BFF-68 Defiant Sudan activist faces mounting legal woes

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SUDAN-RIGHTS-WOMEN,INTERVIEW-UPDATE

Defiant Sudan activist faces mounting legal woes

KHARTOUM, Aug 8, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Prominent Sudanese activist Wini Omer is
determined to keep campaigning for women’s rights, despite mounting legal
woes she says are aimed at silencing her.

Omer, 30, was with another woman and two men in February when police raided
the suburban Khartoum apartment where they were meeting.

She was later charged with prostitution under a controversial public order
law.

“We tried to tell them that it was a house and it was a normal meeting,”
she said.

“We told them there is no reason for policemen to break through a window
suddenly and accuse us of things like this.”

Despite her protests, officers confiscated Omer’s laptop and detained her
for five days.

When her trial began on July 24, investigators told her she could face more
charges, including espionage against the regime.

Such a crime carries the death penalty, although in early August Omer told
AFP she had not been formally charged with spying.

“I’m not scared to face the state in any court,” said Omer, who last year
was on a US government fellowship for young African leaders.

“What counts for me is that we pass our message to everybody in Sudan and
to the oppressive state institutions, and tell them that we are not afraid
and we are always ready to fight for our rights.”

At Tuesday’s session of her trial, police told the court that they raided
the apartment in February after keeping it under surveillance for two weeks,
Sudanese media reported.

“The police informed the court that when they broke into the apartment,
they found the four accused fully dressed and involved in a discussion,”
Omer’s lawyer Fateh al-Hussein told AFP on Wednesday.

The public order law targets mainly women, activists say, including those
selling tea on the streets of the capital.

According to activist Tahani Abbas from campaign group No to Women’s
Oppression Initiative, 15,000 women were sentenced to flogging in 2016 under
the legislation.

The decades-old law also imposes punishments including hefty fines and jail
terms.

Activists say that nearly every gathering of Sudanese men and women,
whether in public or private, can be a police target.

“Regulations like the public order law are tools used to harass activists
fighting for human rights and to instil fear in the citizens,” said Omer, who
is also a journalist and has written regularly on women’s issues in the
African country.

“When they target activists, it’s a message to them that they are being
watched and the state will suppress them.”

Omer was previously accused of breaching the law through “indecent
dressing” while waiting for a bus in Khartoum, wearing a headscarf, skirt and
top. The charge was later dismissed.

– ‘Keep fighting’ –

Despite the legal challenges, she has continued her campaigning work, which
began when she was studying anthropology at university a decade ago.

She was in court in May when a Sudanese teenager, Noura Hussein, was
sentenced to death for murdering her husband who Hussein says had raped her.

Following international outrage, an appeals court commuted the sentence to
a five-year prison term.

Omer at the time said the case illustrated how women’s rights needed to be
taken more seriously, in a country where forced marriage and marital rape are
prevalent.

She says Sudan’s legal system arbitrarily applies Islamic law along with
tribal traditions, and discriminates against women.

“By allowing child marriages and imposing restrictions on women, the system
wants women to be confined only to specific duties,” she said.

But Omer acknowledged that Sudan is witnessing changes, with social media
seeing growing debates on women’s rights.

“Questions about whether women have the right to dress the way they want,
whether they have the right to marry the person they want, are increasingly
asked now,” she said.

“I believe that change happens when you stand up and fight for your
rights… We have to keep fighting for our personal rights.”

BSS/AFP/RY/1715 hrs