Press releases
Amnesty International: URGENT ACTION SUDANESE YOUTH ACTIVIST AT RISK OF TORTURE
11 July 2012
Sudanese youth activist Ussamah Mohammed, who criticised the government in a video published on Al Jazeera TV, has been detained incommunicado since 22 June in Sudan’s capital, Khartoum, putting him at risk of torture and other ill-treatment.
Ussamah Mohammed had gone with a friend on 22 June to the Khartoum neighbourhood of Burri, where protests had recently been taking place. They were carrying smartphones, taking pictures of arrests by National Security Services agents and documenting on Twitter the heavy security presence in the neighbourhood ahead of a day of planned protests.
Ussamah Mohammed and his friend were both arrested shortly after 11.30am by plainclothes officers and forced into two different pickup trucks. While his friend was released after seven hours, Ussamah Mohammed is still detained. His family were informed by an NSS agent that he was in Kober prison, at the NSS section for political prisoners. Ussamah Mohammed has not had access to a lawyer and has not been brought to court. He is at risk of torture and other ill-treatment. Ussamah Mohammed is a prisoner of conscience, held solely for exercising his right to freedom of expression.
Ussamah Mohammed, 32, is a web developer originally from Omdurman. The day he was arrested, he had recorded a YouTube video which was featured on the website of Al Jazeera English, in which he announced that he would take part in the protests planned for 30 June.
Ussamah Mohammed graduated from the University of Khartoum’s College of Mathematics, and lives in Khartoum.
Please write immediately in Arabic, English or your own language:
- Calling on the authorities to release Ussamah Mohammed immediately and unconditionally;
- Urging them to ensure Ussamah Mohammed is not tortured or otherwise ill-treated, and that he has regular access to his family and lawyer of his choice;
- Demanding that they stop the harassment of peaceful activists and journalists, and honour their commitment to freedom of expression, as enshrined in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Sudan is a party.