The Sudan Liberation Army yesterday condemned the arrest by military intelligence in Wadi Salih locality in Central Darfur state, a number of its members after holding a major political symposium in Garsila and taking them to unknown places. The movement added that the arrest took place on Wednesday January 1 2020 while the whereabouts of its affiliates still unknown.
a statement signed by the movement’s spokesman, Mohamed Abdel-Rahman Al-Nayer, indicated that six prisoners of his movement still behind bars in Nyala and Al-Hoda prisons, and more than 20 detainees from the displaced camps who have been in prisons before the fall of the ousted regime of Omar al-Bashir still in the detention facility.
However, the Sudan Liberation Army, led by Abdel Wahid Mohamed Nour, held the transitional government in Khartoum and the local authorities fully responsible for the arbitrary detention and the safety of the detainees, demanding the immediate and unconditional release of its affiliates.
The movement added that such arrests are incompatible with the goals of the glorious revolution, considering that their detention is a dangerous response and a return to the methods of the former regime, stressing that the assassinations and apprehensions did not and will not stop the continuation of the movement’s activity in all the cities of Sudan.
The armed struggle movement warned that these types of arrests confirm that the ousted regime has not yet fallen, and still controls the major institution of the state , mainly the security and military services.
The statement further added that dismantling such institutions and extraditing criminals to the International Criminal Court is considered the first step in achieving the goals of the glorious December revolution, a matter that paves the way for a comprehensive and sustainable peace in Sudan.
Darfur 24) lists some of the detainees’ names as follows:
Musa Mohamed Harun Biya, Al-Tayyeb Salih Ishaq, Muhammad Yusef Al-Doka, Ahmed Abdel Rahman Shmo, Jaafar Abkar Khamis , Al-Taher Muhammad Sulaiman, Abdul Majeed Abdul Hamid, and Mohamed Mousa