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Home > Africa > AFRICA: Al-Bashir could get 12-month ICC reprieve

AFRICA: Al-Bashir could get 12-month ICC reprieve


AFP reporter

Wed, 30 Jul 2008 02:31:00 +0000


EGYPT and South Africa Tuesday expressed their support for a 12-month delay of efforts to indict Sudanese President Omar al-Beshir for war crimes at the International Criminal Court (ICC).

 

"We are both making efforts to find a solution and we are trying hard," said Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak at a joint press conference after holding talks with his South African counterpart, Thabo Mbeki.

 

"The case could perhaps be postponed for about 12 months during which something could happen to decrease the tension," he said on his first official visit to South Africa.

 

The African Union and the Arab League have asked the UN Security Council to delay a decision by the ICC on whether to arrest Beshir.

 

Libya and South Africa on Monday submitted a proposal supporting this to the UN.

 

Mbeki said Beshir's indictment "does not help" efforts to move forward the peace process between north and south Sudan, nor in the Darfur region.

 

"I want to agree completely with President Mubarak and we will be interacting with President al-Beshir sometime later this week. He (Beshir) had wanted to send an envoy to come and discuss this matter with us. And indeed, we will do this," Mbeki said.

 

The Sudanese president was accused by ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo of personally instructing his forces to annihilate three non-Arab ethnic groups in Darfur, masterminding murder, torture, pillaging and the use of rape to commit genocide.

 

He urged that an arrest warrant be issued against Beshir for genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur, where a civil war has been raging since 2003.

 

The United Nations says that up to 300,000 people have died and more than 2.2 million have fled their homes since the conflict erupted in February 2003. Sudan says 10,000 have been killed.

AFP



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READER OPINIONS

Zimbo • n/a
Subject: n/a
Wed, 30 Jul 2008 20:30:52
• Oh, yes. What a good idea. Why didn't we all see it before? Give al-Bashir more time to complete the genocide we all know he is guilty of.
Why do our leaders have to worry themsleves about an accused person? Surely if he goes whoever steps in will continue the peace process and there is no risk of repeat killings.
Almost like Mbeki saying the sanctions on ZANU PF will stop the negotiatiosn and lead to civil war. Is that an admittance that ZANU PF is responsible for the trouble and if we stop them enjoying the fruits of their 28 years in power then they will make things worse for us?
I pity the fool who buys into this African mediation and resolution nonsense. People are dying while they pretend to seek solutions.


Early Times • isaac_1212@hotmail.com
Subject: South Africa's Lead in fresh ideologies and paradigms for Africa
Wed, 30 Jul 2008 07:54:41
• The winds of change, described during the 60s by U. S. News and World Report, are indeed finally sweeping over the entire African landscape. And it is indeed gratifying to see an industrial giant once caught up in European colonial (goodbye Rudyard Kipling) thinking in the vanguard leading the entire continent toward fresh ideologies and workable paradigms for all of Africa, thanks to the good offices of the remarkable statesman, Dr. Thabo Mbeki. Showers of blessing to Africa!



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