Feb 21 2008

China defends arms sales to Sudan

Category: NewseXtreme Stormer @ 9:06 pm

China has defended its sale of weapons to Sudan, amid growing criticism of its alleged failure to help resolve the humanitarian crisis in Darfur.

China’s special envoy on Darfur told the BBC that Beijing accounted for just 8% of Sudan’s total arms imports.

Liu Guijin said the US, Russia and UK were the biggest arms exporters to developing countries including Sudan.

About 200,000 have died in the five years of conflict between rebels, the army and pro-Khartoum militias.

Mr Liu told the BBC that Chinese weapons were not fuelling the conflict.

“Sudan is the third largest conventional arms producer in Africa next only to South Africa and Egypt.
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Dec 04 2007

Teddy Row Teacher Back In London

Category: NewsKhushboo @ 5:36 am

A British teacher jailed in Sudan for letting her pupils name a teddy bear Mohammad arrived in London on Tuesday after being pardoned and said she had been well treated in prison and was sorry to leave the country.

A smiling Gillian Gibbons was met by her son John and daughter Jessica at Heathrow airport after her flight touched down at around 7:05 a.m.

“It has been an ordeal, but I would like you to know that I was well treated in prison and everybody was very kind to me,” Gibbons told reporters. “I was very sorry to leave Sudan. I had a fabulous time there.”

Gibbons, sentenced last week to 15 days in jail for insulting Islam, flew home from Khartoum with two prominent British Muslim legislators who had appealed to the Sudanese president for her early release.

Twenty out of 23 of them chose Mohammad — a popular boy’s name in Sudan, as well as the name of Islam’s Prophet — but a member of staff complained to the authorities.

Gibbons apologised for any distress she might have caused the people of Sudan. She has said she encountered “nothing but kindness and generosity from the Sudanese people”.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown, whose country has had strained relations with Sudan for several years, mainly because of the conflict in Darfur, said he was “delighted and relieved” to hear Gibbons had been pardoned and freed.

Two British peers, Baroness Sayeeda Warsi and Lord Ahmed, went to Sudan at the weekend in a private initiative to try to secure Gibbons’ early release.

Her pardon and release was announced while they were meeting President Omar Hassan al-Bashir on Monday and they left Khartoum later in the day.

Many Sudanese said they thought Gibbons’ action was an innocent mistake which could be forgiven after an apology.

Sudan’s influential Council of Muslim Scholars urged the government on Sunday not to pardon Gibbons, saying it would damage Khartoum’s reputation among Muslims around the world.

Gibbons thanked all those who had helped secure her release and said she was glad to be back in Britain and eager to spend some quiet time with her family.

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