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Egyptian police kill at least 20 Sudanese protesters
By Harvey Thompson
3 January 2006
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On December 30, Egyptian riot police brutally attacked a crowd
of Sudanese refugees protesting outside the offices of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in Cairo, killing
at least 20, and possibly as many as 30, while injuring scores of others.
Around 2,000 refugees and asylum-seekers from Sudan had been
camped for the past three months, many of them sleeping in the
open, in Mustafa Mahmoud square, Mohandiseenan upper-middle-class
suburb of the capital where the UNHCR has an office. They were
protesting the treatment they suffer in Egypt and seeking resettlement
in another country.
In September the UNHCR stopped hearing the cases of Sudanese
asylum-seekers. The demonstration began after the UNHCR stopped
aid to those who had applied and failed to get refugee status.
The UN insists the decision is a result of the signing in January
of an official peace accord that formally ended Sudans 21-year
civil war, even though many asylum-seekers have said they are
in severe danger of being tortured or executed for treason if
sent back to Sudan. A separate conflict in the western region
of Darfur has displaced some 2 million people and left tens of
thousands dead.
The UNHCR announced last week that it had reached a deal with
some of the protest leaders, promising to resume hearing some
cases and offering a one-off payment of up to $700 (£406)
for housing. Most of those in the camp rejected the deal. Those
refugees who are receiving some UN support complain that it is
inadequate.
In the early hours of December 30 thousands of Egyptian riot
police deployed around the ramshackle camp. After a standoff that
lasted several hours, the protesters dismantled their camp, made
mostly of cardboard and plastic sheeting, but most refused to
be led away onto the awaiting buses. While negotiations between
police and protesters were still ongoing, the security forces
began firing water cannon and then invaded the camp en masse.
Thousands of police wielding truncheons attacked the protesters
from all directions.
A reporter for the Associated Press (AP) witnessed police attacking
the refugees with truncheons and said that in many cases they
continued to beat the protesters even as they were being dragged
away. The reporter saw two adults and a four-year-old girl being
carried away unconscious. A medical worker in an ambulance said
the girl was dead. One protester dragged away by two policemen
was clubbed with a tree branch about the size of a mans
arm by a third officer.
Officials said that 25 protesters died and an interior ministry
statement said 50 more were injured, mostly elderly and
children. The statement said 75 police were also injured.
The interior ministry blamed the violence on the protesters.
Attempts were made to persuade them to disperse, but to
no avail, it alleged. The migrants leaders resorted
to incitement and attacks against the police. According
to the ministry, the casualties among protesters resulted from
a stampede.
The AP reporter said he saw no stampede and that the protesters
could not flee because the camp was completely encircled by police.
Protesters could be seen fighting back with long sticks
that appeared to be supports for makeshift tents, the reporter
wrote.
Officials at the South Centrea Sudanese human rights
monitoring groupsaid 1,280 protesters were forced onto buses
and taken to three camps outside Cairo.
Witnesses said the refugees, including women and small children,
were dragged towards buses as they tried to resist leaving the
camp. They want to kill us, shouted one protester.
Our demands are legitimate, it is our right to protest here,
the only right we have.
One of the Sudanese asylum-seekers, Napoleon Roberts, told
the BBCs Focus on Africa programme that he had
been taken to a barracks south of the capital and was being held
with about 1,700 others in disgusting conditions. Weve
been kept here since morning in disgust, and no water for drinking
and no bathroom ... people are staying still with their wounds
on their bodies, he told the BBC programme.
Roberts explained, The UNHCR offers an integration programme,
but with no houses, no education, no work. We have been eating
beans for weeks.
In November, Robertswhose wife is one of the women to
have given birth during the sit-inrisked his life by jumping
over security guards to reach the car of UN Secretary General
Kofi Annan, who was visiting Cairo at the time, to hand over a
letter asking to be resettled in a Western country.
It is our right under the 1951 Geneva Convention to seek
asylum in a country that can afford to host us, he said.
The desperation and resolve of the protesters have been well
known to the authorities. Since the three-month sit-in began,
seven demonstrators have died, three babies have been born, four
women have suffered miscarriages and many have gone on hunger
strike, vowing to continue until death.
New York-based Human Rights Watch said, The high loss
of life suggests the police acted with extreme brutality,
and has called on Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak to urgently
appoint an independent commission to investigate the use of force.
UNHCR spokeswoman in Geneva, Antonio Guterres, said, Were
very shocked and saddened by whats transpired. There is
no justification for such violence and loss of life.
But the UN was eager to wash its hands once more of the Sudanese
refugees. The police action in Cairo followed the UNHCRs
urging of the Egyptian authorities to resolve the
obviously embarrassing issue of the refugee protest outside its
offices.
Commenting on the refugees plea to the UN to be resettled,
Guterres said [resettlement] is not really in UNHCRs
giftits dependent on a third country agreeing to take
them. We tried to maintain a dialogue with the protesters and
there were several mediation attempts. What they seem to be saying
is that conditions for them are tough in Egypt, but they are not
in danger of being sent back [to Sudan]. They can work in Egypt
and have education.
The UNHCRs Layla Jane Nassif in Cairo said, I think
that what will happen is very much up to them [the demonstrators].
We have been trying hard to work with them to make clear what
we can and cannot do in terms of their concerns. She added
that it was not always clear whether all those camped out were
Sudanese or other opportunists.
There has been a marked difference in the coverage of the Cairo
events in the Egyptian and Sudanese press. The mainly state-owned
Egyptian media was sympathetic to the police and largely blamed
the protesters, seeking to encourage popular hostility towards
the refugees and asylum-seekers.
In contrast, the Khartoum Monitor wrote,
This is a very sorrowful end for a people who fled their
own countrys frying pan only to fall into Egypts fire.
The inappropriate use of brutal force was uncalled for and appallingly
inhuman.
Al-Adwa pointed to the complicity of the government
in Sudan:
The Sudanese government is wrong if it thinks that it
is not responsible for this and it is astonishing that it has
not issued an official statement about the incident. Those who
died are Sudanese citizens and the government is responsible for
their safety, even if they were under UN protection.
Although only 30,000 Sudanese people are registered as refugees
in Egypt, it is estimated that 2-5 million refugees from Sudan
are thought to have fled to Egyptonly to face officially
sanctioned discrimination in a country already suffering from
poverty, official unemployment of 25 percent and inadequate social
services. Photographs of Sudanese refugees who have allegedly
disappeared or been killed in Egypt were displayed around the
Cairo camp.
Three years ago, Egyptian police rounded up hundreds of Africans
in what, according to Human Rights Watch, was referred to in a
police document as Operation Track Down Blacks.
See Also:
Mubarak wins Egypts
stage-managed presidential election
[19 September 2005]
Sudan: death of Garang
sets back US plans
[5 August 2005]
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