lunedì 30 giugno 2014

SHUT UP YOUR MOUTH AND PUT DOWN YOUR PEN .

Ahmed Bilal: Questi siti web anormale e pagato impoverita Sudan e gli investitori sfollati e ostacolato il dialogo .. Il ragazzo è sano o tempo Tani li scrive!


Il suo viso tre cariche: sedizione e la guerra stir contro lo Stato e tradimento

2014/06/30 01:00

Sudan Movimento

Ahmed Bilal aggettivo ministro dell'Informazione e portavoce del governo a un workshop sui siti web dei media elettronici attivisti sudanesi di Khartoum e le pagine

Il social networking b (anormale) e (a pagamento) ed è venuto sulla sua lingua menzione Facebook e Alrakubh e libertà e Niles e Sudanaz Online, che egli considerava aveva offuscato l'immagine del Sudan in vari settori ed è quindi nelle ultime fila dei poveri e il corruttore e chiuse la porta agli investitori e ostacolato il dialogo che argomenti Ptdolhm corruzione fabbricati e irreale, come diceva lui, e ha minacciato che è ora sotto il controllo della sicurezza rigoroso disegno di legge è stato vacanza a combattere la sua e di fronte tre l'accusa di sedizione e un fremito di guerra contro lo Stato e il tradimento.



E ha finito il suo libro che tutte le persone hanno il potere e Mrsodan ragazzo o tempo di salutare Tani li scrive.

Questo è stato distribuito attivisti nelle modalità di comunicazione elettronica diversi questa notizia in riferimento alla mancanza di sistema e Mvsudaih blocco formato da loro media online, nonostante le restrizioni sulla stampa e il monopolio degli organi mediatici e l'erosione ed esporre le pratiche e la corruzione della finanziaria, amministrativa e morale e dichiarato la loro determinazione ad andare avanti nelle loro lotte e il loro rifiuto del muso e le minacce.



Questo è stato il ministro delle informazioni avviene in insulti governativi e provocazione come Lsi maschio alternativa Nafie Ali Nafie, e sapeva nei suoi tentativi di insabbiare la corruzione che è già stato scambiato vicino la sua scrittura ha mostrato il suo mandato come Consigliere del Presidente delinea il suo coinvolgimento nella fase iniziale in questo senso.



domenica 29 giugno 2014

COME TO GOD BECAUSE IF YOU COME TO HIM YOU HAVE NO HUNGER COME TO GOD BECAUSE WHEN YOU COME TO HIM WILL HAVE NO THUREST.

RAMDAN

UNITE LA VOSTRA PREGGIERA A DIO E PENTITI VOSTRI PECCATI.


Home | News    Sunday 29 June 2014

Sudanese forces kill Darfur rebel leader Karbino

separation

June 28, 2014 (KHARTOUM) – North Darfur governor Osman Youssef Kibir announced Saturday the death of the leader of Sudan Liberation Movement for Justice (SLMJ), Ali Karbino Ali Karbino, following clashes with the government forces in the state.
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Sudanese army officer points to Ali Karbino’s vehicle, captured after the killing of the rebel leader in North Darfur on 27 June 2014 (ST)
Kibir said Karbino was killed with 12 other rebels on Friday, after he launched an attack on Alquba area north of Kutum. He stressed the Sudanese army repulsed the attack and seized 31 armed vehicles.
The governor pointed, in a statement released on Saturday that several SLMJ fighters were held captive.
A Sudan Tribune reporter in El-Fasher obtained pictures showing Karbino’s body since the midday but the state governor and the Sudanese army confirmed the death only in the evening.
Sources say Arab pastoralists from the area and elements of the Border Guards militia affiliated to the Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) attacked the SLMJ fighters on Friday following the alleged looting of camels belonging to the herders.
10 nomads were killed and several others wounded.
In statements to Ashorooq TV, the commander of the Sudanese army force in Alquba, colonel Alnour Ahmed Adam, confirmed the death of Karbino and showed 30 vehicles and weapons captured from the rebels.
Adam also said they captured 15 rebels, adding that his force was monitoring the movements of the rebels and managed to attack them Friday in Alquba.
Karbino joined Minni Minnawi following the historical split of the rebel Sudan Liberation Movement (SLM) in November 2005. However following the signing of May 2006 Darfur peace agreement, he joined a rebel coalition led by the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM).
In 2011, the late rebel commander, joint the Liberation and Justice Movement (LJM) of Tijani al-Sissi. However he defected following the signing of the Doha Document for Peace in Darfur (DDPD) in July 2011.
Last March and April, his group carried out joint military attacks with SLM-Minni Minnawi in South and North Darfur.
SAF spokesperson, al-Sawarmi Khaled Saad, on Thursday announced that SAF clashed with a group from the SLM-MM in Ed al-Zalat and al-Managim areas north east of Kutum in North Darfur state.
He said they inflicted heavy casualties in lives and equipment on the rebels and seized 22 armed vehicles, 2 rocket launchers, and 3 cannons besides small arms.
Clashes between Minnawi fighters and Sudanese army and government militia in March and April 2014 displaced over 81,000 people in South and North Darfur, according to the UN agencies.
(ST)

sabato 28 giugno 2014

Leave this woman be free to leave Sudan..!!

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NEWS SATURDAY 28 JUNE 2014

Sudan’s apostasy woman released on bail, granted refuge at the US embassy

June 27, 2014 (KHARTOUM) – Sudanese authorities released a Christian woman formerly accused of apostasy on bail on Thursday evening but informed her that she is barred from leaving the country.

An image taken from an undated video provided on 5 June 2014 by Al Fajer, a Sudanese NGO, shows Meriam Ibrahim breastfeeding her newborn baby girl that she gave birth to in jail in May (Photo: AP/Al Fajer)

Meriam Ibrahim was sentenced to death last month for renouncing Islam, but was released on Monday after what the government said was “unprecedented” international pressure. An appeals court found Ibrahim not guilty on two charges of apostasy and adultery and overturned the lower tribunal’s verdict.

However, the 27-year-old was taken into custody by National Intelligence and Security Services (NISS) officers at Khartoum airport on Tuesday along with her husband and two children, for trying to use documents issued by the embassy of South Sudan to fly out of Khartoum

Mrs. Ibrahim is now reportedly facing forgery charges along with police complaints filed by her alleged siblings. It is not clear what the next legal steps would entail.

She was seen late Thursday leaving a police station in Khartoum on a vehicle with diplomatic plates holding the baby she delivered while in prison.

Ibrahim’s attorney, Mohannad Mustafa told Agence France Presse (AFP) early Friday that they went to the U.S. embassy.

"She and her husband think this is a safe place for them," he said.

Daniel Wani, Ibrahim’s husband also said his wife and two children were doing well at the US embassy on the outskirts of the Sudanese capital.

He said they had sought the embassy’s protection because of death threats against his wife.

The US state department spokesperson Marie Harf refused to confirm Ibrahim’s presence at the embassy.

"The family has been taken to a safe location. For their safety, we won’t be discussing the family’s location from here. We are in communication with the Sudanese foreign ministry to ensure that she and her family will be free to travel as quickly as possible. And again, we believe that she and her children have all the necessary travel documents to allow them to enter the United States," Harf said.

Government officials told Sudan Tribune that Ibrahim have the right to leave the country but after issuing a Sudanese passport and obtaining a US visa.

Sudan’s foreign ministry on Wednesday summoned ambassadors of the United States and South Sudan over helping Ibrahim to “illegally” depart the country.

The United States on Tuesday disputed reports that Ibrahim has been rearrested and said that Khartoum assured her that she will be allowed safe passage.

“The state department has been informed by the Sudanese government that the family was temporarily detained at the airport for several hours by the government for questioning over issues related to their travel and I think travel documents. They have not been arrested,” US state department deputy speaker Marie Harf told reporters.

“The government has assured us of their safety. The embassy has been and will remain highly involved in working with the family and the government. We are engaging directly with Sudanese officials to secure their safe and swift departure from Sudan, and of course, we’ll provide more information as we get it,” she added.

The US later acknowledged that Ibrahim had been detained over charges related to her travel documents. Harf said their diplomat in Khartoum “reaffirmed our concern that the family should be allowed to depart swiftly from Sudan; that we would work on that with them”.

Sudan’s National Intelligence and Security Services (NISS) page on Facebook said that Ibrahim was arrested by airport immigration officers after presenting temporary travel documents issued by South Sudan embassy in Khartoum and that had a US visa stamp on it.

“This was viewed by Sudanese authorities as a criminal violation and a disregard upon which the foreign ministry summoned the US and South Sudanese envoys,” the NISS said in a post this week.

“On the other hand a senior official from the Sudanese foreign ministry explained that temporary travel documents are granted by states to their citizens after ensuring that the citizen has no criminal or security problem and has the seal of the interior [ministry] in the domicile of the citizen.

“It is also valid only for one use, and the person would be travelling to his homeland only, but in the case of citizen Abrar [Ibrahim’s Muslim name] the document was issued by the embassy of the state of South Sudan though she is not southerner and heading to America and it is not her homeland,” the post added.

(ST)



giovedì 26 giugno 2014

Sudan goverment of Bashir and his criminal Muslim Brothers have to set free Mariam.

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NEWS THURSDAY 26 JUNE 2014

Khartoum summons US, South Sudan diplomats over Ibrahim travel documents

June 25, 2014 (KHARTOUM) – Sudan’s foreign ministry has summoned the ambassadors of the United States and South Sudan following an attempt by a Christian woman formerly accused of apostasy to fly out of the country using travel documents issued by the embassy of South Sudan in Khartoum.

Meriam Ibrahim was sentenced to death last month for renouncing Islam, but was released on Monday after what the government said was “unprecedented” international pressure. An appeals court found Ibrahim not guilty on two charges of apostasy and adultery and overturned the lower tribunal’s verdict.

However, the 27-year-old was taken into custody by National Intelligence and Security Services (NISS) officers at Khartoum airport on Tuesday along with her husband and two children, for trying to use documents issued by the embassy of South Sudan to fly out of Khartoum.

Senior diplomatic sources told Sudan Tribune that South Sudan’s deputy ambassador to Khartoum, Kowner Mageer, acknowledged at a meeting with the foreign ministry’s deputy head of the department of bilateral relations, Mahmoud Hassan al-Amin, that his embassy issued the travel document used by Ibrahim in order to facilitate her departure.

He underscored that the move does not reflect any escalation from Juba towards Khartoum particularly as Ibrahim’s husband is from South Sudanese origins.

According to the sources, al-Amin told Mageer that his embassy’s intervention in the incident was inconsistent with the positive developments in relationship between the two countries and the spirit of cooperation between them.

The same sources also said that al-Amin expressed to the US charge d’affaires in Khartoum, Jerry Lanier, Khartoum’s outrage and condemnation of Washington’s attempt to facilitate departure of Ibrahim, considering the move a violation to the Sudanese immigration regulations and a sign of contempt to Sudanese laws.

The foreign ministry spokesperson, Abu Bakr al-Sideeg, said in press statements that his ministry informed the US diplomat that Ibrahim enjoys the full freedom to leave the country as long as she follows the required legal procedures and holds the proper identification papers.

He said the foreign ministry conveyed to the South Sudanese deputy ambassador Khartoum’s protest against issuing a temporary travel document for Ibrahim, underscoring that Ibrahim is not a citizen of South Sudan.

Al-Sideeg further added that temporary travel documents are only issued for citizens of a specific country who are present abroad in order to return to that country, saying this criterion doesn’t apply to Ibrahim.

He said the deputy ambassador promised to convey Khartoum’s protest to Juba.

The United States on Tuesday disputed reports that Ibrahim has been rearrested and said that Khartoum assured her that she will be allowed safe passage.

“The state department has been informed by the Sudanese government that the family was temporarily detained at the airport for several hours by the government for questioning over issues related to their travel and I think travel documents. They have not been arrested,” US state department deputy speaker Marie Harf told reporters.

“The government has assured us of their safety. The embassy has been and will remain highly involved in working with the family and the government. We are engaging directly with Sudanese officials to secure their safe and swift departure from Sudan, and of course, we’ll provide more information as we get it,” she added.

The US later acknowledged that Ibrahim had been detained over charges related to her travel documents. Harf said their diplomat in Khartoum “reaffirmed our concern that the family should be allowed to depart swiftly from Sudan; that we would work on that with them”.

Sudan’s National Intelligence and Security Services (NISS) page on Facebook said that Ibrahim was arrested by airport immigration officers after presenting temporary travel documents issued by South Sudan embassy in Khartoum and that had a US visa stamp on it.

“This was viewed by Sudanese authorities as a criminal violation and a disregard upon which the foreign ministry summoned the US and South Sudanese envoys,” the NISS said in a post

“On the other hand a senior official from the Sudanese foreign ministry explained that temporary travel documents are granted by states to their citizens after ensuring that the citizen has no criminal or security problem and has the seal of the interior [ministry] in the domicile of the citizen.

“It is also valid only for one use, and the person would be travelling to his homeland only, but in the case of citizen Abrar [Ibrahim’s Muslim name] the document was issued by the embassy of the state of South Sudan though she is not southerner and heading to America and it is not her homeland,” the post added.

(ST)



martedì 24 giugno 2014

MARIAM HAD BEEN RELEASED.

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News Tuesday 24 June 2014

Sudan frees Christian woman sentenced to death for apostasy

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June 23, 2014 (KHARTOUM) – A court of appeal in Khartoum cancelled a death sentence issued last month against Meriam Ibrahim for apostasy, the official Sudan News Agency (SUNA) reported on Monday.





An image taken from an undated video provided on 5 June 2014 by Al Fajer, a Sudanese NGO, shows Meriam Ibrahim breastfeeding her newborn baby girl that she gave birth to in jail in May (Photo: AP/Al Fajer)“The Court of Appeal in Khartoum North overturned a judgment of the trial court of Haj Youssef and issued a decision to release the prisoner Abrar Hadi Mohammed Abdullah (alias Meriam Ibrahim), after the pleadings submitted by her defence,” SUNA said.



Her lawyer later said that authorities released her from jail.



Ibrahim was convicted of apostasy on May 15th and sentenced her to death by hanging after refusing to revert to Islam. The court also sentenced her to 100 lashes for adultery as her marriage to a Christian man is considered invalid under Sudan’s Islamic Shar’ia law.



Ibrahim, who was reportedly born to a largely absent Sudanese Muslim father, was raised according to her Ethiopian mother’s Christian faith.



She has been imprisoned with her 20-month-old son, Martin, since her arrest in December of last year and gave birth to a baby girl in prison on 27 May.



The head of the women’s committee at Sudan’s National Commission for Human Rights (SNCHR), Meriam Takas, told Sudan Tribune following the court’s decision that the Omdurman Women’s Prison authority received a judicial order to release Ibrahim if she was not convicted in other crimes, stressing that the order referred both the death and flogging sentences.



Ibrahim’s sentence drew widespread international condemnation, with Amnesty International calling it "abhorrent." The US state department said it was "deeply disturbed" by the sentence and called on the Sudanese government to respect religious freedoms.



UK prime minister David Cameron told The Times that he was “absolutely appalled” when he learnt of the death sentence against Ibrahim and called for lifting the "barbaric" verdict.



However, earlier this month Sudan’s foreign minister, Ali Karti, said at a joint press conference with his German counterpart Frank-Walter Steinmeier in Bonn that handling the case is governed by a legal appeal process to achieve justice to the satisfaction of all parties, stressing that the government does not interfere in judicial decisions.



Sudan’s foreign ministry said in a statement on Monday that the court’s decision came within the framework of the independence of judiciary and in fulfillment of the provisions of the law, constitution, and the bill of fundamental rights.



The statement pointed that Sudan faced unprecedented pressure campaign from governments, organisations, international figures, and the media, saying this campaign sought to push the government to interrupt the judicial process and ignore independence of the judiciary and the principle of the separation of powers.



It underscored that the government refused to intervene in the judicial process, noting they continued to remind the international community of the necessity to respect the judiciary and its rulings.



The foreign ministry considered the court decision an opportunity to remind the international community of the continued injustices against 35 million Sudanese people due to unilateral sanctions imposed on Sudan by the United States government since 1997.



It said those sanctions adversely impact importation of live-saving drugs, production inputs, and the development efforts in the country as a fundamental human right, adding that the sanctions also allows confiscation of assets belonging to Sudanese companies and individuals unlawfully which represents a gross violation for human rights and international law.



The statement called on the same governments, organisations, and individuals who expressed concern and demanded release of Ibrahim to express solidarity with the Sudanese people against the unjust unilateral sanctions.



Amnesty international in a statement on Monday described the court’s decision to release Ibrahim as “a step towards undoing the horrific injustice visited on her”.



“Today’s ruling is a small step to redressing the injustice done to Meriam,” said Sarah Jackson, deputy director at Amnesty International.



“However, she should never have been prosecuted. Meriam was sentenced to death when eight months pregnant for something which should not be a crime. Furthermore, her abhorrent treatment, including being shackled, violated international human rights law against ill-treatment.”



The rights group also said it will continue to urge the Sudanese authorities to repeal provisions that criminalise acts of apostasy and adultery so that nobody else in Sudan has to endure the same ordeal as Ibrahim.



The US state department said today it welcomes the release of Ibrahim and called on Sudan to "repeal its laws that are inconsistent with its 2005 interim constitution, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights".



"These actions would help demonstrate to the Sudanese people that their government intends to respect their fundamental freedoms and universal human rights. And as you know, this is a case we raised quite frequently with the government there and welcome today’s news," deputy spokesperson Marie Harf told reporters.



The Popular Congress Party (PCP), led by Islamist figure Hassan Al-Turabi, previously described the death penalty against Ibrahim as "a scandal, extremism, and intellectual backwardness”, saying there is no punishment for apostasy in Islam.



Kamal Omar, PCP’s political secretary said at a press conference last week that freedom of belief is an asset of Islam, noting the death sentence against Ibrahim is a violation of the basic principles of Islam.



He emphasised that PCP leader and members are against the conviction of Ibrahim, describing the judge who issued the apostasy sentence as “ignorant”.



(ST)

mercoledì 11 giugno 2014

HANDS OF NUBA KILLINGS.

Nuba

They stay in caves to protect children from the Bashir bombs

HANDS OF THE NUBA