Archive for November 19, 2011

Pagan Amum: South Sudan offers billions of dollars to settle Sudan disputes

Posted: November 19, 2011 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Economy

By Hereward Holland

JUBA | Fri Nov 18, 2011 1:26pm EST

JUBA Nov 18 (Reuters) – South Sudan is offering Khartoum “billions of dollars” if it agrees to settle all bilateral disputes and gives up claims to the contested oil-producing Abyei region, a top official said on Friday.

South Sudan became the world’s newest country after voting for independence in a January vote, taking with it three-quarters of the former united country’s roughly 500,000 barrels per day of oil production.

The split left a long list of unresolved issues; including Abyei, how to share oil revenues and other assets, and how to end border violence. Sudan is facing a severe economic crisis and has asked fellow Arab countries for aid to compensate for the loss of oil revenues.

African Union (AU) mediators hope both countries will meet in Ethiopia next week after talks collapsed in the summer over the question of how much the landlocked South should pay for the use of Sudan’s export facilities.

Apart from how to divide oil revenues, Abyei is one of the biggest disputes between north and south. Sudan’s armed forces seized the border region in May and says Abyei will stay with the north unless a much-delayed referendum agreed under the 2005 peace agreement decides otherwise.

South Sudan’s chief negotiator Pagan Amum said his government has presented Sudan and the African Union with a “package proposal” to resolve issues around Abyei, oil, financial assistance, borders and security.

“We presented a very reasonable and logical proposal in which we are prepared to assist the north and give them billions of dollars,” Amum told reporters.

He said his country would “be ready to assist the Republic of Sudan to manage its economic crisis resulting from the separation of South Sudan,” if Khartoum respects the territorial integrity of the South. He did not elaborate.

Decades of civil war have left the South severely underdeveloped but the flow of oil dollars means it has a higher per capita income than many of its African neighbours. It contracted the sale of oil worth $2.14 billion from July to October.

Sudan’s foreign ministry spokesman El-Obeid Morawah declined to comment on Amum’s proposal other than to say such moves should be made during talks and not through the media.

He said the government would meet AU mediator Thabo Mbeki in Khartoum on Saturday and then decide whether talks in Ethiopia would make sense now or if Sudan needed more time.

“We have not yet agreed on a specific date for talks (in Ethiopia),” he said.

Sudan’s foreign ministry called on Juba to reconsider a presidential decree transferring shares in oil consortia owned by Sudapet, Sudan’s state-owned oil company, to South Sudan’s oil-firm Nilepet.

But Amum said Nilepet would take over Sudapet’s shares.

“Sudapet  and its interests and assets will pass to Nilepet as the government company that inherits and takes over the properties of the government of Sudan as part of the separation and disengagement and as an exercise of sovereignty,” he said. (Reporting by Hereward Holland; additional reporting by Ulf Laessing; Editing by Matthew Jones)

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/11/18/sudan-south-idUSL5E7MI40820111118

Juba University Lecturers on Strike

Posted: November 19, 2011 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Education

Lecturers at the University of Juba have downed their tools over salary arrears.

18 November 2011
Juba University Lecturers on Strike
The administration block at the University of Juba. [©Gurtong]

By Waakhe Simon Wudu

JUBA, 18 November 2011 [Gurtong] – The University of Juba Academic Staff Association declared the strike on Thursday, saying their patience had run out after staying for several months without pay.

A letter addressed to all the campus staff referenced “Open Strike”, expressed that; “Despite the fact that payments of our salaries for August and September 2011 was delayed for almost three months, you have been diligently carrying out your duties and responsibilities. Nonetheless, this attitude was not appreciated by the authorities in charge of the university. Instead of receiving payment for the arrears of July and salary of October by the end of October, in accordance with the directives of the Ministry of Finance, we have not received any payment to date”, states the letter.

Read more on Gurtong.org here

http://www.gurtong.net/ECM/Editorial/tabid/124/ID/6046/Default.aspx


ZINTAN, Libya (Reuters) – Muammar Gaddafi’s son Saif al-Islam has been captured in the Libyan desert by fighters who vow to hold him in the mountain town of Zintan until there is a government to hand him over to.

  • Saif Al-Islam, son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, gestures as he talks to reporters

Crowds across the country fired guns and hooted car horns to celebrate the seizure of the British-educated 39-year-old, who a year ago appeared a possible successor to rule the oil-producing desert state.

Hundreds of people crowded round the plane carrying him after it landed in Zintan, trapping him inside and raising fears he might suffer a similar fate to his father, who was beaten and shot after his capture a month ago Sunday.

Saif al-Islam was later taken away uninjured and Prime Minister-designate Abdurrahim El-Keib promised that Gaddafi’s son would face a fair trial.

“We assure Libyans and the world that Saif al-Islam will receive a fair trial … under fair legal processes which our own people had been deprived of for the last 40 years,” Keib told a press conference in Zintan.

Saif al-Islam, who had vowed to die fighting but was taken without a struggle, was arrested overnight, officials said.

“At the beginning he was very scared. He thought we would kill him,” Ahmed Ammar, one of his captors, told Reuters.

Saif al-Islam told a Reuters reporter on his plane he had wounded his hand during a NATO air strike a month ago. Asked if he was feeling all right, Gaddafi said simply: “Yes.”

The Zintan fighters, who make up one of Libya’s most powerful militia factions that hold effective power in a country still without a government, said they planned to keep him in Zintan until they could hand him over to the authorities.

Keib is scheduled to form a government by Tuesday, and the fate of Saif al-Islam will be an early test of its authority.

The incoming premier said Gaddafi’s son remained in the hands of “the revolutionaries in Zintan” and heaped praise on their fighters, acknowledging the authority the tribal militia continued to hold over its territory.

“They (the Zintan fighters) will keep him in peace, take care of him. He will be treated as any human being with respect. He will get his day in court,” El-Keib said. He said the detention was the “crowning” of the uprising that overthrew Muammar Gaddafi.

Libyans want to try Saif al-Islam at home and believe he knows the location of billions of dollars of public money amassed by the Gaddafi family. His captors said they found only a few thousand dollars and a cache of rifles in seized vehicles.

The European Union urged Libyan authorities to ensure Saif al-Islam was brought to justice in cooperation with the International Criminal Court, which accuses him of crimes against humanity.

Ammar told Reuters that his unit of 15 men in three vehicles, acting on a tip-off about a possible high-profile fugitive, had intercepted two cars carrying Gaddafi and four others in the desert about 70 km (40 miles) from the small oil town of Obari at about 1:30 a.m. (2330 GMT on Friday).

“SERVANT OF PEACE”

After the fighters fired in the air and ground to halt the cars, they asked the identity of the passengers. The man in charge replied that he was “Abdelsalam” – a name that means ‘servant of peace’. But the fighters quickly recognized Saif al-Islam and seized him without a fight.

The fighters said they put him at ease and he accepted he would be taken to Zintan, a town in the western mountains south of Tripoli that was a stronghold of anti-Gaddafi rebels.

Saif al-Islam appeared relatively at ease and was not handcuffed as he sat on a bench at the rear of the plane.

Wearing traditional robes with a scarf pulled over his face, Saif al-Islam had a heavy black beard and wore his rimless spectacles.

His thumb, index and another finger were heavily bandaged from the wounds sustained in the NATO strike.

Muammar Gaddafi’s beating, abuse and ultimate death in the custody of former rebel fighters was an embarrassment to the previous transitional government. Officials in Tripoli said they were determined to handle his son’s case with more order.

“The capture presents a challenge to the NTC. If they want to try Saif then what can they do to make Zintan hand him over?” said Henry Smith, an analyst with the Control Risks group, referring to the National Transitional Council which won international recognition as Libya’s new interim government.

“They may leave his fate to Zintanis but then where does that leave Libya’s embryonic judicial system? This is an acid test of the NTC’s authority.”

Memories are still fresh of the days Gaddafi’s father’s corpse spent rotting and on public view in the city of Misrata, another rebel stronghold, as its militia leaders trumpeted their capture of the fallen leader as part of their campaign to extract power and patronage from the new interim authority.

A fighter from an anti-Gaddafi unit, the Khaled bin al-Waleed Brigade, which said it seized Saif al-Islam in the wilderness near the oil town of Obari, told Free Libya television: “We got a tip he had been staying there for the last month.

“They couldn’t get away because we had a good plan,” Wisam Dughaly added, saying Saif al-Islam had been using a 4×4 vehicle: “He was not hurt and will be taken safely for trial so Libyans will be able to prosecute him and get back their money.

“We will take him to Zintan for safekeeping to keep him alive until a government is formed and then we will hand him over as soon as possible,” Dughaly said.

He added that Saif al-Islam, once seen as a reformer who engineered his father’s rapprochement with the West, appeared to have been hiding out in the desert since fleeing the tribal bastion of Bani Walid, near Tripoli, in October.

“I’m really surprised that Saif al-Islam has not met the same fate as his father and his brother,” Fawaz Gerges, professor of international relations at the London School of Economics, told BBC TV.

“The best thing that the new leadership can do is to hand Saif al-Islam to the International Criminal Court because I don’t believe it really has the resources and the means to try Saif al-Islam and give him a fair trial.”

“ALMOST ZERO”

Asked of the chances of that, he said “Almost zero.” He said he expected him to get the death penalty and be executed in Libya. “This is unfortunate for the new Libya,” he said.

The ICC only acts if a country is unable or unwilling to investigate or prosecute a suspect, for instance when its legal system has collapsed.

Justice Minister Alagy said he was in touch with the ICC over how to deal with Gaddafi.

“We Libyans do not oppose the presence of international monitors to monitor the trial procedures that will take place for the symbols of the former regime,” he told Al Jazeera.

Other Libyan officials have said a trial in Libya should first address killings, repression and theft of public funds over the four decades of the elder Gaddafi’s personal rule.

There was no word of the other official wanted by the ICC, former intelligence chief Abdullah al-Senussi.

The ICC said Saturday it had received confirmation of the arrest of Saif al-Islam from Libya’s Ministry of Justice.

“We trust that the Libyan authorities and the International Criminal Court will ensure that justice runs its course, so that the new Libya can be built on the rule of law and respect for human rights,” NATO spokeswoman Oana Lungescu said.

In June, the ICC issued arrest warrants for Muammar Gaddafi, Saif al-Islam and al-Senussi on charges of crimes against humanity after the U.N. Security Council referred the Libyan crisis to the court in February.

The ICC said last month that Saif al-Islam was in contact via intermediaries about possibly surrendering, but that it also had information that mercenaries were trying to take him to a friendly African nation where he could evade arrest.

France and Britain, which both pushed for a military intervention in Libya in March, welcomed the news of the detention.

“It is a great achievement for the Libyan people and must now become a victory for international justice too,” said British Prime Minister David Cameron.

(Additional reporting by Ismail Zeitouny and Mahmoud al-Farjani in Zintan, Ali Shuaib, Alastair Macdonald, Omar Younis, Hisham El-Dani in Tripoli, Francois Murphy in Benghazi, Erika Solomon in Beirut, Peter Apps and Michael Holden in London, Nicholas Vinocur in Paris and Gilbert Kreijger in Amsterdam; Writing by Alastair Macdonald and Peter Millership; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

http://news.yahoo.com/gaddafi-son-saif-seized-libya-officials-114541021.html

Gaddafi’s spy chief Abdullah al-Sanussi ‘captured’

Abdullah al-Sanussi (22 June 2011) Abdullah al-Sanussi was Gaddafi’s brother-in-law and close aide

Col Gaddafi’s fugitive spy chief Abdullah al-Sanussi has been captured, Libya’s interim government says.

He was seized by fighters in the south of the country, officials say.

Mr Sanussi, who has not yet been seen in custody, was one of the last senior figures from the Gaddafi regime still on the run.

Gaddafi’s son Saif al-Islam was seized on Saturday. Both he and Mr Sanussi are wanted for alleged war crimes by the International Criminal Court (ICC).

Mr Sanussi, a brother-in-law of Col Gaddafi, is said to have been arrested at his sister’s home in the southern town of Sabha on Sunday.

He was regarded as the late leader’s right-hand man – and one of the regime’s most-feared figures.

Mr Sanussi, 62, is being sought by the ICC in connection with the repression of protests against Gaddafi’s rule earlier this year.

He has also been accused of human rights abuses, including his implication in the massacre in 1996 of more than 1,000 inmates at the Abu Salim prison in Tripoli.

‘Fair trial’Mr Sanussi was a close adviser to Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, according to leaked US embassy documents.

Saif al-Islam is due to be interrogated by prosecutors at a secret location in the western city of Zintan, where he was taken by militiamen who seized him in Libya’s southern desert.

Mohammed Saiyeh, NTC: “We’re catching the black box of Gaddafi – al-Sanussi is full of lots of valuable information”

The commander of the Zintan militia told the BBC their prisoner was being well-treated at a private house, and had seen a doctor on Sunday about a wound to his hand.

The commander also gave details of the capture on Saturday. He said Saif al-Islam had asked to be shot dead but the militias refused.

The interim government has indicated it wants to try him in Libya, and interim Prime Minister Abdurrahim al-Keib said he would receive a fair trial.

Concerns have been raised about the possibility of ill-treatment, after what happened to Gaddafi following his capture in Sirte last month.

ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo is to visit Libya to discuss the handling of the case of Saif al-Islam. He is expected to request his extradition to the Hague.

Mr Ocampo has said that while national governments had the first right to try their own citizens for war crimes, his primary goal was to ensure a fair trial.

BBC Middle East correspondent Jon Leyne says allowing Saif al-Islam to be taken out of Libya would be hugely unpopular there and, quite possibly, his Zintan captors would refuse to hand him over.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-15812736


Why This Is Important

The Sudanese regime headed by Omar al-Bashir is responsible for many crimes against humanity, as evidenced by his indictment in the International Criminal Court. In addition to atrocities committed during the long civil war with the south, the ongoing conflict in the western region of Darfur has produced the death and displacement of hundreds of thousands of Sudanese people, and the destruction of many important ancient archaeological sites in the country. The repeated conflicts initiated by the government against its own people are born from and demonstrate the al-Bashir regime’s refusal to accept, acknowledge, and respect the diverse peoples, cultures, and religions of Sudan.
Currently, fighting has erupted in South Kordofan and, more recently, in the Blue Nile state. Again, thousands of people have been displaced and killed. In keeping with his decision to dispel all humanitarian and aid workers and media in Darfur in 2009, the al-Bashir regime has restricted the access of humanitarian groups and journalists to these conflict areas, particularly South Kordofan.

Allow aid workers immediate access to new conflict areas in Sudan

Greetings,

I just signed the following petition addressed to: President Obama, Hillary Clinton, Ban Ki Moon.

—————-
Allow aid workers immediate access to new conflict areas in Sudan

The Sudanese regime headed by Omar al-Bashir is responsible for many crimes against humanity, as evidenced by his indictment in the International Criminal Court. In addition to atrocities committed during the long civil war with the south, the ongoing conflict in the western region of Darfur has produced the death and displacement of hundreds of thousands of Sudanese people, and the destruction of many important ancient archaeological sites in the country. The repeated conflicts initiated by the government against its own people are born from and demonstrate the al-Bashir regime’s refusal to accept, acknowledge, and respect the diverse peoples, cultures, and religions of Sudan.
Currently, fighting has erupted in South Kordofan and, more recently, in the Blue Nile state. Again, thousands of people have been displaced and killed. In keeping with his decision to dispel all humanitarian and aid workers and media in Darfur in 2009, the al-Bashir regime has restricted the access of humanitarian groups and journalists to these conflict areas, particularly South Kordofan.

We, the undersigned strongly believe that the U.S. government and the UN must bring pressure to bear upon the military dictatorship in Sudan to permit humanitarian aid workers immediate and unrestricted access to ongoing conflict areas in Nuba Mountains, South Kordofan, and Blue Nile State in Sudan. Humanitarian aid is urgently needed to provide food, water, medicine, and shelter to civilians affected by this conflict. The Sudanese people have a right to access these basic human needs, and the right to live in dignity.
—————-

Sincerely,

[Your name]

Created By Elshafei Dafalla, Woodbridge, MA

South Sudan releases detained journalists

Posted: November 19, 2011 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Junub Sudan

South Sudan releases detained journalists
Africa Review
By MACHEL AMOS in JubaPosted Saturday, November 19 2011 at 12:37 Two journalists who were arrested over the publication of a story critical of the wedding of South Sudan President Salva Kiir’s daughter to an Ethiopian man have been released without

South Sudan releases two journalists without charges
Sudan Tribune
November 18, 2011 (JUBA) – South Sudanese security services released today two journalists arrested since 18 days ago without charges, one of the two detainees Peter Ngor Arol Garang told Sudan Tribune just after his release.

South Sudan Releases Journalists Held for Criticizing President
Voice of America
November 19, 2011 South Sudan Releases Journalists Held for Criticizing President Michael Onyiego | Juba, South Sudan Two journalists, detained for two weeks by government security in the new nation of South Sudan, have been released.

Frost Over the World – Saving South Sudan
Al Jazeera
Sam Childers, describes how he turned his life around-from his past as a former convict to his current missionary vocation running a charity and orphanage in South Sudan.

Museveni warns Bashir over South Sudan
Daily Nation
Photo/FILE President Salva Kiir of South Sudan (right) with Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni during the inauguration ceremony at Dr Garang’s mausoleum in Juba on May 22, 2010. By EMMANUEL GYEZAHO President Museveni has called on Sudanese President

UN Urges South Sudan Military to Release Child Soldiers
Voice of America (blog)
The United Nations is calling for the military of South Sudan to release all remaining child soldiers who are serving within its ranks. The UN Mission in the Republic of South Sudan (UNMISS) said Thursday that 53 child soldiers between the ages of 13

South Sudan appeals to Mugabe to press upon Omar al-Bashir
Bulawayo24
by Staff reporter A special envoy of South Sudan President Salva Kiir, Mr. James Wani Igga who is also a speaker of parliament met Zimbabwe’s Acting President John Landa Nkomo. The South Sudan envoy delivered a special message to Nkomo, appealing to

Zimbabwe: South Sudan Hails Relations With Govt
AllAfrica.com
SOUTH Sudan has hailed its relations with Zimbabwe and called for further cooperation in areas of education and capacity building. The Speaker of Parliament for Africa’s newest nation, Mr James Wani Igga, told reporters after meeting Acting President

South Sudan to offer north “package” for oil transit
Sudan Tribune
By Julius N. Uma November 18, 2011 (JUBA) – South Sudan has proposed to offer north Sudan a “package” to resolve the deadlock in the ongoing post-independence negotiations on southern oil transportation, a senior member of the ruling party said Friday.