Sudan government closes Darfur radio
By Own Correspondent – KHARTOUM – The Sudanese government has shut the Khartoum office of Radio Dabanga, whose reports on Darfur have angered it, and arrested 13 staff from the radio station and a rights group that shares its offices, the group’s chairman said Tuesday.
The government cracked down on rights groups following a 2009 International Criminal Court arrest warrant for President Omar Hassan al-Bashir for war crimes in Darfur. Many activists fled the country fearing for their lives.
A source in Sudan’s National Security and Intelligence Services said they had no information about the arrests.
“When viewed in relation to the upcoming voter registration and referendum in the South…the arrests…show the determination of the Sudanese government to suppress civil society during this critical time, and the extent to which the freedom of expression… will not be tolerated,” the African Center for Justice and Peace Studies said in a statement.
Analysts say Sudan is using the January 9 referendum on secession as cover to end dissent in Darfur. Peace talks have made little progress, stifled by rebel divisions and ongoing military operations.
Despite a 2004 ceasefire, Khartoum has gradually reasserted control over most former rebel-held towns and areas, marginalizing the insurgents. A recent rapprochement with neighboring Chad cut off major supply lines to the guerrillas.
However, Radio Dabanga, registered in Holland, is one of few media outlets still reporting on the Darfur conflict. It is not licensed in Sudan and the government continually writes to the Dutch government asking them to close the station, Salih said.
HAND also has no legal status in Sudan.
Abdelmageed Salih, head of Human Rights and Advocacy Network for Democracy (HAND), told Reuters nine journalists and four HAND activists were detained during the weekend raids.
“They also raided and closed our office and took all the things inside like the computers and documents and Radio Dabanga equipment,” he said from the United States where he now lives.
Credits- Rueters