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Sudan conflict creates another major migration crisis

Emad Mekay, IBA Middle East Correspondent, CairoFriday 26 May 2023

Violence in Sudan between the national army and a powerful paramilitary group is displacing hundreds of thousands of people, forcing them to seek protection in neighbouring countries such as Egypt. An increasingly dire situation looks likely to escalate into a major migration crisis, requiring an emergency response from the international community.

The current fighting, which erupted between two rival generals in mid-April has killed nearly 1000 people including at least 200 children. The number of refugees has gone up to one million and the effort to support them with water, sanitation, food, shelter and cash assistance will require a total of $3bn, according to UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) Filippo Grandi.

Desperate desert detours

Refugees are facing serious threats in the country, particularly in the capital Khartoum where there are heavy street battles and the paramilitary group has barricaded in residential areas. At the Egyptian–Sudanese border crossing of Arqeen, which most of the arrivals come through, many spoke of narrow escapes as the country’s security disintegrated overnight and gave way to lawlessness. Refugee families told Egyptian TV that their homes were ransacked, women forced to give up their jewellery and many kidnapped or killed if they ventured out.

On 16 May, Sudan Doctors Union reported cases of rape as victims sought medical help in and around Khartoum. The medical group has recorded the number of deaths at a minimum of 863 and injuries among civilians at 3531 but said the numbers are probably much higher due to the lack of movement. ‘There are many other deaths and injuries that we couldn’t record in this survey,’ the group says. ‘We are unable to reach hospitals due to the security situation and the difficulty of movement in the country.’ The organisation says that some 20 hospitals have been raided and were forcefully evacuated.

Raouf Mazou, UNHCR Assistant High Commissioner for Operations, describes the humanitarian situation in and around Sudan as tragic. ‘There are food, water and fuel shortages, limited access to transport, communications and electricity, and skyrocketing prices of basic items,’ he says.

The trip to cross the southern border of Egypt has taken some refugees 10 days, mostly with little food and water. Many spoke of spiralling land transport costs because desperate refugees were out-bidding each other to try to flee the violence. Bus rates to the borders with Egypt have gone from a typical $40 to $300 per person within three days. One Sudanese family spent seven days in a rickety microbus on a trip from Khartoum to Dongola, where they had to take unprepared trucks to the Arqeen crossing on the Egyptian border.

An Egyptian woman identified as Om Ali and her son, who happened to be in Khartoum when the fighting unexpectedly broke out, fled with no food or money. She travelled with a Sudanese family whose 18-month-old baby couldn’t be fed as they couldn’t find milk. They were rescued by Egyptian truck drivers who were fleeing the clashes. Bridges have been blocked and many say that their trip can take up to 10 days by land via long and little-known desert detours to avoid attacks by robbers and militias. The Arqeen crossing, about 1000km north of Khartoum, became the point of choice because it had relatively better facilities as it has an office for the Egyptian immigration that gave entry visas.

The clashes began when two military generals fell out over power-sharing arrangements. On one side, Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo (Hemedti), the head of the Wagner-linked guerrilla forces, Rapid Support Forces (RSF); on the other side, the military headed by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, who is now the de facto head of state. Both Burhan and Hemedti joined forces in 2021 to launch a coup against a civilian transitional government in Khartoum brought about by civilian public protests against the corruption and mismanagement of former President Omar Bashir.

Emergency evacuation visas

Legal experts cite several international accords to allow refugees in similar situations to cross borders into other countries, sometimes without permission. International law expert Cristiano d’Orsi tells Global Insight that in Sudan’s circumstances, international law makes it imperative for neighbouring countries – Egypt, South Sudan, Central African Republic, Ethiopia and Chad – to offer visas and safe refuge for those fleeing before they can eventually go to a final destination host country, for example in Europe.

‘Neighbouring states must advocate for the principle of non-refoulement (non-rejection) in all circumstances,’ says d’Orsi, who specialises in migration law in Africa and teaches at the University of Johannesburg. ‘This implies that people fleeing the unrest in Sudan and seeking safe haven in the neighbouring countries must not be returned to Sudan or, in the case of people who were refugees in Sudan, they should not be returned to their country of origin without a prior individual assessment of the risks upon return.’

Many Sudanese refugees say they may eventually head to European Union countries. ‘In terms of Sudanese who arrive in Europe as refugees, claims must be processed. This is an obligation that much of the European Union has signed up to under international law,’ said Aleksandar Stojicevic of the IBA Immigration and Nationality Law Committee. ‘This would be an ideal situation for the use of emergency evacuation visas,’ he continues.

Greg Siskind, Vice-Chair of the IBA Immigration and Nationality Law Committee, says that how countries deal with refugees is often based on the UN. ‘I can tell you that a lot is based on UN treaty obligations and if a country has not signed the UN Convention on Refugees and does not have an established refugee programme, a lot of what happens is based on the realities on the ground and the goodwill of the neighbour country. Many times, a country that is receiving a lot of refugees over their borders will work with non-government organisations and establish camps for those fleeing,’ he says.

Dire straits

In Cairo, Egyptian officials say some 110,000 Sudanese had crossed the land border by mid-May. This makes Egypt the largest recipient of Sudanese refugees, many of whom say they do not plan to return to their poverty-stricken homeland as they expect the security situation to get even worse. Egypt now receives around 5,000 people a day at its southern borders. ‘Most new arrivals are women and children, a number of whom are unaccompanied or separated,’ said the UNHCR in a press release.

The epicentre of the fighting was initially Khartoum but fighting has quickly spread to other parts including Darfur, making it more likely that the number of refugees will increase. Aid agencies say there is a humanitarian crisis in the making in the area particularly in the desert stretch between the Egyptian and Sudanese borders, considered a no man’s land and where armed robbers attack buses going north.

Cairo says it will not turn back the refugees and considers them ‘guests’, a label that has, since the outbreak of the Arab Spring, allowed thousands of other refugees from Syria, Iraq and elsewhere to live in Egyptian cities and seek jobs rather than keeping them locked in refugee camps. Egyptian officials say they will offer services such as increasing enrollment quotas at local universities and schools to allow Sudanese students to continue their studies. Cairo has also run extra trains and buses from Aswan, the nearest major city to the southern borders, to take the newcomers into the country. Humanitarian organisations have worked with the Egyptian Red Crescent offering sanitary kits, wheelchairs and food. Many local residents in Aswan took to social media to announce their homes open as temporary shelter.

UNHCR, however, says that, while the Egyptian authorities reaffirm that the border with Sudan will remain open, it has major concerns about delays at the border. It is not clear how the Egyptian economy can continue as ‘a host country of first asylum’ or receive larger numbers as the country itself suffers from runaway inflation and economic stagnation on top of deep political divisions. Pro-military ultranationalists blame refugees for the strain on public services and the economic meltdown and want to see a rollback of the nation’s humanitarian obligation. They often call for the expulsion of current refugees and for turning away fresh arrivals. In May, the country’s military rulers arrested a refugee from Chad allegedly for organising a small protest outside the UNHCR office in Cairo against conditions of African refugees in Egypt and the slow processing of their papers.

The conflict between the two factions in Sudan has so far displayed all the ingredients of a bitter and prolonged fight. Despite the rampant poverty plaguing the Sudanese population, both warring leaders have amassed enough wealth to keep funding their fight for years to come. Hemedti has turned himself into the country’s richest man after seizing control of Sudan’s lucrative mineral resources including gold mines and developed ties with traders in Russia and the UAE through massive smuggling operations. Some two million Sudanese work in the country’s mining industry, including children, ensuring a steady supply of soldiers when needed. Burhan controls all of the non-oil sectors and has warm ties with Cairo and Saudi Arabia.

If the conflict is prolonged further, as expected, regional actors like Egypt and South Sudan will not be the only ones who come under border pressure from waves of refugees but the consequences could engulf the entire Horn of Africa and even reach the shores of the more affluent Europe. ‘As for fleeing to Europe by boat, I would expect to see this and I would expect it to go in a similar way to past crises with reactions differing from country to country and tragedies to regularly make the news,’ says Siskind.

Sudan’s exports have stalled because of the war; meaning there will be less liquidity to import necessities such as fuel, wheat or food, further driving the exodus. Aid agencies expect the soon-to-come rainy season to limit access and delivery of whatever aid finally arrives, prompting the escape of even more Sudanese for neighbouring safe havens and Europe.

‘Today, 25 million people – more than half the population of Sudan – need humanitarian aid and protection,’ said Ramesh Rajasingham, head of the Geneva bureau of UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. ‘That is the highest number we have ever seen in the country.’ Rajasingham warned that there are strong indications the humanitarian situation could soon evolve into a regional emergency. At a time when the world is already suffering from instability and conflicts in different parts of the globe, the ripples of further forced migration and chaos in Sudan are likely to be felt worldwide before too long.

Image credit: andy/AdobeStock.com


The High Level Panel of Legal Experts on Media Freedom launches blasphemy report

On World Press Freedom Day, 3 May 2023, the High Level Panel of Legal Experts on Media Freedom participated in a number of activities in New York to highlight the grave challenges facing the press globally and to showcase its recommendations to the Media Freedom Coalition.

The High Level Panel of Legal Experts on Media Freedom is the independent advisory body of the Media Freedom Coalition. The International Bar Association’s Human Rights Institute (IBAHRI) serves as Secretariat to the High Level Panel, providing it with operational, technical and legal assistance.

One such activity was the launch of the first of the High Level Panel’s International Standards reports, On Religious Freedom and Discontent: International Standards and Blasphemy Laws. The report was authored by Karuna Nundy, and its recommendations endorsed by the entire High Level Panel. The report is the result of close collaboration with leading academic institutions from around the world. It examines national laws regulating speech that is characterised as ‘blasphemous’ and assesses the compatibility of those laws with media freedom. Topics covered include overlap between hate speech and blasphemy, damaging implementation of blasphemy laws, due process and fair trial concerns and recent changes to blasphemy laws.

To launch the report, the High Level Panel took part in an event, ‘Media Freedom in the Face of Blasphemy Laws’, which was co-organised with Columbia University Global Freedom of Expression and co-sponsored by PEN America. The recording of the launch is available here.

The High Level Panel took part in other events and activities around World Press Freedom Day, including a panel discussion on ‘Dismantling the Independent Media through Systemic Restrictions’, which was co-organised with Covington & Burling, and Columbia University Global Freedom of Expression. The panel discussed the nature of the challenge to an independent media and some of the urgent measures that need to be taken in response.

Read the report here

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IBAHRI condemns armed confrontation in Sudan

The International Bar Association’s Human Rights Institute (IBAHRI) has released a statement condemning the armed confrontation between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) across Sudan. The IBAHRI is particularly concerned about the resulting harm being caused to civilians, with the use of heavy artillery and air strikes in highly populated areas. The violence has thus far left almost 300 people dead and 2,600 injured.

The IBAHRI asks General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, Commander-in-Chief of the Sudanese Armed Forces and self-appointed Ruling Council leader, and Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, RSF and de facto deputy leader of the Ruling Council, to end all hostilities immediately.

IBAHRI Co-Chair and Immediate Past Secretary-General of the Swedish Bar Association, Anne Ramberg Dr Jur hc, commented: ‘The IBAHRI calls on General al-Burhan and General Dagalo to end hostilities immediately in Khartoum and the rest of the country. This armed confrontation is a reckless move for power that severely undermines commitment to ensuring a civilian-led transition to democracy. The IBAHRI calls for the belligerent parties to ensure the protection of civilians and humanitarian workers, cease all hostilities and return to the democratic transition towards a civilian-led government.’

Read the press release here


IBAHRI continues torture prevention work in Kyrgyzstan

The International Bar Association’s Human Rights Institute (IBAHRI) continued its in-country work in Kyrgyzstan in May. The IBAHRI took part in a round of shadow visits to places of deprivation of liberty in the country in order to provide technical assistance to the Kyrgyz National Preventive Mechanism. This work falls under the project ‘Strengthening the capacity of the National Preventive Mechanism (NPM) and lawyers in Kyrgyzstan – Phase 2: Practical tools and strategies towards a systemic and systematic approach to torture prevention’. The Kyrgyz NPM is a system for preventing torture and ill-treatment in places of detention.

The IBAHRI focuses on torture prevention training and technical assistance as part of its ongoing work regarding human rights and the administration of justice. The IBAHRI’s work promotes prompt and impartial investigations into allegations of torture and ill treatment, and advocates for the independence of forensic services from law enforcement agencies.


IBAHRI condemns conviction of Russian journalist and opposition activist Vladimir Kara-Murza

Vladimir Kara Murza

A 25-year prison sentence was handed down to Russian journalist and opposition activist Vladimir Kara-Murza by the Moscow City Court on 17 April 2023. An outspoken critic of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Kara-Murza has reported widely on the international law violations perpetrated by the Russian military against the people of Ukraine.

A dual Russian-British national, Kara-Murza was sentenced to the prison term after being found guilty on the charges of treason, dissemination of ‘false information’ about the conduct of the Russian Armed Forces and involvement with an ‘undesirable organisation’.

IBAHRI Co-Chair and Immediate Past Secretary-General of the Swedish Bar Association, Anne Ramberg Dr Jur hc, commented: ‘The IBAHRI is deeply concerned about the chilling effect the prosecution of Vladimir Kara-Murza will have on the press and media freedom in Russia. This conviction constitutes an unacceptable affront to freedom of expression and threatens the existence of a free press in Russia.’

The prosecution of Kara-Murza has formed part of a wider crackdown by the Kremlin on dissenting journalists, free speech and the right to protest, which has only intensified since the invasion of Ukraine and is having a profoundly detrimental effect on civic space in Russia.

Furthermore, the secret nature of Kara-Murza’s trial constitutes a violation of his right to a fair and public hearing.

Other gross violations of his due process rights have also been reported, largely preventing him from obtaining an effective defence. This adds to the IBAHRI’s concerns about the injustice of his conviction based on fabricated charges.

Kara-Murza has been a strong voice for democracy and freedom in Russia for many years. His wife, Evgenia Kara-Murza, continues his work from the US. During the IBA Annual Conference in November 2022, she fiercely spoke about what it means for the couple to be advocates of conscience.


IBA raises concerns about legal reform in Israel

IBA President Almudena Arpón de Mendívil Aldama has released a statement expressing concern with the proposed reforms to the legal system in Israel, which would seriously undermine the independence of the judiciary, including the Supreme Court, and dismantle legal checks on executive power. In the statement, the IBA expresses its serious concerns over the impact that the reforms could have on the constitutional framework of the State of Israel.

In January 2023, the Israeli Minister of Justice, Yariv Levin, proposed legislative reforms which would amend ‘the composition and functioning of the judicial appointment committee to confer a dominant position to representatives of the government; enabling the Knesset (Israel’s parliament) to override decisions of the Supreme Court; impairing the Supreme Court’s ability to review governmental decisions; and severely undermining the independence of legal advisors to the government ministries’.

The proposed reforms would have the effect of completely dismantling both the external and internal checks on the executive, through the independent judiciary and the independent legal opinions of the Attorney-General and of the legal advisors to government ministries. These reforms will curb legitimate oversight of the actions of government and the Knesset, leaving the executive free to use its power in a potentially arbitrary and discriminatory manner.

Read the full statement here


IBAHRI condemns Ugandan anti-LGBTI bill that expands use of the death penalty

The IBA’s Human Rights Institute (IBAHRI) has strongly condemned Uganda’s Anti-Homosexuality Bill, which includes the death penalty for ‘aggravated homosexuality’. The Ugandan Parliament passed the Bill overwhelmingly, with 389 votes to two, on 21 March 2023.

Described as ‘probably among the worst of its kind in the world’ by United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Türk, the final version of the Bill is yet to be officially published, although the version amended and adopted during the parliamentary session on 21 March 2023 defines ‘aggravated homosexuality’ as being committed where the offender is living with HIV; is a parent, guardian, or has authority or control over the person against whom the offence is committed; is a serial offender; applies, administers or causes any drug, matter or thing to be used with intent to stupefy or overpower the person against whom the offence is committed; or if the victim is under the age of 18 or has a disability.

Read the full news release here

Media freedom: journalism has crucial protective role as civic spaces threatened

Joanne Harris

A report published in March by global civil society alliance CIVICUS, which monitors civic space freedoms, has downgraded 15 countries – including several nations widely seen as democracies, such as the UK. The UK’s rating fell from ‘narrowed’ to ‘repressed’ after a year in which its government published a series of legislative proposals that threaten to restrict areas such as the right to protest.

CIVICUS defines ‘civic space’ as ‘the respect in policy and practice for the freedoms of peaceful assembly, association and expression which are underpinned by the state’s duty to protect civil society’. The organisation’s civic space monitor, which tracks developments in citizens’ freedoms and rights around the world, assesses and scores 197 countries and territories based on how well they protect civic freedoms such as the right to protest, how restrictive laws are, the level of intimidation by authorities and how free the press is to report on these areas – the latter being crucial for holding authority to account and helping to protect civic space.

A total of ten countries were upgraded last year, with positive signs seen in jurisdictions including the US, which moved from repressed to narrowed. CIVICUS said that 28.5 per cent of the world’s population live in closed countries, 42.2 per cent in repressed countries, 14.9 per cent in obstructed regimes, 11.3 per cent in narrowed countries and just 3.2 per cent in countries with open civic space. More people than ever are now living in countries where state and non-state actors are routinely allowed to imprison, injure and kill people for exercising their fundamental freedoms.

I would like to see more of that robust assertion that the act of journalism is vital to a free society

Dana Green
Chair, IBA Media Law Committee

Given the war in Ukraine, Russia was unsurprisingly among the five countries to be downgraded from repressed to closed. Likewise, Hong Kong SAR was downgraded in this way, given the increasing restrictions being imposed by China. Journalists are at risk of arrest in both jurisdictions, with a recent example being that of reporter Evan Gershkovich, who has been detained in Russia on charges of espionage, allegations that are denied by both Gershkovich and his employers.

CIVICUS assesses the frequency of harassment and attacks on journalists, and whether they’re detained in the process of doing their jobs. It has documented attacks – both verbal and physical – on journalists by the police, politicians and protestors in countries around the world. The Americas were identified as the most dangerous region to be a journalist, with deaths of reporters recorded in at least nine countries.

CIVICUS upgraded the US in part due to efforts by President Joe Biden’s administration to improve the government’s relationship with the media. However, Dana Green, Chair of the IBA Media Law Committee and Senior Counsel at the New York Times, says she remains pessimistic about the press freedom situation in the country. The US Press Freedom Tracker documented 145 arrest or criminal charges involving journalists in 2020, at the height of the Black Lives Matter protests. Numbers dropped to 59 in 2021 and just 15 in 2022, but Green says these numbers are likely significantly undercounted. ‘In my personal experience […] often these things don’t make the news, often the journalists are released without charge due to lawyers’, she says. ‘The framing around the Biden administration is not the right way to look at this, in the sense that almost all of these repressive actions are happening at the local or state level which is not influenced by national changes in political parties.’

She suggests that attacks on journalists, especially those covering protests or civil unrest, could be attributed to a desire by authorities to deter protestors more generally, by making the arrests more prominent. It has also become more common for authorities to attack the media verbally, leading to a social discourse suggesting that the ‘mainstream media’ is biased or unreliable. 

Elizabeth Morley, Diversity and Inclusion Officer of the IBA Media Law Committee and a partner at Howard Kennedy in London, says the growth of social media and other forms of reporting have made it tougher to be a journalist. ‘It’s harder to easily categorise what constitutes a journalist or a reporter because it’s so diverse now. You’ve got citizen journalists, you’ve got freelancers, you’ve got those employed by long-standing media organisations and they all play a role in reporting and holding authority to account’, Morley says. 

Last year journalist Charlotte Lynch of LBC was arrested while covering an environmental protest and held for hours in a cell – an arrest later found by a police report to be unjustified. As a direct result of this, the Public Order Bill currently progressing through the UK legislative process has been amended to prevent a police officer from exercising a police power ‘for the sole purpose of preventing a person from observing or reporting on a protest’.

Despite this, Morley says that press freedom and freedom of expression are generally not a priority in UK legislation. But the challenge now is that the anti-media discourse makes it hard for the press and authorities to speak up in support of the importance of protecting journalism from attacks. Instead, she and Green suggest the legal profession could play a role as part of the ultimate aim of safeguarding the rule of law. 

‘All lawyers, regardless of whatever field they happen to practise in, should view attacks on the media as an industry or profession as undermining the rule of law that we are all committed to uphold. I would like to see more of that robust assertion that the act of journalism is vital to a free society and these are not legitimate attacks’, Green says. Morley agrees and says that ‘the legal profession are independent of the government so from that perspective it puts them in a really good position to be able to highlight the importance of freedom of expression’. 

Moving forward, the picture is not rosy. Green says it’s now harder to be an investigative journalist, and the pool of applicants is becoming even less diverse. She adds that some news organisations are now giving their reporters covering domestic protests ‘pre-deployment’ support – previously reserved for covering overseas conflict zones – such as safety equipment, contingency planning and psychological assistance. 
 

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