First Spectrum:
For those who have tamed the darkness in their eyes, and a towering wound has grown in their consciousness, prisoners of loneliness at the twists of pain!!
It seems that the detention and investigation authority in Khartoum, controlled by the “Security Cell” and the “Special Action Forces,” is increasing its influence day by day. Although these are security entities operating in a vague and unofficial manner, they have been granted wide powers by the official state apparatus itself.
These cells consist of a group of security personnel whose mission is investigation and interrogation, and they practice arrest and torture against citizens, either on charges of cooperating with the Rapid Support Forces, or belonging to the Forces of Freedom and Change or Resistance Committees.
As for the “Special Action Forces,” they belong to the commander of the Bara Brigades and carry out killings and torture in scenes reminiscent of the worst chapters of repression in the country’s history.
What is most surprising and worrying about these forces, which operate with absolute chaotic freedom, is what sources revealed: the Sudanese police, although an official body supposed to protect citizens, transfers suspects to this cell with official letters from officers in police departments for investigation and detention, as a higher authority, as if recognizing it as a judicial authority.
This behavior raises serious questions about the extent of the infiltration of state institutions by Islamist political currents and their complicity in human rights violations!!
The detainees handed over to this cell are not held in known centers but are transferred to secret locations, and the brigades exploit citizens’ homes where they are subjected to the worst types of physical and psychological torture. Numerous testimonies spoke of the use of sharp tools, electric shocks, beatings, and deprivation of food and medicine, in complete absence of any legal or human rights oversight.
The security cell does not operate independently of the Islamic brigades but is considered their executive arm, using the war to justify repression in an attempt to silence any youthful voice demanding freedom, justice, or civilian rule. This alliance between religious extremism and security forces poses a direct threat to Sudan’s future and reproduces the system of oppression against which the people revolted.
What is happening today in Khartoum is not just individual violations but a parallel repressive system operating under religious and political cover, targeting youth as symbols of change. Transferring suspects to unofficial bodies and practicing torture outside the law represents a blatant violation of human rights and calls for a serious stance by both Sudanese society and the international community.
Everyone must realize that silence about these violations is complicity, and documenting them and holding perpetrators accountable is the first step towards justice.
When the police abandon their role, the street becomes an open arena for violations. Youth are arrested without charges, transferred to secret locations, tortured, and their families threatened with silence or the same fate. The state turns into a ghost, and institutions become empty facades, while unofficial security formations dominate the scene, unmonitored and unaccountable for their crimes.
The official letters sent from police departments to what is known as the security cell are not just papers but documents of condemnation, proving that the state itself hands over its citizens to the machinery of repression. The police are no longer the body that protects citizens and upholds the law but have turned, in an absurd scene, into a mediator delivering youth to unofficial bodies that practice repression and torture under the banner of the Islamic brigades.
This is no longer mere negligence but an explicit abandonment of duty and blatant complicity with a system that does not recognize law or human rights. These are not individual mistakes but a systematic policy managed behind the scenes and executed by hands bearing religious slogans but knowing neither mercy nor justice.
When the police abandon their role, the citizen is left only with fear, and the nation with a memory burdened by blood. But history does not forget, and justice, even if delayed, does not die.
Are we facing the force that controls political power, or the politics that controls the force!!
Final Spectrum:
#No_to_war
Words of condolence and sympathy from the Prime Minister of Port Sudan government to the people of Jebel Marra for their loss!!
Words alone are not enough.
Recommended for you
Exhibition City Completes About 80% of Preparations for the Damascus International Fair Launch
Talib Al-Rifai Chronicles Kuwaiti Art Heritage in "Doukhi.. Tasaseem Al-Saba"
Ministry of Media Announces the 10th Edition of 'Media Oasis'
Al-Jaghbeer: The Industrial Sector Leads Economic Growth
Unified Admission Applications Start Tuesday with 640 Students to be Accepted in Medicine
Love at First Sight.. Karim Abdel Aziz and Heidi: A Love That Began with a Family Gathering and 20 Years of Marriage