Amnesty International’s Global Round-Up: Latest Human Rights News
(22/11/04)
Sudan: Arms trade fuelling human rights abuse in Darfur
The helicopter pilots deliberately and indiscriminately attacked the informal internally displaced persons' settlement
knowing very well that there were innocent civilians.
African Union Commission Ceasefire Violation report on the attack in Hashaba and Gallab Villages on 26 August 2004
The only thing in abundance in Darfur is weapons. It’s easier to get a Kalashnikov than a loaf of bread.
Jan Egeland, UN Emergency Relief Coordinator, 1 July 2004
Amnesty International today revealed details of the uncontrolled arms exports that have fuelled massive human rights
abuses in Sudan, including the killing, rape, torture and displacement of more than a million civilians since the Darfur
conflict began in February 2003.
"Governments must stop turning a blind eye to the immediate and long term consequences of this totally irresponsible
trade. They must ensure that the UN Security Council imposes a mandatory and rigorously monitored arms embargo on all
parties to the conflict in Sudan including the government’s armed forces. The embargo should aim to stop all exports of
arms that are likely to be used to commit human rights violations," said Elizabeth Hodgkin, Amnesty International's
Sudan researcher.
At a news conference in Nairobi ahead of this week‘s meeting of the UN Security Council in the same city, Amnesty
International delegates presented a report identifying the main types of arms sent to Sudan and the governments that
have deliberately or unwittingly allowed them to be sent.
The report, Sudan: Arming the perpetrators of grave abuses in Darfur shows how Sudanese government forces and their
militia allies have used such arms for grave human rights violations, war crimes and crimes against humanity.
"Two Antonov aeroplanes, five helicopters and two MIGs attacked our village at around 6am. Five tanks came into town.
The attack lasted until 7pm...Eighteen men and two children from our family were killed when fleeing." Testimony given
to Amnesty International in May 2004 by Aziza Abdel Jaber Mohammed and her half sister Zahra Adam Arja on the attack of
Kornoy in North Darfur in December 2003.
Based on the testimony of hundreds of survivors gathered by Amnesty International as well as commercial documents, UN
arms trade data and other sources - the report’s main findings include:
Military aircraft and components sold to Sudan from the Russian Federation, China and Belarus, with helicopter spare
parts from Lithuania, despite repeated use of such aircraft to bomb villages and support ground attacks on civilians;
Tanks, military vehicles and artillery transferred to Sudan from Belarus, Russia and Poland, even though such equipment
has been used to help launch indiscriminate and direct attacks on civilians;
Grenades, rifles, pistols, ammunition and other small arms and light weapons exported to Sudan from many countries, but
mainly China, France, Iran and Saudi Arabia;
The recent involvement of arms brokering companies from the UK and Ireland attempting to provide large numbers of
Antonov aircraft and military vehicles from Ukraine and pistols from Brazil;
Military training and cooperation offered by Belarus, India, Malaysia and Russia.
"Some governments such as Bulgaria, Lithuania and the UK have already begun to take action to halt the arms flows to
Sudan, and the European Union has imposed an embargo, but other governments show no sign of wanting to turn off the tap
that is fuelling these atrocities", said Brian Wood, Amnesty International's research manager on the arms and security
trade
Amnesty International is appealing to the UN Security Council to impose a mandatory arms embargo to halt exports of arms
likely to be used to commit human rights violations. The embargo should be accompanied by rigorous UN monitoring both
inside and outside Sudan.
The organization is calling on all states mentioned in the report to take immediate concrete steps to suspend all
transfers of those types of arms and related logistical and security supplies that are being used for grave human rights
violations in Sudan.
To prevent the arms trade from contributing to such disasters, Amnesty International is also campaigning for all states
to establish much more rigorous controls on conventional arms, including the establishment of an Arms Trade Treaty which
would prohibit arms exports to those likely to use them to violate international human rights and humanitarian law.
For a full copy of the report, Sudan: Arming the perpetrators of grave abuses in Darfur, please see: http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/engafr541392004
news.amnesty Sudan crisis press pack
Sudan crisis pages
Sudan: Briefing for the UN Security Council meeting in Nairobi 18-19
Briefing for the UN Security Council meeting in Nairobi
Bulgaria: Give the children of Dzhurkovo a chance to realize their dreams
Dzhurkovo is a small village in the Rodopi Mountains -- a magnificent range in Southern Bulgaria.
Myanmar: Prisoners of conscience freed
Amnesty International welcomes the release from prison today of at least 20 political prisoners in Myanmar. The Burmese
authorities announced yesterday that they would release 3,937 prisoners, after finding that "improper deeds" were used
to imprison them.
Mexico: Indigenous women and military injustice
Amnesty International is launching its latest report on Mexico Indigenous women and military injustice 23 November at a
press conference in Mexico City.
Child Soldiers: Governments failing generations of children
The Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers today released the most comprehensive global survey of child soldiers to
date. It said that children are fighting in almost every major conflict, in both government and opposition forces. They
are being injured, subjected to horrific abuse and killed.
El Salvador/Guatemala: "¿Dónde están los niños?" (Where are the children?)
Imagine your country is at war; imagine you are a child.
Brazil: The world has not forgotten
Though it is eight years since the cold blooded massacre of 19 MST activists in Eldorado dos Carajás, the world
continues to be baffled as to how nobody has yet been imprisoned for these crimes.
Saudi Arabia: Women's exclusion from elections undermines progress
Saudi Arabia is gearing up for the country's first nationwide municipal elections early next year, but half of the
population will not be taking part.
Iraq: Urgent action needed to prevent war crimes
Recent reports from Falluja raise serious concerns that grave violations of the laws of war protecting both civilians
and combatants who are no longer taking part in hostilities (hors de combat) are taking place.
Uganda: Government cannot prevent the International Criminal Court from investigating crimes
Amnesty International is concerned about reported statements by government officials suggesting that crimes against
humanity and war crimes committed in Northern Uganda would be addressed in traditional reconciliation procedures.
Ukraine: Arrested for requesting election results
Amnesty International is concerned that the authorities in Ukraine continue to arrest people who exercise their right to
peacefully protest.