Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Update on next trip to Sudan!

We are in the process of putting together a team of police officers and chaplains to return to Sudan March 27 - April 10, 2010. I am raising $2000 which will provide for the rest of the need for this trip and a start towards the need for our next trip. My goal is to be able to take teams into Southern Sudan once a quarter for up to two weeks at a time.

Our team will be working with Sudanese Police Officers and Command Staff in Juba, Southern Sudan. Our training will involve child protection programs, ethics, officer safety, mangement training, and community policing techniques. We also plan to take the team to Nyimbuli also in Southern Sudan where Safe Harbor has an ongoing work providing medical and food relief to surviving victims of the ongoing Genocide in Darfur.

You can read more and participate in helping us by going to our website at: http://policeoutreach.hqters.com/

Monday, October 12, 2009

Killers Sentenced in Khartoum, Sudan

Our team arrived in Khartoum in 2008 shortly after the murder of Mr. Granville and his driver. Some have asked if these men were really the killers since they were tortured. We do know that our FBI had agents working directly with the Sudanese Police when we arrived and that they did have some leads. Our hope is that they did sentence the right men.

The story is an example of why we covet the prayers of many when we travel in Sudan attempting to make a differnce and assist in helping the surviving victims of the continued genocide one man, woman, and child at a time. Visit our website to participate with us at http://policeoutreach.hqters.com/.

Sudanese to hang over US killing

The four men said their confessions had been obtained through torture. A Sudanese court has upheld a death sentence against four Islamists who shot dead a US envoy on 1 January 2008.

John Granville, 33, and his Sudanese driver Abdelrahman Abbas Rahama were killed as they returned from a New Year's Eve party in Khartoum. Mr Granville's mother had earlier asked for the death sentence to be passed. Under Sudan's Islamic law, the family of a murder victim can either request the death penalty for those convicted, forgive them or ask for compensation.

A death sentence was originally passed in June but some members of Mr Abbas' family then pardoned the killers, reports the AFP news agency. The four have always protested their innocence, saying their videotaped confessions were extracted under torture.

Mr Granville was shot five times while travelling in his car. After the sentence was read out, defendant Mohaned Osman shouted: "This sentence is not credible," and said the US had murdered Muslims, according to Reuters news agency. In a letter read out to the Khartoum North court on Sunday, Mr Granville's mother formally demanded the death penalty in order to "safeguard the lives of others from those who killed her beloved son". There was no option of life imprisonment.

The FBI had sent agents to help investigate the murder of Mr Granville, who worked for the US Agency for International Development. The incident shocked many people, including the small Western community in Khartoum. The Sudanese capital had previously been considered one of the safest in Africa. The BBC's James Copnall in Khartoum says there have been some concerns that the incident could prove damaging for the already fragile relationship between Sudan and the US. The Sudanese authorities condemned the attack immediately, and seem to have made resolving the case a priority, our reporter says.

Reprinted from: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/8302410.stm