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Sudan court jails 6 more artists for 'public nuisance'

  (Agence France-Presse)
Khartoum, Sudan
Sat, September 26, 2020

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Sudan court jails 6 more artists for 'public nuisance' Filmmaker Hajooj Kuka, winner of the Grolsch People's Choice Documentary Award for 'Beats of the Antonov' attends the TIFF Awards Brunch during the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival at the InterContinental Toronto Centre Hotel on September 14, 2014 in Toronto, Canada. (AFP/Jemal Countess)

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Sudanese court has sentenced six artists to two months in jail for "creating a public nuisance", a lawyer said Friday, bringing the total number convicted in the case to 11. 

Thursday's sentence, which also saw the group fined 5,000 Sudanese pounds (US$90) each, comes a week after the court issued the same ruling for five other artists, including prize-winning Sudanese filmmaker Hajooj Kuka. 

In August, Kuka had said on Twitter that he and others were "attacked during a theater workshop in #khartoum by islamists instigators. The police stood by the attackers and arrested us".

Defence lawyer Othman al-Basri told AFP on Friday that the assailants had accused Kuka and his colleagues of "holding mixed-gender workshops". 

The artists were taken to a Khartoum police station, where they chanted slogans including "Freedom, peace and justice," a catchphrase of the months-long protest movement that brought down president Omar al-Bashir in April 2019.

"All 11 artists were then charged with creating a public nuisance and violating public safety at a police station," Basri said, adding that the defense would appeal. 

The case has drawn widespread criticism from writers, directors and others in the film community in Sudan and abroad.

Read also: Gold-hunting diggers destroy Sudan's priceless past

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the body responsible for the Oscars, said on Twitter earlier this week that it "supports the efforts to release Academy member Hajooj Kuka" and those jailed with him.

Steven Markowitz, who produced Kuka's recent film "aKasha", slammed the charges against the Sudanese artists as "fake".

Sudan is undergoing a precarious political transition under a joint civilian-military government that was formed on the back of months of protests following Bashir's ouster. 

The strongman came to power in an Islamist-backed coup in 1989. 

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