From news reports:
The management of the federal Kober Prison in Khartoum North on Sunday [September 14, 2014] carried out the death penalty against two men accused of having killed Chinese workers in West Kordofan several years ago.
The members of the Darfur rebel Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) were sentenced to death on charges of murdering the five Chinese who were working at the Abu Dafra oil field in West Kordofan in 2008. 17 others were acquitted.
On 18 October 2008, a group of 35 JEM rebels kidnapped nine Chinese oil workers and a Sudanese driver at the Abu Dafra oil field. The bodies of five workers were found a few days later.
JEM strongly condemned the execution of the “freedom fighters” in Kober prison, stressing that “no JEM combatant had anything to do with the assassination of the Chinese in Abu Dafra.”
Jibril Adam Bilal, the spokesman for the movement, told Radio Dabanga that the trial, in which the two were convicted, was politically motivated. “It was directed by the National Intelligence and Security Service (NISS), and has nothing to do with the judiciary in the country.”
He urged human rights organizations to investigate and document “this crime committed against innocent people.”
On this day..
- 1812: Juan Jose Crespo y Castillo, Huanuco rebel
- 1568: Jan van Casembroot, Lord of Backerzele
- 1888: Alexander Goldenson, San Francisco obsessive
- 1979: Nur Muhammad Taraki, grandfather of the Afghan War
- 258: St. Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage
- 1814: Not William Beanes, anthem enabler
- 1459: Pietro di Campofregoso, former Doge of Genoa, stoned to death
- 1767: Elizabeth Brownrigg
- 1894: Enoch Davis, like a cur
- 2000: Cheng Kejie of the National People's Congress
- 1932: Paul Gorguloff, who assassinated the French President
- 2004: Mamoru Takuma, for the Osaka school massacre