Njama za kuimega Sudan

WikiLeaks cables: Sudanese president 'stashed $9bn in UK banks'

Omar al-Bashir, the Sudanese president, has siphoned as much as $9bn out of his impoverished country, and much of it may be stashed in London banks, according to secret US diplomatic cables that recount conversations with the chief prosecutor of the international criminal court.

Some of the funds may be held by the part-nationalised Lloyds Banking Group, according to prosecutor, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, who told US officials it was time to go public with the scale of Bashir's theft in order to turn Sudanese public opinion against him.

"Ocampo suggested if Bashir's stash of money were disclosed (he put the figure at $9bn), it would change Sudanese public opinion from him being a 'crusader' to that of a thief," one report by a senior US official states. "Ocampo reported Lloyds bank in London may be holding or knowledgeable of the whereabouts of his money," the cable says. "Ocampo suggested exposing Bashir had illegal accounts would be enough to turn the Sudanese against him."

Lloyds responded by saying it had no evidence of holding funds in Bashir's name. "We have absolutely no evidence to suggest there is any connection between Lloyds Banking Group and Mr Bashir. The group's policy is to abide by the legal and regulatory obligations in all jurisdictions in which we operate."

Details of the allegations emerge in the latest batch of leaked embassy cables released by WikiLeaks which reveal that:

• US officials regard European human rights standards as an "irritant", criticising the Council of Europe for its stance on secret rendition of terror suspects.

• Diplomats believe judges in the war crimes trial of the Liberian ex-president Charles Taylor have been deliberately causing delays to ensure the only African judge is presiding when the verdict is delivered.

The cables were released as the WikiLeaks editor-in-chief, Julian Assange, accused the US of mounting an aggressive, illegal investigation against him. "I would say that there is a very aggressive investigation, that a lot of face has been lost by some people, and some people have careers to make by pursuing famous cases, but that is actually something that needs monitoring," he told reporters outside the mansion on the Norfolk/Suffolk border where he is staying while on bail.

Assange has repeatedly asserted that he is the victim of a smear campaign. The Guardian today publishes the first full account of the allegations made against him by two Swedish women based on previously unseen police documents.

If Ocampo's claim about Bashir's fortune is correct, Sudanese funds being held in London banks amount to one tenth of annual GDP in Sudan, which ranks fifteenth from bottom in the UN's index of the world's poorest countries. Ocampo discussed evidence of the stash with the Americans just days after issuing an arrest warrant for the Sudanese president in March 2009, the first issued by the court against a serving head of state. Bashir was indicted for seven counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity last year with a further three counts of genocide added in July. Ocampo, who has never released details of the alleged funds, was severely criticised for the indictment by many in Sudan and internationally amid criticisms the move would inflame fighting in the southern Darfur region.

Despite the humanitarian crisis in Sudan, Bashir has remained popular among many others in the country, particularly those who have benefited from the oil boom brought about during his presidency. A spokesperson for the Sudanese government dismissed the claim, describing it as further evidence of the ICC's political agenda in discrediting the Sudanese government.

"To claim that the president can control the treasury and take money to put into his own accounts is ludicrous – it is a laughable claim by the ICC prosecutor," said Dr Khalid al-Mubarak, government spokesperson at the Sudanese embassy in London. "Ocampo is a maverick, and this is just part of his political agenda. He has failed miserably in all his cases and has refused to investigate Iraq or Gaza – he needs success and he has targeted Bashir to increase his own importance."

"Attempts to smear not only Bashir but Sudan as a whole are well known, and are clearly linked with anti-Arab sentiments and Islamophobia," Mubarak added.

But experts said that if confirmed, the funds could have big implications for victims of human rights abuses in the country. Richard Dicker, head of international justice at Human Rights Watch, said: "If Bashir were to be tried and convicted, these funds could not just be frozen, but used as a source of reparations for victims … [of] horrific crimes in Darfur."

Robert Palmer, a campaigner at anti-corruption organisation Global Witness, said: "$9bn may sound like an inconceivably large amount of money for the president of Sudan to control. But we have uncovered evidence of substantial funds being held in a European bank by an oil-rich country in the past, where the head of state had a worrying level of personal control over the funds. In Sudan's case, the figure is almost the same amount as has been transferred from north to south Sudan under the oil revenue sharing part of the comprehensive peace agreement since 2005."

In a remarkable series of exchanges, the cables also reveal how Sudan's mineral wealth had a direct bearing on the ICC proceedings against Bashir, as China balked at action against him that could harm its interests in the oil industry. "Ocampo said China, as long as it continues to have oil concessions in Sudan, does not care what happens to Bashir," one cable states.

In another cable dated March 2008, a senior French official noted "growing Chinese concern about possible north-south fissures in Sudan and the possibility that its oil interests could be threatened".

"The Chinese were beginning to see more clearly that Sudan's behaviour towards Darfur and Chad could only increase the possibility of a north-south rupture will a possibly severe effect on China's stake in the oil sector,' the French are reported to have said.

In return, the Chinese expressed "puzzlement" that the French – a member of the ICC and able to influence the deferral of proceedings against Bashir – supported Ocampo's decision to pursue the Sudanese president, given France's oil interests in the region. "[The Chinese] observed French companies have oil interests in Sudan as well as Chad," the Americans stated.

France ultimately supported Bashir's indictment, but the cables suggest this was deliberately calculated to protect their oil interests. The French told the Americans they believed that firm action on Darfur was the only way to protect oil interests.

Both French firm Total and China, through affiliates of its state-owned China Petroleum and Chemical Corporation, have substantial oil concessions in Sudan, which currently produces 500,000 barrels of crude oil per day .

"It is ironic that China, which postures as a friend of the people's in the developing world couldn't give a damn about the suffering of hundreds of thousands of African victims in Darfur," said Dicker. "I'm not surprised that China is putting its oil interests above the interests of humanity in seeing that these crimes of enormous concern are adjudicated, but I think it will rebound to China's discredit," Dicker added.Speculation that Bashir may have deposited billions in oil money in foreign accounts is likely to add to demands for his arrest and transparency in Sudan's oil sector."The arm of the law, when it comes to this type of crime, committed by or alleged to have been committed by heads of state or heads of government, has gotten longer," said Dicker. "There is a long road to trial in The Hague, but what's striking is a number of other heads of state and heads of government have wound up in court much to their surprise through often lengthy and circuitous pathways."

WikiLeaks cables: Sudanese president 'stashed $9bn in UK banks' | World news | The Guardian
 

Sudan's government has slammed leaked US diplomatic cables that accuse Omar al-Bashir, the country's president, of transferring up to $9bn out of the African nation, with much of it sent to banks in the United Kingdom.
Sudan's information ministry called the embezzlement claim "a wretched political action" in a statement released on Sunday, a day after The Guardian newspaper reported the cables.
"The allegation of the ICC prosecutor is meant to convince the US administration to support him in propagating this lie which he thought would make the Sudanese people turn against him (al-Bashir)," the ministry said.
A US diplomatic cable released by the WikiLeaks whistleblowing website on Saturday details a conversation between Alejandro D. Wolff, the former US ambassador to the United Nations, and Luis Moreno-Ocampo, the chief prosecutor to the International Criminal Court (ICC).

During a meeting in March 2009, Moreno-Ocampo is quoted as saying that the disclosure of the alleged "illegal accounts" could help garner support for al-Bashir's arrest.

"Ocampo suggested if Bashir's stash of money were disclosed [he put the figure at $9bn], it would change Sudanese public opinion from him being a 'crusader' to that of a thief," the cable says.
"Ocampo suggested exposing Bashir had illegal accounts would be enough to turn the Sudanese against him."

Sudan is one of the poorest countries in the world with an estimated 40 per cent of the population living below the poverty line, despite being a sizable exporter of oil.

20093493159417734_8.jpg


War crimes charges
The meeting between Wolff and Moreno-Ocampo was held shortly after the ICC ordered the arrest of the Sudanese president on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity in the country's western Darfur region. A further three counts of genocide were added to the charges in July.

Khartoum has repeatedly dismissed the arrest warrant as "a political decision" and African nations have refused to comply by detaining al-Bashir during overseas visits.
Rabie Abdul Atti, a senior member of the governing National Congress Party (NCP), described the allegations as lies.
"To claim that the president can control the treasury and take money to put into his own accounts is ludicrous."
Khalid al-Mubarak,
government spokesman

"These allegations by Ocampo are proving that he is a big liar internationally and I don't think that the Sudanese people will look at them seriously," he told Al Jazeera.
"These are political allegations [intended to] to press the Sudanese government to comply with the agenda of Europeans and the United States of America."

Earlier, Dr Khalid al-Mubarak, a spokesman at the Sudanese embassy in London, called the allegations a "laughable claim".

"To claim that the president can control the treasury and take money to put into his own accounts is ludicrous," he told The Guardian newspaper.

The leaked cable also hints at efforts to bring major world powers on board over the arrest warrant.
"Ocampo suggested it would be beneficial to reassure China that its access to oil would not be jeopardised," the cable says.
"If China believed Bashir was becoming a destabilising influence, Ocampo said China might be more open to his removal as long as his replacement would guarantee support for China's economic interests."


'No evidence'
The US document said that Britain's Lloyds Banking Group "may be holding or knowledgeable of the whereabouts of his money".
But Lloyds insisted it was not aware of any link with al-Bashir.
"We have absolutely no evidence to suggest there is any connection between Lloyds Banking Group and Mr Bashir," a spokeswoman said.
"The group's policy is to abide by the legal and regulatory obligations in all jurisdictions in which we operate."
Abdel Rahman Mohamed, an international development consultant in the US, said there would be "a great deal of ramifications" if the allegations were proven true.
"However I don't think the reality reflects any possibility for anybody to take $9bn and put [that] in the United Kingdom," he told Al Jazeera.
"If he had wanted to do this he would have placed [the money] in some place where other members of the regime have stashed their money away, in Malaysia or Dubai or somewhere else. Not in a Western country where he could be subject to investigation."
The release of the US cable came at a sensitive moment for Sudan, with a referendum on south Sudan independence slated for January 9.
Al Jazeera's Mohammed Vall, reporting from Khartoum, said al-Bashir's enemies, particularly the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM), which governs the semi-autonomous south, were likely to use the allegations against al-Bashir.
"Particularly SPLM will pick up on this to discredit him further and most probably they will use it in the campaigning in the south, that this government cannot be dealt with, that it's not credible," he said.
"The SPLM has been raising many accusations in the past about the lack of transparency in the division of oil revenues between the north and south and this is a very good story for them."

2010121821721450734_20.jpg

MBAYA WA SUDAN -----MORENO-OCAMPO
Source;Aljazeera
 
Omar al-Bashir: northern Sudan will adopt sharia law if country splits

President defends woman's flogging in speech accused of stoking religious divisions as south prepares for referendum



  • Reuters in Khartoum
  • guardian.co.uk, Sunday 19 December 2010 15.05 GMT <li class="history">Article history
    Omar-Hassan-al-Bashir-006.jpg
    Omar al-Bashir has been accused of deepening Sudan's international isolation. Photograph: Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah/Reuters Omar al-Bashir, the Sudanese president, said the country would adopt an Islamic constitution if the south split away in next month's referendum, in a speech today in which he also defended police filming a woman being flogged.
    "If south Sudan secedes, we will change the constitution and at that time there will be no time to speak of diversity of culture and ethnicity," Bashir told supporters at a rally in the eastern city of Gedaref.
    "Sharia [Islamic law] and Islam will be the main source for the constitution, Islam the official religion and Arabic the official language," he said.
    An official from south Sudan's main party criticised Bashir's stance, saying it would encourage discrimination against minorities in the mainly Muslim north and deepen the country's international isolation.
    The referendum in south Sudan, where most follow indigenous beliefs and Christianity, on whether to declare independence is scheduled to start on 9 January.
    The vote was promised in a 2005 peace deal that ended a civil war between north and south, and set up an interim constitution which limited sharia to the north and recognised "the cultural and social diversity of the Sudanese people".
    Analysts expect most southerners to choose independence in the poll, due to last for a week. Yasir Arman, from the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM), said Bashir's statements would encourage repression in the north. "This type of discourse is preparing the ground for a police state. The north, whether alone or with the south, is an extremely diverse place."
    Arman said it was the north's hardline stance that had pushed southerners towards separation. "If it [the north] continues like this it will encourage other areas like Darfur, the Nuba mountains and eastern Sudan to walk out as well," he added, referring to areas on the peripheries of northern Sudan. "It will also result in Sudan having worse relations with the outside world."
    Southern leaders have said they are worried about how hundreds of thousands of southerners living in the north might be treated after a split.
    Arman, Bashir's main challenger in the presidential elections in April, is from the northern sector of the SPLM. He said his group would form a separate opposition party inside the north if the south seceded.
    Bashir also defended police shown lashing a woman in footage that appeared on YouTube. "If she is lashed according to sharia law there is no investigation. Why are some people ashamed? This is sharia," he said.
    Senior NCP member Nafie Ali Nafie said on Thursday that efforts to keep the country united had failed, in the first acknowledgement from the northern elite that the south would probably secede.
    Floggings carried out under Islamic law are almost a daily punishment in northern Sudan for crimes including drinking alcohol and adultery.
 

Sudan's government has slammed leaked US diplomatic cables that accuse Omar al-Bashir, the country's president, of transferring up to $9bn out of the African nation, with much of it sent to banks in the United Kingdom.
Sudan's information ministry called the embezzlement claim "a wretched political action" in a statement released on Sunday, a day after The Guardian newspaper reported the cables.
"The allegation of the ICC prosecutor is meant to convince the US administration to support him in propagating this lie which he thought would make the Sudanese people turn against him (al-Bashir)," the ministry said.
A US diplomatic cable released by the WikiLeaks whistleblowing website on Saturday details a conversation between Alejandro D. Wolff, the former US ambassador to the United Nations, and Luis Moreno-Ocampo, the chief prosecutor to the International Criminal Court (ICC).

During a meeting in March 2009, Moreno-Ocampo is quoted as saying that the disclosure of the alleged "illegal accounts" could help garner support for al-Bashir's arrest.

"Ocampo suggested if Bashir's stash of money were disclosed [he put the figure at $9bn], it would change Sudanese public opinion from him being a 'crusader' to that of a thief," the cable says.
"Ocampo suggested exposing Bashir had illegal accounts would be enough to turn the Sudanese against him."

Sudan is one of the poorest countries in the world with an estimated 40 per cent of the population living below the poverty line, despite being a sizable exporter of oil.

20093493159417734_8.jpg


War crimes charges
The meeting between Wolff and Moreno-Ocampo was held shortly after the ICC ordered the arrest of the Sudanese president on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity in the country's western Darfur region. A further three counts of genocide were added to the charges in July.

Khartoum has repeatedly dismissed the arrest warrant as "a political decision" and African nations have refused to comply by detaining al-Bashir during overseas visits.
Rabie Abdul Atti, a senior member of the governing National Congress Party (NCP), described the allegations as lies.
"To claim that the president can control the treasury and take money to put into his own accounts is ludicrous."
Khalid al-Mubarak,
government spokesman

"These allegations by Ocampo are proving that he is a big liar internationally and I don't think that the Sudanese people will look at them seriously," he told Al Jazeera.
"These are political allegations [intended to] to press the Sudanese government to comply with the agenda of Europeans and the United States of America."

Earlier, Dr Khalid al-Mubarak, a spokesman at the Sudanese embassy in London, called the allegations a "laughable claim".

"To claim that the president can control the treasury and take money to put into his own accounts is ludicrous," he told The Guardian newspaper.

The leaked cable also hints at efforts to bring major world powers on board over the arrest warrant.
"Ocampo suggested it would be beneficial to reassure China that its access to oil would not be jeopardised," the cable says.
"If China believed Bashir was becoming a destabilising influence, Ocampo said China might be more open to his removal as long as his replacement would guarantee support for China's economic interests."


'No evidence'
The US document said that Britain's Lloyds Banking Group "may be holding or knowledgeable of the whereabouts of his money".
But Lloyds insisted it was not aware of any link with al-Bashir.
"We have absolutely no evidence to suggest there is any connection between Lloyds Banking Group and Mr Bashir," a spokeswoman said.
"The group's policy is to abide by the legal and regulatory obligations in all jurisdictions in which we operate."
Abdel Rahman Mohamed, an international development consultant in the US, said there would be "a great deal of ramifications" if the allegations were proven true.
"However I don't think the reality reflects any possibility for anybody to take $9bn and put [that] in the United Kingdom," he told Al Jazeera.
"If he had wanted to do this he would have placed [the money] in some place where other members of the regime have stashed their money away, in Malaysia or Dubai or somewhere else. Not in a Western country where he could be subject to investigation."
The release of the US cable came at a sensitive moment for Sudan, with a referendum on south Sudan independence slated for January 9.
Al Jazeera's Mohammed Vall, reporting from Khartoum, said al-Bashir's enemies, particularly the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM), which governs the semi-autonomous south, were likely to use the allegations against al-Bashir.
"Particularly SPLM will pick up on this to discredit him further and most probably they will use it in the campaigning in the south, that this government cannot be dealt with, that it's not credible," he said.
"The SPLM has been raising many accusations in the past about the lack of transparency in the division of oil revenues between the north and south and this is a very good story for them."

2010121821721450734_20.jpg

MBAYA WA SUDAN -----MORENO-OCAMPO
Source;Aljazeera

Kwa maana hiyo basi wikileaks kuhusu tanzania sio za kweli kwa vile zimekanushwa.
 
Kwa maana hiyo basi wikileaks kuhusu tanzania sio za kweli kwa vile zimekanushwa.
Sio lazima kila wiki leak iwe kweli.Nyengine ni za kuchakachuliwa.Ndio maana ipo haja ya kutumia akili yako.
 
Inavyoelekea Sudani Kusini watajitenga. je isingekuwa bora kukamilisha na kuwapa nilotics ( Wajaluo) taifa lao kamili ambayo itamega sehemu ya Kenya , Uganda and Tanzania sababu katika nchi zote hizo hawa wameishi kwa miaka mamia kama sio elfu na pia bado wanabaguliwa vibaya. Tumeona Kenya jinsi ambavyo wanatengwa na kubaguliwa kwa siasa na nafasi za kazi. Pia Tanzania kasikazini hawa watu wamekua wakitengwa na hawapati fursa kama makabila mengine na Uganda pia hivyo hivyo. Ni wakati wa kuweka taifa lao.
 
Inavyoelekea Sudani Kusini watajitenga. je isingekuwa bora kukamilisha na kuwapa nilotics ( Wajaluo) taifa lao kamili ambayo itamega sehemu ya Kenya , Uganda and Tanzania sababu katika nchi zote hizo hawa wameishi kwa miaka mamia kama sio elfu na pia bado wanabaguliwa vibaya. Tumeona Kenya jinsi ambavyo wanatengwa na kubaguliwa kwa siasa na nafasi za kazi. Pia Tanzania kasikazini hawa watu wamekua wakitengwa na hawapati fursa kama makabila mengine na Uganda pia hivyo hivyo. Ni wakati wa kuweka taifa lao.

Kweli kabisa. Wajaluo nao waunde Jaluoland. Na msiwasahau wamasai pote wanasukumwa sukumwa tu- maika mia bado hawajatransform kuwa na wanasayansi wengi. Wamasai wa Kenya na Tanzania waunde Masailand. Hapo ndio maendeleo yakweli yanaanza
 
Violence against women in the Sudan. Huyu anapata kichapo kwa kuvaa suruali ndani ya baibui.

 
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Violence against women in the Sudan. Huyu anapata kichapo kwa kuvaa suruali ndani ya baibui.



Nimeangalia hiyo video.
Unajuwa mambo kama hayo Sudan ni kitu cha kawaida inapotekea mtu akavunja heshima hadharani.Hapa imefanywa ni kioja kwa vile hiki ni kipindi cha kampeni.
Hao unaowaona ni askari na gari yao iko pembeni.Kosa lake si kama mpiga picha na wewe unavyotaka tuamini.Pale pembeni angalia kuna wanawake wenzake wamesimama na wala hawajavaa hata hilo buibui.
Kikosi kama hicho huwa kinarahisisha sana kazi za mahakama kwani watu kama huyo mwanamke hutiwa adabu na kuachwa ajichunge mwenyewe.Kwa adhabu kama hizi walevi wanaoanguka barabarani wala huwaoni jijini Khartoum
Kilichonifurahisha zaidi katika hiyo video ni waislamu wanamchapa bakora muislamu mwenzao.
Zaidi ni kuwa waislamu wenye rangi nyeusi wanamtia adabu mtovu wa nidhamu anayeonekana ni mwarabu.Wote mbele ya sharia ni sawa hakuna ubaguzi.

Kiarabu nakielewa lakini sijasikia baadhi ya maneno ya tafsiri ya English.
Naungana na rais Omar Albashir aliyesema kuhusiana na hii video:
"If she is lashed according to sharia law there is no investigation. Why are some people ashamed? This is sharia," he said.
 
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Watenganishwe haraka kwani their union was too artificial and imposed by Colonialists! Nchi ni watu wenye historia moja, utamaduni unaofanana, sasa Waarabu na Wadinka wanafanana nini? Watenganishwe haraka na kuondolewa makuchani mwa Wakoloni wa Kiarabu, we Black Africans must decide own destiny! Wamedhalilishwa kiasi cha kutosha
 
Ami alikuwa ametumwa na Bashir ku brain wash Wana JF.

We can't be bought so easily.

Southern Sudanese people have spoken so loudly, so now leave them alone. The North can go on with the Policies that Ami & Co. love so fervently.
 
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