FEMA CLOSELY MONITORING STORMS AND THEIR DAMAGE IN MOORE, OK, AND **

HOMELAND SECURITY SECY JANET NAPOLITANO COORDINATING WITH OK GOV MARY **

OBAMA ADMIN URGES ALL THOSE IN AFFECTED AREAS TO FOLLOW THE DIRECTION OF **

FALLIN HAS DEPLOYED 80 NATIONAL GUARD MEMBERS TO ASSIST WITH SEARCH-AND- **

COMMUNICATION SNARLED BY THE STORM, AS LANDLINES AND CELL PHONE TOWERS WERE **

THE DEVASTATION FROM THE TORNADO WAS SO MASSIVE THAT IT WILL TAKE TIME TO **

AUTHORITIES ADD LIVE POWER LINES AND OPEN GAS LINES IN THE MOORE AREA POSE **

OK GOV MARY FALLIN (R) SAYS "HEARTS ARE BROKEN" FOR PARENTS WONDERING ABOUT **

FALLIN SAYS A COMMUNICATIONS CENTER HAS BEEN SET UP AT A CHURCH IN MOORE **

SHE ALSO COMMENDED RESPONDERS FOR WORKING AS QUICKLY AS THEY CAN TO SORT **

FALLIN ALSO SPOKE WITH PRES OBAMA, WHO OFFERED THE NATION'S HELP AND GAVE **

A CITY IN MISSOURI SENDS EMERGENCY RESPONSE TEAM TO TORNADO-RAVAGED **

A JOPLIN CITY OFFICIAL SAYS THE COMMUNITY REMEMBERS THE HELP IT RECEIVED **

THE TEAM OF A DOZEN OR SO POLICE AND FIREFIGHTERS WILL HELP PINPOINT AREAS **

FOR INFORMATION ON HOW TO DONATE: REDCROSS.ORG/OKC **

ALL PATIENTS AND STAFF "AMAZINGLY" SURVIVE TORNADO HIT AT SMALL OKLAHOMA **

MOORE MEDICAL CENTER WAS "PRETTY MUCH DESTROYED" BY MONDAY'S MASSIVE **

SOME OF THE HOSPITAL'S 30 PATIENTS WERE TRANSFERRED TO OTHER FACILITIES **

AT LEAST 51 PEOPLE CONFIRMED DEAD AFTER HUGE TORNADO HITS OKLAHOMA CITY **

THE DEATH TOLL INCLUDES AT LEAST 20 CHILDREN **

MONDAY'S TWISTER DEVASTATED THE TOWN OF MOORE, A COMMUNITY OF ROUGHLY 40, **


 

My FNC colleague Joshua Rhett Miller’s latest story on U.S. aid worker jailed in Sudan

EXCLUSIVE:  Sudanese-American peace activist Rudwan Dawod spent 45 days in a Khartoum prison, enduring brutal beatings and barely enough food and water to stay alive before a judge ordered him freed.

He’s already planning his next trip back to the war-torn region.

“We are building our country, we are building peace,” Dawod told FoxNews.com in an exclusive interview in Washington, D.C., where he stopped on his way home to Oregon, where his wife is expecting the couple’s first child. “We are making reconciliation between people, and this is what they’ve always needed, so I cannot stop from going there. I know it’s risky, but they deserve it and I really need to continue. They cannot stop me from going to [South Sudan].”

Dawod — a permanent U.S. resident accused of being an American spy while imprisoned in Khartoum — said the brutal treatment by the country’s National Intelligence and Security Service (NISS) will not deter his mission of rebuilding a Catholic cathedral in South Sudan that has twice been destroyed by Sudanese forces. The 29-year-old native of Darfur was arrested in Khartoum on July 3 while participating in a peaceful protest against the ongoing violence in the region and the Sudanese government’s austerity policies under President Omar Hassan Al-Bashir. Prior to his arrest, Dawod had spent a month in South Sudan facilitating resources to rebuild the cathedral that will serve 1,000 worshippers in Torit — and become a symbol of peace between Christians and Muslims in the African nation.

“They started beating me a lot with sticks, kind of like a strong plastic,” Dawod said of his arrest by NISS forces. “First they said, ‘We know you very well and where you come from.’ They told me, ‘We have been looking for you.’”

Dawod, a project director for Sudan Sunrise, a Washington-based organization that promotes peace and the end of oppression in the region, had traveled to Sudan to visit relatives and to renew his passport. He originally had no plans to participate in the protest, which was led by Girifna, a non-violent youth protest movement in the nation whose name means “We’re Fed Up.” He was the first person taken into custody at the rally of 1,000 activists and residents, he said, followed by an Egyptian journalist.

Dawod’s imprisonment attracted scant international attention, though FoxNews.com chronicled his plight as his case wound through the unpredictable Sudanese legal system. Even as he appeared in court to profess his innocence, Dawod endured regular beatings and interrogations behind closed doors.

“They were questioning me a lot,” Dawod said, adding that authorities believed he was an American spy. “I knew that they were just trying to charge me and try to punish me. I was just a symbol; they wanted to make the other people afraid.”

While in custody, Dawod said he was beaten daily for a week and was detained with six other men in a cell designed for one person.

“I was in a very small room and there was not anything, just a floor,” he said. “There was no sheet, no blanket or mattress or anything. There [was] not even any light and I was in chains even inside the little room.”

The harsh conditions didn’t break Dawod’s spirit, however. Instead, he felt sorry for his captors.

“I wasn’t really feeling bad at all, even when they were beating me,” he said. “I reached some kind of level … I wasn’t even feeling the pain of their torture or their beatings. I was even telling them I was not their enemy and that I didn’t see them as my enemy. The government was just using them to torture their own brothers.”

Some of the security forces seemed to enjoy Dawod’s suffering, he said.

“But when they gave me an opportunity to speak a little bit,” I convinced a lot of them that they were doing something crazy. If they’re a human being, they’re not supposed to enjoy someone else’s suffering.”

 

CLICK HERE to read the rest of the story on FoxNews.com.









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