Privacy Rights/History/Country sources/Sudan: Difference between revisions

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|contents=Privacy rights first appear in the [[Probable year::1973]]  Sudanese Constitution. Article 42 states “the private life of citizens is inviolable. The state shall guarantee the freedom and secrecy of postal, telegraphic, and telephonic communications in accordance with the law.” Article 43 protects dwellings in the same manner (The Democratic Republic of Sudan Gazette, “The Permanent Constitution of Sudan”). Today, these protections are combined into Article 55 of the [[Probable year::2019]]  Constitution, in which “No one’s privacy may be violated. It is not permissible to interfere in the private or family life of any person in his home or correspondence, except in accordance with the law” (Constitute Project, "Sudan [[Probable year::2019]]" ).
|contents=Privacy rights first appear in the [[Probable year:: 1973]]  Sudanese Constitution. Article 42 states “the private life of citizens is inviolable. The state shall guarantee the freedom and secrecy of postal, telegraphic, and telephonic communications in accordance with the law.” Article 43 protects dwellings in the same manner (The Democratic Republic of Sudan Gazette, “The Permanent Constitution of Sudan”). Today, these protections are combined into Article 55 of the [[Probable year:: 2019]]  Constitution, in which “No one’s privacy may be violated. It is not permissible to interfere in the private or family life of any person in his home or correspondence, except in accordance with the law” (Constitute Project, "Sudan [[Probable year:: 2019]]" ).


https://www.righttononviolence.org/mecf/wp-content/uploads/[[Probable year::2012]]/ 01/Constitution-Sudan-[[Probable year::1973]]- +-amendment-[[Probable year::1975]]. pdf
https://www.righttononviolence.org/mecf/wp-content/uploads/[[Probable year:: 2012]]/ 01/Constitution-Sudan-[[Probable year:: 1973]]- +-amendment-[[Probable year:: 1975]]. pdf
https://constituteproject.org/constitution/Sudan_[[Probable year::2019]]? lang=en
https://constituteproject.org/constitution/Sudan_[[Probable year:: 2019]]? lang=en




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Latest revision as of 22:12, 28 December 2022

What is the oldest written source in this country that mentions this right?

Sudan

Privacy rights first appear in the 1973 Sudanese Constitution. Article 42 states “the private life of citizens is inviolable. The state shall guarantee the freedom and secrecy of postal, telegraphic, and telephonic communications in accordance with the law.” Article 43 protects dwellings in the same manner (The Democratic Republic of Sudan Gazette, “The Permanent Constitution of Sudan”). Today, these protections are combined into Article 55 of the 2019 Constitution, in which “No one’s privacy may be violated. It is not permissible to interfere in the private or family life of any person in his home or correspondence, except in accordance with the law” (Constitute Project, "Sudan 2019" ).

https://www.righttononviolence.org/mecf/wp-content/uploads/2012/ 01/Constitution-Sudan-1973- +-amendment-1975. pdf https://constituteproject.org/constitution/Sudan_2019? lang=en