[dehai-news] (GlobalPost) UN presence at Bashir’s inauguration spells trouble for ICC


New Message Reply About this list Date view Thread view Subject view Author view

From: Biniam Tekle (biniamt@dehai.org)
Date: Fri May 28 2010 - 07:51:28 EDT


http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/worldview/100527/omar-bashir-international-criminal-court-crimes-against-humanity

 Opinion: UN presence at Bashir’s inauguration spells trouble for ICC

Sudan government maintains that dignitaries at Bashir's inauguration,
despite ICC charges against him, means trial close to being over.

By Betwa Sharma — Special to GlobalPost

Published: May 27, 2010 15:54 ETUNITED NATIONS, New York — The International
Criminal Court was wounded by the defiance of Sudanese President Omar
al-Bashir who rejected its authority after being indicted last year. To make
matters worse, Bashir was re-elected and then, further rubbing salt in the
ICC’s wounds, key United Nations officials attended his inauguration in
Khartoum on Thursday.

The Sudan government, which never recognized the ICC’s jurisdiction, now
asserts that the presence of the U.N. and dignitaries from neighboring
African countries implies that even the international community is on its
way to dismissing the trial. No high-level officials from the West attended.

“It is doomed to fail like the League of Nations,” said Abdalmahmood
Abdalhaleem Mohamad, Sudanese envoy to the U.N. “We call it the Guantanamo
Bay of Europe since it has nothing to do with justice and fair play.”

The conflict between the ethnic tribes of Darfur and the predominantly Arab
government has been raging for nearly a decade. The rebel groups want
greater political autonomy and economic empowerment after decades of
marginalization.

At the height of the storm, the notorious government-backed militia, the
Janjaweed, killed and raped civilians while burning down hundreds of
villages. In March 2009, the ICC charged Bashir with war crimes and crimes
against humanity but not genocide.

More than 2 million people have been displaced. While large-scale atrocities
are no longer being perpetrated, the fighting persists. By some counts, the
death toll stands at 300,000 but the Sudanese governments put the number at
10,000.

“We believe attending the inauguration would send a terrible message to
victims of international crimes not only in Darfur, but globally, that their
suffering is being disregarded,” Kenneth Roth, head of Human Right Watch,
wrote in a recent letter to Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

The U.N., however, doesn’t appear to have a choice because it needs to run
two peacekeeping missions in Darfur and South Sudan. Ban insisted that his
representatives were at the ceremony only in their political capacity. “What
they are doing is not more than that, they are doing exactly within the
framework of their mandate,” he said.

The unfolding events also give credence to the theory that international
justice cannot be dealt unless backed up by the right political cards. Right
now, Bashir is a powerful leader and there is little anyone can do to
displace him.

“Someone has to arrest him and that kind of political support is not there,”
said Princeton Lyman, an expert at the Council on Foreign Relations, who
suggests dropping the whole ICC business for the moment. “This is a very
delicate and awkward situation but neither the U.S. nor the U.N. can afford
to isolate him [Bashir].”

<!--pagebreak-->

Although certain groups of the middle class and intelligentsia hope to
revive the arrest warrant in the future, the majority of the populace
especially the Arabs, choose to dismiss it as a bad memory.

While the chaos in Darfur persists, Bhaskar Chakravorty, an Indian
businessman feels safer in Khartoum than in New Delhi and gives Bashir
credit for it. “He had come to power through a coup d'etat yet he was no Idi
Amin,” Chakravorty said.

“The president is powerful. People respect power. He has made attempts to
reach to the people,” he added, noting the recent election results, despite
the irregularities, reflected the will of the people.

But for human rights groups, seeing U.N. representatives and other
governments welcome Bashir, makes even more graphic the failure to get
justice for millions.

“Attendance also risks signaling that your government is not committed to
the ICC's success,” Roth said, pointing out that it would send out a bad
signal before the first review conference of the ICC's Rome Statute set to
happen in Uganda in June.

But the U.N., more than any other institution or country, needs Bashir to
stick around in Sudan, which has expelled humanitarian groups before. The
U.N. sent its two chiefs of the U.N. peacekeeping missions, Haile Menkerios
and Ibrahim Gambari, to the inauguration.

“The fact is that Mr. Bashir was elected by the Sudanese people as the
president in the recent elections,” said Martin Nesirky, the U.N.
spokesperson. “It is a political event as well as a ceremony that involves
the swearing in of a head-of-state of a country where we have sizable
missions.”

The ICC, however, is fighting back. For the first time, the court asked the
U.N. Security Council to take action in the arrest of a former minister and
a pro-government militia chief from Sudan who are wanted for war crimes in
the Darfur conflict and are still at large.

The ICC did not mention Bashir but a special adviser to the ICC prosecutor,
Beatrice le Fraper, told the BBC that similar action might be taken for the
president and the “arrest warrant will not disappear.”

“It's very important that all those who attend the inauguration remember
that it is first and foremost the inauguration of a man who has been charged
with the crime of extermination,” le Fraper said.

On his last trip to brief the Security Council, chief prosecutor Luis
Moreno-Ocampo also announced widening his investigations to cover officials
who lied about Darfur. “My Office is considering the criminal responsibility
of Sudanese officials who actively deny and dissimulate crime,” he said.

Lyman noted that away from home, however, Bashir had not won any hears and
minds. “He has more credibility and power at home but it doesn’t change his
image outside,” he said. “He still won’t be able to travel widely away from
his country.”

         ----[This List to be used for Eritrea Related News Only]----


New Message Reply About this list Date view Thread view Subject view Author view


webmaster
© Copyright DEHAI-Eritrea OnLine, 1993-2010
All rights reserved