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Dear Colleagues,

Thank you for allowing me to utilize our listserv to distribute this important statement and petition of solidarity, however I do believe awareness of this situation in Sudan and resistance to it is quite relevant to the academy for several reasons; also, the women's movements of Sudan have a long and very distinct history, which many of us in the global north are unaware of. 

It remains a horrendous reality that the current regime continues to target women and girls as part of its campaign of terror to retain power against a highly public and sustained demand for political and economic change. 

The statement below is quite well-written, informative and provides you the link to the petition for your signature.

Please feel free to distribute to your networks. 


AMEWS Statement of Solidarity with the Women of Sudan

AMEWS Statement on Sudan

 7 March 2019

SOLIDARITY WITH THE WOMEN OF SUDAN

 As the world celebrates International Women History Day on March 8, The Human Rights Task Force of the Association for Middle East Women’s Studies (AMEWS), an affiliate of the Middle East Studies Association (MESA), stands in solidarity with the women of Sudan, who have been at the forefront of the protests that started December 2018 and continue to this date. While Sudanese women and men initially protested the rise of the prices of basic commodities, such as bread and gas, protestors now demand an end to the rule of the National Congress Party (NCP). The NCP has been in power for the last three decades, during which the majority of the people of Sudan have faced oppression, militarization, and social, economic and political exclusion.  The regime in power has been particularly oppressive and violent toward women and girls in all parts of Sudan, including through rape as a tool of war, and through its infamous ‘Public Order’ and criminal law provisions that restricted women’s freedom of movement and imposed a dress code on women. The regime particularly targeted low-income women such as street vendors, and women in historically marginalized areas of Sudan such as Darfur, Southern Kordofan, and the Blue Nile.

 Women in Sudan continue to lead and to protest despite the regime’s use of excessive force, sexual violence against women and other forms of torture.  Detainees include key figures in the women’s movement.  Associations and Movements from across the Middle East, Africa, and globally, including the Middle East Studies Association of North America and the African Studies Association of North America, in addition to over twenty organizations from across the Middle East and Africa, have condemned this violence. In January 2019, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet also condemned the Sudan regime’s excessive use of force against detainees and has asked that the regime respects its people’s rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly.

Sudanese protestors have marked March 7 as a day to recognize and celebrate the bravery and heroism of Sudanese women.  We take this opportunity to express our support for the rights of all Sudanese, especially women and men to peaceful assembly and protest, and we honor their dreams and aspirations for social, economic, and political change and social justice, gender equality, freedom, prosperity, and human rights.  And we call for the immediate release of all detainees, especially women and academics. The African Studies Association has issued a statement concerning freedom of expression in Sudan; and twenty-two African and Middle Eastern human rights associations issued a statement condemning the use of force against protestors.

 Please read the following petition and sign if you agree with the content:

https://www.change.org/p/activists-solidarity-with-the-people-of-sudan-december-2018

 In solidarity,

The AMEWS Human Rights Task Force

Nancy Gallagher, Chair, University of California, Santa Barbara

Sondra Hale, University of California, Los Angeles

Nadje Al-Ali, Brown University

Anita Fabos, IDCE Clark University

Hind Ahmed Zaki, Harvard University

Angie Abdelmonem, Arizona State University

http://amews.org/amews-statement-of-solidarity-with-the-women-of-sudan/?fbclid=IwAR3vM0H7DQeTO8AQzXs43TOlb0u51QHx13adDneTUH4g-YuCnwMN2IlW1ek


Kevin M. DeJesus, PhD

Assistant Professor 

John Hazen White College of Arts & Sciences
Department of Social Sciences
Johnson & Wales University
White 507

8 Abbott Park Place
Providence, RI 02903
401-598-5131


Honorary Fellow

Center for Global Development

University of Aberdeen

Scotland, UK


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