Ngbazande, Activist, South Sudan

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Christine Joseph Ngbazande, is a mother of three, an activist and leads a women’s development organization in Yambio, the capital of Western Equatoria state in South Sudan. “I lost my mother very early in life and, suddenly, my childhood became quite tough,” reveals Christine. At an age when her focus should have been going to school and getting an education, Christine found herself caught in a cycle of domestic chores and farming. “I would often be late for school,” she recalls. “Because I was a girl, my family gave me no space to prioritize my education.” Christine’s childhood dream was to b… Continue reading ““Equality cannot be achieved in a day”–Christine Ngbazande, Activist, South Sudan”

U.S. Senator Coons renews calls for sanctions on Sudan’s coup leaders

U.S. Senator Chris Coons and Human Rights Activist John Prendergast renewed calls to impose targeted sanctions on military leaders who carried out a military coup in Sudan last October 2021.

In November 2021, the US Congress adopted the Sudan Democracy Act, which had been filed by Senator Coons, to impose targeted sanctions on the coup leader for undermining a civilian-led democratic transition, peace, and human rights in Sudan.

However, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Molly Phee told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on February 1, they did not impose sanctions on the Sudanese military because they believe there is room for a diplomatic solution.

In a joint article released in Foreign Policy Magazine on February 28, Coons and Prendergast reiterated calls for sanctions saying the “kleptocratic military” in Sudan have throttled the nation’s economy and used it to enrich and entrench themselves.

” A modern, comprehensive set of sanctions on the coup leaders and their networks will disrupt the military’s revenue streams and their grip on power, creating an opening for the nation’s nascent democracy movement to grow,” they further stressed.

The authors of the article do not share the position of the State Department on the willingness of the Sudanese military to re-establish a democratic government because that would end their economic privileges inherited from the former regime.

In a report about the al-Burhan coup in November 2021, The Sentry Project which is co-founded by Prendergast, says that “control over the state affords the security services continued opportunities to accrue wealth while shielding themselves from accountability for past and future abuses.

In return, Phee told the senators that the military forces in Sudan are not “monolithic” and do not share the same interest.

“Some of them truly would like to effect the transition but they do not know how to do it,” she added.

Under the Sudan Democracy Act, the President (or his administration) can waive sanctions if he considers it to be in the interest of the U.S.

The article warned that the outcome of the current Sudanese crisis will impact the region far beyond the Horn of Africa and could hurt the interests of the U.S. and its allies.

“Russia held talks in Moscow with senior Sudanese military officials as Russian troops were invading Ukraine, and is suspected of involvement in the military coup in Khartoum in October,” they said.

The article is alluding to the Russian presence in the landlocked Central African Republic and reports about plans to destabilize the fragile transition in Chad and the Sahel countries.

Source: Sudan Tribune

Russia-Ukraine conflict: AU condemns reports of ill-treatment of Africans trying to flee Ukraine

ADDIS ABABA— The African Union has condemned disturbing reports of ill-treatment of African citizens in Ukraine trying to flee the country but are being refused the right to cross borders safely.

Thousands of Africans and other foreign nationals, particularly students, have been scrambling to leave Ukraine following Russia’s invasion.

But as hundreds of thousands throng to Ukraine’s various land borders, overwhelming authorities in neighbouring countries, reports have emerged that Africans are being treated differently and sometimes prevented from leaving.

Several people have shared videos and testimonies on social media, denouncing discrimination at train stations and border posts.

“Reports that Africans are singled out for unacceptable dissimilar treatment would be shockingly racist and in breach international law,” AU Chair, Senegal’s President Macky Sall, and Moussa Faki Mahamat, head of AU Commission said in a joint statement.

The statement added that all people have the right to cross international borders during conflict, and should enjoy the same rights to cross to safety from the conflict in Ukraine, notwithstanding their nationality or racial identity.

“The Chairpersons commend the efforts by African Union Member State countries and their embassies in neighbouring countries to receive and orientate African citizens and their families trying to cross the border from Ukraine to safety,” the statement concluded.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK