Press Release
January 20, 2004
Memorandum
to Sudan Government, Judiciary, and Bar Association:
To Reform Penal Treatment:
Sudan
Must Establish a New Criminal Justice*
The Plight of Sudanese
Judiciary and Criminal Justice
The unabated injustices
to women and the other minorities in contact with the law by various provisions,
procedures, and implementations of the Sudan Criminal Law, in general,
and the Penal Code, in particular, have routinized gross violations in
the human rights and social welfare situation of the displaced citizens
and the other disadvantaged groups in the National Capitol Khartoum, as
well as the other urban and rural areas of Sudan. Under abusive provisions
of the enforceable Sharia laws, a repressive judicial
system has been strictly imposed to manipulate adjudication and the other
sensitive areas of the criminal justice processes for partisan goals at
expense of the due process of justice.
In the passing years
after the June 89 military coup, SHRO-Cairo has repeatedly raised detailed
memorandums to the Sudan Government protesting legislature, executive
and judicial abuses, and the shortcomings of the Sudanese criminal justice.
Realizing the urgent need to establish a new system based on the best
of Sudan Law resources, namely international human rights norms and judicial
precedence, in addition to humanitarian versions of the Islamic Sharia
and the other indigenous sources of adjudication - as might be democratically
approved by the People of Sudan - the organization consistently suggested
immediate abrogation of the governments harsh laws.
In the enforceable
system of the day, judges exercise unrestricted discretionary powers to
incarcerate, imprison, fine, inflict physical punishment, or sentence
to death the accused persons without fair guarantees or equal provision
for the rights of the accused, especially the right to innocence until
proven guilty, legal consultation, public hearing, cross-examination of
witnesses, fair trial free of tortures and unlawful confessions, etc.
Apart from gross violations
of these fundamental principles, the judges training in the lawful
profession that governs the bench, however, has steeply deteriorated over
the decades. This is partially due to the non-democratic structure and
performance of the government-controlled Bar Association that in democratic
times enjoyed supervisory tasks with the academia, independently from
government controls, to ascertain competency standards for the proficiency,
in addition to reduced standards of law studies in the Sudan law schools
as a direct consequence of the narrow-minded theocratic conversion of
the countrys academics throughout the 1990s up to the present time.
The presidential intrusion
in the judiciary has already reaped fruitless deeds since the army officers
of the so-called Salvation Revolution ignorantly annexed the Sudan Judiciary
Council to the partisan preferences and personal desires of the ruling
Brotherhood to replace the former democratic process of selecting judges
on the basis of modern personnel criteria, which was a necessary procedure
to promote deserved judges to higher ranks by the autonomous decision
of the Council.
Since then, the judiciary
has been massively disabled by the executive powers of the political rulers
who authorized executives to issue private courts, overrule Chief Justice
and the Judiciary Council, and impose massive dismissals of the Sudan
competent judges. The objective nature and the quality of adjudication,
as a genuine part of the criminal justice system, has finally deteriorated
to a system of corrupted political allegiance to satisfy the recruiting
authority, regardless of the countrys needs for the independent
judiciary, the rule of law, and the due process of justice.
The crisis of Sudans
criminal justice and penal treatment has already plagued the country hand-in-hand
with the executive usurpation of the independent judiciary, the theocratic
academia, and the political suppression of the democratic Bar. The ensuing
complications of this structural crisis require comprehensive reform that
should firmly restore independence of the Judiciary and the Bar, professionalize
the academic curriculum of law studies at the Sudan law schools apart
from theocracy, political ideology, or partisan preferences of presidents
and/or ruling regimes.
With the increased
striving for peace and democratic transition in the whole country, the
Sudanese are strongly required by international law and the best national
heritage to put forward a modern system of criminal justice, penal code
and criminal procedure based on internationally recognized human rights
norms, to succeed the 14-year fruitless orientation of justice and non-humanitarian
implementation.
A Critical Approach
to Sharia Jurisprudence
In essence, the Islamic
Sharia jurisprudence might be approached by a Zahiriya perspective
that simply emphasizes literary application of Sharia sources such
as mechanical flogging of an adulterous person, for example, based on
the Sura XXIV (al-Nur: 2), which says The woman and the man guilty
of adultery or fornication flog each of them with a hundred stripes.
The Sharia jurisprudence,
however, must correctly deal with crimes and penal treatment using another
Ijtihad approach that emphasizes the Prophets deed, which resembles
the highest source of spiritual implementation in the Muslim faith, being
the most authenticated authority that translated the word of the Holy
Book of Islam to actual action.
The Zahiriya restrictive
approach, which has been strictly applied by the Brotherhood of Sudan
in close collaboration with the defunct rule of Nimeiri (1983-1985) throughout
the second theocracy of the Brotherhood military coup up to the present-time
presidential system, increased the discretionary powers of judges to the
extent of interpreting the law only to favor the physical penalties of
amputation, flogging, crucifixion, and death.
Obviously, this implementation
was meant to spread terror among the population since it was brutally
imposed by the deformed machinery of the police and prison regular forces
under the superior guidance of Omer Hassan Ahmed al-Bashir, Dr. Hassan
Dafa-Allah al-Turabi, Ali Uthman Taha, Dr. Ibrahim al-Tayeb
(Sikha), Brigadier Bakri Hassan Salih - among other leaders - particularly
Professor Ali Nafi, the field-marshal of Ghost Houses and
security apparatus, irrespective of the ethos of religion or the rule
of law.
The ijtihad approach,
on the other side, allows flexible terms of penal treatment to the accused,
as well as granted rights to the victim, in the context of a spiritually
humanitarian path of mandatory faith relations that are necessarily based
on the individuals consciousness and personal commitment way above
any external dictates. Even if a State draws heavily from the Prophets
Path for enforceable justice, the penology of treating adultery, for example,
must be legally based on the Prophets abstinence from immediate
application of the al-Nur verse to allow a self-convicted adulterer to
withdraw his/her previous confession of the guilt, as is well-known in
the documented history of the Prophets life: only when the adulterer
insisted on receiving the penalty, several times, on her/his own right,
at different intervals of time, did the Prophet reluctantly ask for implementation
of the prescribed penalty with clear instruction to stop the punishment
if the convicted person so desired at any given moment of the implementation
process.
Apart from adultery,
defaming women, rape, and other forms of severe sexual assault are treated
as grievous crimes that require useful preventive and curative measures,
not simply flogging or prison confinement for the culprit, as well as
meaningful community-based remedies such as seeking forgiveness of the
victim from the part of the wrong-doer, or paying financial compensation
and receiving public humiliation to the satisfaction of the injured party.
Whereas applying the
Prophets Humanitarian Approach would save many cases from the familial
and social stigma of fornication or adultery among other desirable benefits,
applying the Zahiriya rigid approach would certainly deprive the accused
of the genuine right of closing up the case, as they might wish, on the
assumption that there is no injured party to claim the guilt or ask for
compensation other than the accused himself/herself. Moreover, implementing
a Zahiriya approach never accounts for the necessary individualization
of the accused needs for spiritual and social reform.
The judicial and humanitarian
lessons heavily drawn from the Prophets Ijtihad to verify the penalty
in a humanitarian way rather than mechanically applying the Quranic
verse is the greatest legitimacy for Muslim judges to exercise disposition
in the service of the reformative purpose of penal treatment.
In another case, if
a person is accused of adultery by witnesses, the onus of proof is firmly
conferred upon the eye witnesses, if ever available, who must
be meticulously scrutinized to provide clear evidence with accurate details
of the actual act of adultery. This practice is virtually impossible to
ascertain.
According to the Quran,
If ye have a dispute concerning any other matter, refer it to Allah
and the messenger (The Holy Quran, Sura Al-Nissa: 59). The
Prophets approach paid full consideration to the socio-economic,
psychological, and physical conditions of the accused. The Prophet emphasized
forgiveness, whenever possible, and encouraged advocating the circumstantial
evidence by interpreting doubts for the benefit of the accused. A person
who committed crime was not prosecuted unless he/she was a sane adult
liable to criminal responsibility. Killing in self defense and stealing
food to eat were exceptional cases. A lunatic and/or a person intoxicated
by compulsion was exempted from prosecution if they so committed crime.
The lessons possibly
drawn from these wrongfully ignored Sharia principles pertain to
the necessity of abrogating all together the present-time non-Prophets,
i.e., non-Islamic enforcements of Sudan law that hurriedly allow judges
to kill the accused for adultery, amputee a thiefs limp for a bunch
of food, or arbitrarily flog a woman for fornication: judging adultery
requires the establishment of a special system of spiritual judiciary
that is not less perfect than the full independence of judges from the
executive or legislative powers of State.
The actual implementation
of these ideals under the Sudans Sharia justice
is at best wrongful in direct correspondence with the repressive system
of criminal justice, executive usurpation of the Judiciary, and the non-democratic
governance of the country. To perfectly implement a criminal justice system
based on the Prophets Humanitarian Path, which is the only legitimate
Islamic system, the judges themselves must be highly renowned for pure
religious faith and clarity of spiritual purpose to be able to appreciate
the right of the accused to withdraw from his/her self-confessed guilt
any time during the process of implementation besides the other difficult
tasks of a system of justice revealed, in essence, for Lordly spiritual
sublimation, let alone the ill-trained, politically biased personnel of
the Sudans Brotherhood rule.
Although it is possible
in contemporary life to establish judicial systems free of executive or
legislative intrusions (still responsible before democratically-elected
parliamentary structures) within a regular democratic system of rule,
the spiritual personnel credentials that are necessary for the Prophetic
implementation of justice are only spiritually possible, but are practically
particularistic (i.e., non-routinized via bureaucratic systems of personnel
selection). On the other side, liberating the Sudan Judiciary from presidential
intrusions and the other executive advances by the presidency (as in the
case of the latest bar elections when the votes were openly rigged by
presidential directives) is a must to put the Sudan Judiciary back to
modernity, democratic routinization, and the due process of law.
Contemporary Failures
of Sharia Implementation
In comparative human
rights research, it is possible to assume that some of the Prophets
teachings have been incorporated in various forms by different sources
in contemporary international norms. However, Muslim authorities wrongfully
insisted on implementing harsh penalties, instead of enforcing the available
humanitarian alternatives of physical punishment with the Ijtihad approach.
In handling the crime
of adultery, the existing Sudan Governments theocratic Penal Code
did not differentiate properly between the rights of the accused persons
who are entitled to individualization of penal treatment, according to
the Sharia itself, especially the non-Muslim, and between different
cases of Muslims. In the case of drunkenness, the Penal Code did not put
in consideration the tradition of the Sunna, which provided a humanitarian
treatment for the offender. The Prophet himself preferred good preaching
to physical punishment, and yet flogging was inflicted by his successors
for the act of wine drinking.
The history and the
present time practices of the theocratic rulers of Sudan, Nimeiri and
Bashir, indicate that the humanitarian approach of the Prophet and his
Ijtihad were practically abandoned. Only the Zahiriya harsh approach was
blindly applied for repressive political goals, which completely failed
to abide-by the teachings of the Prophet or even the Minimum Standards
of the United Nations for Crime Prevention and the Treatment of Offenders
to which Sudan is a State Party.
The Sudan Human Rights
Organization Cairo Office is aware that Sharia has been a genuine
component of Sudan laws since they were put in force based on the 1860s
Penal Code of India, which, in turn, was influenced by Islamic Law. The
presently theocratic criminal justice system of the Sudan Government,
however, failed to use the tradition of Ikhtilaf (different viewpoints)
to issue flexible Fatawi (scholarly decisions) to insure contemporary
harmony of the Sharia with societal change, cultural and religious
diversity, and community needs.
In the absence of
Ijtihad and the prevalence of the Zahiriya authoritative madhaib [schools
of jurisprudence], the rights of non-Muslims have never been equally observed
on equal footing with their Muslim counterparts in the same homeland,
although earlier Mujatahids [scholars] of Islam, for example, Abu Hanifa,
the famous jurist, decided that Muslims are obliged to respect the right
to wine drinking and wine ownership by non-Muslims in a Muslim State.
Equally the Ahnaf jurists exempted non-Muslims from the application of
hudud because the belief in Islam is a pre-condition for the application.
SHRO-Cairo has repeatedly
criticized the dehumanizing, unscholarly, politicized version of the Sudan
Criminal Law and Penal Code (see the shro-cairo.org). The failure of Sharia
jurists to keep pace with modernity with respect to the insurance of equal
rights to the women and the non-Muslim citizens increased the national
tension between Sharia supporters and the general public that is
deeply concerned with the equality of citizenship as a foremost constitutional
right, regardless of faith, gender, or race.
Return to the 1974
Laws
Earlier in 1974, a
new penal code accompanied by a code of criminal procedure was enacted.
The new code maintained most provisions of the repealed penal laws. These
laws included significant amendments and approaches guided by the
knowledge and experience of Sudanese jurisprudence in the course of the
effort made to correlate the context of law with the needs of Sudanese
customs, values, and traditions that did accumulate during seventy years
of legal application. This process also took advantage of modern jurisprudence
and legal theory.
Among many other changes,
the age of consent was up-graded to be eighteen years in certain crimes;
the age of criminal responsibility became ten years instead of seven.
Whipping was abolished, although flogging unfortunately continued to exist
as a recognized punishment. The execution of a person whose age was less
than 18 years and/or above the age of seventy years was prohibited. Imprisonment
for a juvenile whose age was less than 16 years was also prohibited.
In the 1974 law, culpable
homicide was not considered murder if committed by a person deprived of
self-control due to a mental disturbance. A woman who caused her self
to miscarry in order to avoid shame was imposed lesser punishment than
other cases of voluntary abortion, and a wifes sexual intercourse
with another person was criminalized, regardless of the consent or connivance
of the husband. Because of these humanitarian provisions, the democratic
Bar Association (before the June 89 coup) adopted the 1974 laws instead
of the notorious September Laws 1983 until a democratic legislation would
consider a new criminal system largely based on international norms and
the Sudanese precedence system of adjudication.
Judicial Tensions
and Renewed War in Pastoral Sudan
The Sudan criminal
justice equally failed to resolve armed striving in the pastoral areas
of the country between diverse ethnic groups. The country continues to
suffer interethnic conflicts, which are based on the competition of pastoral
groups to ensure water and pasture for their animals in the Savannah and
semi-desert belt.
The Baggara (i.e.,
cattle herders) of Kordofan and Darfur regions together with the Dinka
and other Nilotic groups of the Southern part of the country constitute
major sections of the pastoral population. Because of the limited natural
resources of pastoral land, in addition to a serious shortage of services
and facilities, clashes and disputes occur frequently between individuals
and groups. Very often, small disputes develop into large-scale armed
conflicts and feuds with gross losses of life and property. And yet, the
failure of development administration and planning in integrating the
socio-cultural and politico-economic needs of pastoral people into regional
development remains a major factor for the on-going armed conflict in
these areas.
Another significant
factor for the continuity of violence in the Savannah belt of the Sudan
relates to the expansion of mechanized farms at the expense of pasture.
This factor articulates clearly through the correlations of internal migration
with the displacement of indigenous groups from the traditional agricultural
sector. The grievances of many nomadic groups (such as Rufa, Kennana,
and the Ingessana peoples among many other indigenous groups) were escalated
further by the exclusion of their animal husbandry from the allotment
of mechanized schemes. Moreover, many government officials abused the
executive power to expropriate land from these traditional groups, especially
in the Blue Nile, White Nile, and Upper Nile provinces.
Despite the serious
lacking of development programs that are urgently needed to establish
a permanent and just solution for the existing conflicts due to wasteful
military and security spending by the presidency, Aside from failures
of the security-influenced criminal justice, Sudanese indigenous adjudication
has relatively managed to reduce the conflict between legal norms and
institutions and the indigenous traditions that influence the popular
handling of socio-legal problems. Still, the major ethnic, economic, and
political tensions that motivate group violence are largely unresolved.
Theoretically, compensation
of the injured party in some cases with blood money is allowable in Islamic
Sharia Law, which theoretically encourages the groups in conflict
to resolve their tensions peacefully. The application of government policies
in this concern, however, has not resolved the protracted ethno-political
tensions in Darfur or the other parts of the country. In addition to the
negligence of development projects by the succeeding governments, Sharia
punishments were excessively implemented by the Khartoum rulers to terrorize
the political opposition of Darfur people who have consistently rejected
the Brotherhood rulers before and after the June coup.
As the cases of many
Sudanese African groups indicate, the June 89 government favored the Arab-descent
party in the tribal conflicts between the Arab and the non-Arab Sudanese
of Darfur and the Nuba Mountains. Sharia Law was abused by Sudan
Government to discriminate between citizens on the basis of faith, race,
and descent. The massacres of the Zagawa and Masalit people by Arab militias,
the extra-judicial killing and displacement of Nilotic groups by the government-controlled
Peoples Defense Forces, and the enslavement of Nuba and Dinka children
and women by Brotherhood-militias in the war-affected areas were never
fully controlled or compensated.
Most recently, the
courts of DarFur sentenced tens of citizens with death sentences, amputations,
or heavy fines. The courts applied the Penal Code and Criminal Procedure
which, as illustrated in this Memo, did not guarantee the minimum standards
of the due process of justice. The insistence of the Sudan Government
to implement these laws, despite the continuous failures they produced,
must be seriously challenged and then wholly replaced with humanitarian
provisions as recommended by the democratic Bar Association (1985-1988),
human rights and civil society groups, as well as the Human Rights Commission
and the International Community.
Immediate Criminal
justice Reform
Constitutionally,
Sudan Laws as they exist today must be liberated from the unabated abusive
application of Brotherhood jurisprudence to a non-partisan system of justice
that should be mainly based on international human rights norms to guarantee
the internationally recognized standards of crime prevention and the treatment
of offenders.
In the meantime, the
government must insure the freedom of religious beliefs without discrimination
of any form for the non-Muslim population to enjoy their own faith and
personal freedoms apart from any Muslim patronage or dictates.
Towards the application
of principled, community-based and/or individual educational activities
to improve the humanitarian life of the Muslim society, the Muslims concerned
with Sharia should abide-by the Prophets humanitarian teachings
via the Ijtihad approach, if they are interested, rather than the Brotherhoods
rigidity or the Zahiriya narrow-minded fiqh.
For immediate action:
With reference to
the pending case of the Sudanese woman Intisar Abd al-Gaddir who,
accused of adultery, is susceptible to flogging by provision of the penal
code, the Organization asks the Sudan Judiciary to stop flogging or stoning
a citizen accused of adultery by the enforceable Sharia La. As is
appropriate, the judiciary must discharge the case by encouraging the
accused to withdraw admission of the guilt, at any given moment of the
judicial process, in accordance with the Prophets deeds.
The Organization asks the government to stop executing death penalties
on the recently tried citizens of DarFur in compliance with the local
adjudication of the indigenous population that emphasizes blood money
compensation instead of killing, as well as the international human rights
law that prohibits death penalties in principle.
To insure lasting
reformation of the Sudan laws, judiciary, and the criminal justice system,
SHRO-Cairo asks the Sudan Government to:
- Abrogate the Sudan
Criminal Law, procedure and penal code.
- Reinstate, as is
appropriate, all the judges dismissed by the June coup or the succeeding
presidency for political reason to their respective jobs.
- Establish new criminal
and penal laws based on international human rights norms in close collaboration
with the democratic opposition, the Human Rights Commission, human rights
organizations, and civil society groups.
- Abandon theocratic
orientation and abuses of Sudan Laws and Judiciary by the legislative,
executive, and presidential authorities.
- Assure independence
of the Judiciary by clear separation between the legislative, executive,
and judicial powers of the State.
- Reinstate the autonomous
Council of the Judiciary to run the judiciary affairs independently
from the presidency.
- Rectify the International
Agreement on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against
Women to promote the women status in society and state, and to protect
the womens rights in Sudan Laws and the criminal justice system.
- Stop the civil
war that is increasingly escalated by the government in DarFur by immediate,
consistent, and direct peaceful negotiations with all concerned regional
and national parties.
- Apply substantial
reduction of the military and security budgets of the State to be able
to allocate sufficient funding to promote the humanitarian conditions
of the displaced population and the other victims of civil war, as well
as the social and economic conditions of DarFur and the other marginal
regions.
- Eliminate the government
bias to the Jangaweed Arab-militias as a major cause of the armed ethnic
cleavages between the Arab-descent and African-descent citizens of DarFur.
- Strengthen the
human rights of nomadic groups in the other pastoral areas of Sudan.
- Modernize the indigenous
adjudication systems of Sudan Bedouins with democratic measures based
on indigenous sources, independence of the judiciary, and international
human rights norms.
Copies to:
Sudan Government,
Khartoum
Sudan Judiciary,
Khartoum
Attorney Generals
Chamber, Khartoum
The Sudan Bar-Association,
Khartoum
The National
Democratic Alliance (Sudan)
The SPLM Peace
Negotiating Team, Nairobi
The Human Rights
Commission, Geneva
Human Rights
Watch, New York
Amnesty International,
London
National Endowment
for Democracy: Washington, D.C.
The Arab Organization
for Human Rights, Cairo
The Arab Lawyers
Union, Cairo
Sudanese human
rights and democracy groups
* Many paragraphs
of this Memorandum are originally included in the SHRO-Cairo Project:
Encyclopedia of Islamic Criminal Justice (2004-2006).
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