11/11/2022
UN Experts Urged to Intervene on Behalf of Eight Protestors Being Prosecuted in Case Marred
by Torture and Fair Trial Violations
(11 November 2022)
REDRESS, the Missing Initiative, and the Sudanese Defenders Centre for Legal Aid have appealed to United
Nations experts to intervene on behalf of eight Sudanese activists who were arrested in relation to the
killing of a member of Sudan’s military forces. They have all been subjected to torture and are being
prosecuted for crimes which carry the death penalty in an ongoing trial marked by due process violations.
Since last year’s military coup, Sudanese authorities have carried out a campaign of mass arrests and
detentions, targeting activists, protestors, journalists, and political figures. The UN estimated in June 2022
that nearly 1,300 people were arrested between October 2021 and April 2022 alone. Some of those
arrested have been charged with crimes and rapidly prosecuted, while other detainees have been held
without charge for days or even months.
Consistent with this pattern, the eight individuals are active members of Khartoum-area neighbourhood
resistance committees. All were arrested without warrant by unidentified joint forces between March and
August 2022 and denied access to legal counsel for up to three months after their arrest.
The submission highlights the systematic use of torture and ill-treatment against the detainees and other
serious fair trial violations, including:
• The detainees’ lack of access to representation during their early detention and interrogation;
• The withholding of defence counsel’s access to investigation records or other evidence until the
commencement of the trial;
• And a failure to conduct medical examinations regarding the detainees’ allegations of torture,
despite judicial authorisation.
Since being charged with several crimes on 20 September 2022, the detainees have been held in Kober
Prison under harsh conditions, where they continue to be at risk of torture and other ill-treatment. Several
detainees with pre-existing conditions resulting from injuries sustained during prior protests have been
denied medical treatment and face an enhanced risk of further harm.
The organisations urge the UN Special Rapporteur on torture, Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, and
other UN experts to call on Sudanese authorities to:
• Ensure that immediate steps are taken to prevent the further torture or ill-treatment of the eight
detainees;
• Guarantee an effective and impartial investigation into the circumstances of their arrest and
detention without delay;
• Ensure that any evidence obtained by torture or other ill-treatment is excluded from criminal
proceedings in accordance with Sudan’s international legal obligations; and
• Guarantee that any ongoing or future proceedings are conducted in accordance with fair trial and
due process protections.
For more information, please contact: Eva Sanchis, Head of Communications at REDRESS, at
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