When Torture Survivors Turn the Tables
Posted by Enough Team on Feb 20, 2012
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Editor's Note: Activist, restaurateur, and guest blogger Magdy
el-Baghdady recently returned to London from Khartoum, where he was
detained in one of Sudan's most infamous prisons: Kober. He offered
this horrifying insider's perspective on the violence prisoners there
endure. Please be aware that some of el-Baghdady's descriptions are
graphic.

A version of this post originally appeared in English and Arabic on Girifna.com.

I am the first British citizen held by the government of Sudan as a
political prisoner in its notorious Kober Prison in Khartoum without
access to an attorney, and no permission to contact the British
embassy. I was arrested, brutally interrogated, and falsely accused of
being a spy and inciting an Arab Spring before being released without
charge. While I was not politically active then, I am now, because of
my ordeal and what I witnessed.

I was arrested on February 14, 2011, then held in four prisons in
Sudan and released without charge on April 23, 2011. I thought my
situation was unique; I came to learn this is the standard procedure
of the outlaw Khartoum regime led by President Omar al-Bashir, an
indicted war criminal.

The foreign men I met in prison from Chad, Jordan, Nigeria, Egypt and
India related their similar circumstances and experiences. We were all
tortured, beaten, starved, and intimidated to the highest degree
without respect for universal human rights. However, as horrible and
unconscionable as the brutality we endured was, foreigners have it
relatively easy, in comparison to what the Sudanese detainees must
endure. To witness the shocking treatment the Sudanese must go through
is deeply disturbing.

The brutal violence Bashir’s government inflicts upon his own people
behind closed doors is unspeakable. And that is precisely why I feel
compelled to speak, in order to help bring such suffering to an end.

In the Political Remand section of Kober Prison, everyone is tortured;
at least, I saw and heard of no exceptions. With my own eyes, I
witnessed men being taken from the cells, and returned later in the
day broken from systematic torture. There are rooms within Kober
Prison with tires hung from ceilings. Men are stripped naked and put
through the tyies. They are suspended and flogged for hours, sodomized
and burnt. It disturbed me that an officer from Sudan’s national
security service, or NISS, could do this to his own kind, to treat his
own countrymen this way.

In other rooms, there are customized ceiling fans that support the
weight of a man suspended from them. The officers strip the prisoner
naked, lower his trousers to his ankles and cuff his feet. They
suspend him upside-down on the fan and beat him with electric cables
and batons. This torture is to break the prisoner’s will, to soften
him so he will confess to anything he is accused of.

It shocked me to see that when men returned to the cells, they did not
complain of the beatings, and they did not cry from physical pain.
What actually destroyed their hearts was having the threat of gang
rape upon the women of their families repeated to them. I could see
these men would sign any confession, whether there was evidence of
their guilt or not, and even if they were innocent, to ensure the
safety of the women of their families. One inmate told me of the
techniques used, such a tube inserted into their penises and tied at
either end to stop them urinating and cause the utmost agony. Some men
had all their fingernails and toenails removed, and were stripped
naked and chained to the horizontal bars of the windows if they dared
to hunger strike.

While I was in prison, I was told of two 10-year-old children held
there. What possible political threat is a child to Bashir? I
witnessed for myself the beating of children. Two young boys who had
Western-style haircuts and were caught breakdancing were in the same
cell as me. Officers entered the cells with weapons and locked
themselves in. They held one child to the wall and used a thick
plastic pipe to beat this child’s legs. He was one meter away from me.
I had to sit and watch this officer systematically thrash this child
until the boy could barely stand, his thighs swollen. The boy was
shaking and unable to control his bowels. This officer was three times
the size of this boy. Never in my life have I heard or seen such a
crime against children.

I am ashamed to admit I sat there and did nothing. So now I am doing
something: I am sharing this boy’s story because he is in no position
to do so. And I’m asking you to listen and consider what you might be
in a position to do.

To mention what they did to me seems light in comparison. For eight
days, I was blindfolded, handcuffed, and shackled at the feet. They
took me to a wall outside the cells to a transfer area and beat me
across my back and forearms. I was punched in the face and shoulder,
and kicked in the testicles. They held me against a wall with other
men and performed a mock execution; they held the muzzles of their
weapons to the back of my head and cocked their weapons. I could hear
the click, and wondered if this would be my end. But it was just
another form of torture, and it did not end.

They starved us. I lost 40kg of body weight during three months in
prison. And I have a fractured right foot, burns on my left foot.
Shackles and stones cut my ankles while I was beaten. During the first
days, I must admit I felt sorry for myself and thought I was strong.
By the time of my release, I didn't feel nearly so strong anymore
after watching what happens to Sudanese people.

I am ashamed to even write about what happened to me, I have
suppressed the feeling of when I was hurt. I remember very clearly
seeing the savagery inflicted on the Sudanese though, which makes my
blood run cold. When I compare the treatment of kids half my size and
age, and the strength they had to endure it, I can only say further
how weak I feel in comparison to them.

The most important thing to say is: There is no permanent condition.
All things are destined to change. Revolution this time is possible,
because the time we are living in now is different from any other.
Social networking and communications provide a platform unlike any
other moment in history. We must all take advantage of this moment,
this opportunity.

We must stand up for universal human rights, and fight for the hope of
a better future for everyone’s children, if Sudan is to be a place
that represents opportunities for all Sudanese people, men and women
in all regions, of all ages, beliefs and political parties. I have
seen people willing to resist the Khartoum regime to the death. But
for me, the question is, how can we all work together to make Sudan a
place that we all want to live in? That is the question that must keep
Bashir awake at night, feeling isolated and weak. May we show the
world what happens when torture survivors turn the tables on this
despotic regime and rebuild Sudan guided by a vision of democracy.

Magdy el-Baghdady, 31, is a British restaurateur raised in West
London, who traveled to Khartoum, Sudan, in January 2011 to open a
food truck and serve barbecued and smoked chicken and chips on Nile
Street.

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