Tributes for veteran Sudanese human rights champion

Abdel Salam Hassan Abdel Salam, who was murdered in London last weekend, was a guiding light of Sudan’s human rights movement.

A poet and lawyer – in that order, he would have said – and an unbowed secularist, he was also an equally committed student of Islam and classical Arabic, who coined the term al mashru’ al medani, “the civil project,” as a deliberate riposte to the Islamists’ so-called al mashru’ al hadhari or “civilization project”.

The motto served well for his work in exile from Sudan, in London as a leading human rights activist and champion of rights for women and non-Muslims, northern and southern Sudanese alike.

He was found dead in his home in south London, apparently stabbed to death in the early hours of 12 March. Police told the Guardian newspaper they are probing any connections between his death and his work promoting human rights in Sudan and helping torture victims seek redress.

Formerly chairman of the Sudan Human Rights Organization, re-founded in exile, he was among the first to step up and make the case for human rights and democracy as integral to a lasting peace as the Sudanese civil war ground to its bitter end.

After working to ensure Sudanese human rights with Justice Africa and later the Redress Trust a south London rights organisation which helps torture victims around the world, he was able to return to Khartoum again, and lay plans to end his long exile and resume his work at home.

During his time with Justice Africa, they and he shared office space with Index on Censorship in north London.  Henderson Mullin, Index CEO and publisher at the time recalled him as a “gentle giant” much liked by all. “He was a warm hearted and quietly intelligent man whose work for peace and democracy in Sudan kept him passionate but rarely angry, committed but never intransigent.”

Colleague and friend Alex de Waal described him as an unflinching advocate for human rights. Abdel Salam was, he said, “one of a remarkable generation of Sudanese intellectuals… who possessed a vivid curiosity about the complexities and paradoxes of their country.” He had a keen sense of the social and political context for making those rights real, ready to both dispute and mock both the excesses of Islamist zealots, and those who were intimidated by them.

And colleagues from the Redress Trust said they would “greatly miss his depth of knowledge and commitment and the conviviality with which he enriched our daily lives.”  He was divorced and leaves an adult daughter.

Google poised to close Chinese search engine

According to an internal source quoted in the Financial Times, Google is “99% certain” to close the Chinese version of its search engine after prolonged disagreements over censorship laws. Last week  Google’s  Chief Executive Eric Schmidt confirmed that “something will happen soon”. In response to Google’s threats to shutter Google.cn, Li Yizhong, Minister of Industry and Technology, told the National People’s Congress on Friday that Google must “bear the consequence” of its “irresponsible and unfriendly” actions.

Pro-Tibet protesters arrested in Nepal

Thirty-four Tibetans were arrested in Kathmandu last Wednesday, for staging demonstrations. The protests, outside a Buddhist monastery and the Chinese Embassy, were commemorating the 1959 Tibetan uprising.  This crackdown on pro-Tibet actions coincides with an increase in security measures in Lhasa. 2,800 police officers have been deployed in the city in anticipation for potential violence this week during the second anniversary of the 2008 riots.

PAST EVENT: Our society will be a free society night

Music and comedy night in support of journalists in Iran – Friday 19th March 630pm-830pm
FREEWORD CENTRE, 60 FARRINGDON ROAD, LONDON EC1R 3GA
To reserve a place email [email protected]
Or call 020 7324 2570

Journalists Maziar Bahari and Masih Alinejad will be speaking in support of journalists in prison in Iran.

PLUS comedians Peyvand Khorsandi and Jodi Kamali
AND musicians Sahra Band and Roshi
MC Fari Bradley, Resonance FM

Index on Censorship has joined with leading international free expression groups to call for the release of Iranian journalists, bloggers and writers. Please show your support by signing the petition on the campaign site or Facebook and come to the campaign’s event this Friday at the Free Word Centre for an evening of Iranian music and comedy at the Free Word Centre, 60 Farringdon Road, London EC1R 3GA. To reserve a place email [email protected] Or call 020 7324 2570

SIGN THE PETITION
http://www.oursocietywillbeafreesociety.org
http://apps.facebook.com/causes/petitions/398

SUPPORT INDEX'S WORK