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WAR REPORT
Sudan officers jailed up to 5 years over coup: army
by Staff Writers
Khartoum (AFP) April 7, 2013


Thousands in Darfur seek protection after fighting
Khartoum, Sudan (AFP) April 07, 2013 - Thousands of civilians in Sudan's troubled Darfur region have sought protection around peacekeeping bases after rebel attacks and "possible" air strikes, the mission said on Sunday.

The African Union-United Nations Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) confirmed rebels of the Sudan Liberation Army's Minni Minnawi faction "attacked and seized" the towns of Muhagiriya and Labado.

On Saturday the rebels said they had killed government troops and occupied the areas, about 100 kilometres (60 miles) east of the South Darfur state capital Nyala.

"At both locations, UNAMID personnel reported several possible air strikes and are taking steps to ascertain the number of casualties caused by the fighting," the peacekeepers said in a statement.

"Thousands of civilians, many with their livestock, are concentrated around UNAMID team sites in Muhagiriya and Labado for protection. The pressure from the presence of civilians, especially in Muhagiriya, is growing."

The latest unrest came as insurgents, who have been fighting for 10 years in Darfur, denounced an international donor conference which seeks support for "rebuilding" the devastated region.

"I would like to condemn very strongly" the meeting which began Sunday in the Gulf state of Qatar, said Abdel Wahid Mohammed al-Nur, who heads another faction of the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA).

"To have (a) donors' conference you have to have peace and security on the ground first," said Nur, who launched the uprising in 2003.

Speaking to AFP, he alleged that donated money "will not go to the people".

Gibril Adam Bilal, spokesman for the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), asked the international community "not to participate in giving the government of Sudan a chance to conduct crimes" against the people.

The Doha conference, which ends on Monday, was agreed under a July 2011 peace deal which Khartoum signed in the Qatari capital with an alliance of rebel splinter groups.

Major rebel movements including JEM and the SLA have refused to sign the peace pact, although a breakaway faction of JEM acceded to the deal on the eve of the donors' conference.

While the worst of the violence has long passed, rebel-government clashes continue along with inter-Arab battles, kidnappings, carjackings and other crimes.

But the $7-billion draft development strategy on the table in Doha says there will probably never be an ideal time for recovery, and delays can only make the process more difficult.

Sudan is perceived as one of the world's most corrupt countries. The development plan proposes an independent monitoring mechanism and says other safeguards will be built in, including from the UN and World Bank.

President Omar al-Bashir is wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide allegedly committed in Darfur.

His defence minister and a state governor are also wanted.

A group of Sudanese military officers were sentenced to between two and five years in prison on Sunday for their role in a coup attempt last year, the army and a defence lawyer said.

"The accused persons were convicted of attempting to undermine the constitutional and security system and threaten the country's unity and harm the armed forces by the use of force," army spokesman Sawarmi Khaled Saad said.

In addition to jail time, they were dismissed from military service but have 15 days to appeal the verdicts, he added, quoted by state news agency SUNA. He said 11 army men were convicted while one was acquitted.

A lawyer for the accused, Hashiem al-Jali, confirmed the sentences for a coup attempt last year but told AFP that only nine soldiers were convicted after the trial that lasted about three weeks.

Magdi El Gizouli, a fellow at the Rift Valley Institute, said it was "a political statement not a court ruling," while other analysts said the case revealed turmoil within the regime of President Omar al-Bashir, who himself seized power in a coup 24 years ago.

Jali said the heaviest sentence of five years was handed down to Brigadier Mohammed Ibrahim, who played a role in the 1989 coup.

He called it a "heavy punishment" for all the soldiers and said the defence team would look at ways of appealing.

But a regional political expert told AFP the penalty was in fact relatively light as they could have faced the firing squad.

"It means that President Bashir would like to calm the situation," said the expert, asking for anonymity.

"The regime is scared about (its) opponents."

When the trial began, he said that the case against the officers was "not very clear" and the evidence scant, with officials releasing only vague details about the plot.

"The problem is that the people who did this ... were hardcore supporters of Bashir, once upon a time," Gizouli said.

Most of the detainees are close to a vocal group of former volunteer mujahedeen fighters -- veterans of the 1983-2005 civil war -- and an elite group within them called Al-Saihun or "tourists for the sake of God".

The soldiers were arrested in November along with the country's former intelligence chief in a plot which analysts said was linked to hardcore Islamist officers.

Along with a youth movement within the ruling National Congress Party, the war veterans have called for new national leadership and a return to Islamic values because they said the government is tainted by corruption and other problems.

The accused plotters were detained without any shots being fired.

Authorities also arrested Salah Gosh, who served as national intelligence boss until 2009. As he is not a military officer, his case was to be heard later.

Sudan has experienced at least seven coups or attempted coups in its 57-year history.

Some tension has eased in the country since early March when Sudan and South Sudan finally settled on detailed timetables to implement crucial economic and security pacts, after months of intermittent border clashes.

Bashir announced last week that all political prisoners would be freed as the government seeks a broad political dialogue, "including (with) those who are armed".

Authorities then released seven political prisoners, though the opposition says hundreds more are still being held.

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