Press Release
July 9th, 2005
SHRO-Cairo shares with the People of Sudan and all peace-loving
peoples throughout the world the happiness of peace and the political
opportunities now available to complete all necessary steps to make
of the Naivasha Peace Agreements a real comprehensive peace for
all people of the Sudan.
The Organization looks with satisfaction to the inclusion of important
instruments of the international human rights norms in the Interim
Constitution. Specific inclusion of the Agreement Against Torture,
the Agreement Against All Forms of Discrimination Against Women,
among others, is still required.
The Organization’s position on the full establishment of
the permanent and just peace is clearly included in its document
(see SHRO-Cairo Position on Sudan Peace Deal and Constitutional
Panel: May 27th, 2005 in shro-Cairo.org). SHRO-Cairo position on
the transitional rule, which formally started today, Saturday the
9th of July, 2005, is herein reiterated as previously released on
January 9, 2005.
Toward a Successful Transitional Rule:
Free Human Rights Federation; Independent Judicial Commissions;
and Socio-Economic Development versus Presidential Dictates and
Security Spending
Sunday: January 9, 2005: The Sudan Human Rights Organization Cairo
Office congratulates the People of Sudan in the South and in the
North, the Mother Continent of Africa, and the whole International
Community with the signing of the Naivasha Peace Agreements, which
completed a historic formal ending of the North-South disasters
of war by internationally-recognized treaty guarantees aimed to
satisfy the yearning of our people for the achievement of the just
peace, the sustainable development, and the regular democracy.
In this grand occasion, SHRO-Cairo hopes that the two Peace Partners,
the National Congress Party and the Sudan People’s Liberation
Movement, would successfully accomplish the peace obligations conferred
upon them by agreement, and the promise they both pledged to promote
the Naivasha Accords to a nationally recognized consensus that should
extend, on equal terms, the just and permanent peace, power sharing,
and participation in national decision making to the other marginal
regions, especially Darfur, the Nuba Mountains, Eastern Sudan, and
the Northern Provinces as well.
The Organization reiterates the grave national, regional, and international
concerns for the worsening conditions of the displaced people of
Darfur and the escalated violence in the region; henceforth, the
possibility of “taking a swift action” in the words
of the United Nations Secretary General (January 8, 2005) to redress
the situation. At this point, SHRO-Cairo emphasizes the Sudanese
Appeal to the World on the Human Crisis of Darfur, which held the
Khartoum Government “squarely responsible for the crisis,”
and calls upon the International Community to work closely with
the People of Sudan to end the crisis via a national constitutional
conference.
The Organization emphasizes, in particular, the urgent need to
ensure non-discriminatory representation of all political parties
and civil society groups in the next Committee on the Interim Constitution.
Most importantly, the committee in question should exercise firm
consideration of all international human rights charters and conventions,
as well as the Sudanese legal heritage and social realities, to
democratize, with the peace spirit of the Naivasha agreements, the
repressive law arsenal of the government in order to ensure the
full enjoyment of human rights and public freedoms to all citizens,
irrespective of faith, political stand, social status, or any other
discriminatory criteria.
Specifically, the Committee should carefully consider clear provisions
by constitutional law for accountability of authority abuses, as
well as principled abrogation of all forms of physical punishment
in the criminal law; the provisions against women’s rights
in the family law and other legal acts; the heavy taxation policies;
the state-imposed unevenly distributed zakah [alms giving]; and
the other authoritative orientations that have been inflicted upon
the public by the State media and press in 15 consecutive years
of anti-democratic rule.
SHRO-Cairo is deeply concerned about the powers bestowed on the
President to establish judicial bodies and a national human rights
commission in consultation with the First Vice President, according
to the Implementation Modalities of the Protocol on Power sharing,
as adopted by agreement. The Organization is seriously concerned
for the possibilities of executive and legislative intrusions in
the Interim Period against independence of the Judiciary in light
of the government’s purge of judges and the other unresolved
injustices of the Sudanese criminal justice system.
The Organization hopes the next South and North Interim Governments
would strongly maintain the Independence of the Judiciary, as a
cornerstone of democratic rule. Besides the need to implement laws
based on international human rights laws and the best of Sudan laws,
Sudan courts must be strictly independent from the Executive. The
Judiciary should be fully allowable to select its own governing
councils, as well as the management of its legal and administrative
affairs by judicial jurisdiction, free of presidential dictates
or legislative interference.
Because the full enjoyment of civil freedoms and human rights is
the strongest guarantee of a lasting peace and effective rule of
law all over the country, the Organization urges the governing partners
of the National Congress Party and the Sudan People’s Liberation
Movement to act in the best interest of the Naivasha Peace Protocols
to protect the untouchable right of civil society groups to establish
their own Federation of Human Rights, as well as other human rights
assemblies, free of any government intrusion or security orientation
- let alone a presidential state-imposed commission - in accordance
with the International Agreement on Civil and Political Rights to
which Sudan is party.
SHRO-Cairo emphasizes further, the need to spend the oil wealth
and other state revenues to increase the social and economic development
of the Nation in order to fulfill the social and economic rights
of people, as guaranteed by international norms. For this purpose,
the already proposed enlarged military and security spending in
the State Budget under the renewed emergency law should be effectively
reduced.
Towards the achievement of this important end, the governing bodies
of the country, as would be established according to the Accords,
must reserve the largest share of the State financial resources
in the post-conflict period for the necessary spending on social
development (health, education, housing, and culture) programs side-by-side
with the encouragement of local and foreign investments to generate
the vital productive components of labor and employment, absorb
the returnee citizens in decent conditions into their homelands,
and reinstate the unfairly dismissed public service workers and/or
employees throughout the last 15 years of anti-democratic rule to
man, with the available working force, the Nation’s development
in the Peace Era.
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