The ICC has
called for the arrest of Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir at an AU summit in
South Africa. Al-Bashir is facing international charges of genocide and crimes
against humanity.
Deutsche Welle, 14 June 2015
International
Criminal Court (ICC) prosecutor Fatou Bensouda said South Africa was legally
obliged to arrest al-Bashir and surrender him to the court at the summit
starting on Sunday in Johannesburg.
If South
Africa fails to carry out the arrest, the matter will be reported to the
court's assembly of states and the United Nations Security Council, she said.
Rights
groups have echoed the ICC call for al-Bashir's arrest.
"Allowing
President al-Bashir into South Africa without arresting him would be a major
stain on South Africa's reputation on promoting justice for grave crimes,"
Elise Keppler, acting international justice director of Human Rights Watch,
said in a statement on Friday.
But African
Union (AU) Commission spokesman Jaco Enoh-Eben said the AU would not compel any
member states to arrest a leader on behalf of the court, saying: "It's
like arresting yourself."
The ICC
issued an arrest warrant against al-Bashir in 2009, accusing him of war crimes
and crimes against humanity related to alleged atrocities carried out by the
military and government-backed militias in the conflict in Darfur.
Reported
arrival
Al-Bashir
was reported by various media sources to have arrived in Johannesburg to lead
his country's delegation to the summit.
Since the
warrant was issued, he has made most of his international trips to states that
have not signed up to the ICC, such as Saudi Arabia and Egypt. However, he has
also visited member states that declined to arrest him, such as Nigeria, where
he went in July 2013.
Sudan's
Darfur conflict, which erupted in 2003 amid an ethnic insurgency against
al-Bashir's government, saw 300,000 people killed and two million displaced,
according to UN estimates.
The
Sudanese army and government-backed militias - commonly known as the Janjaweed
- are alleged to have perpetrated heinous crimes against civilians, including
indiscriminate bombardment.
Al-Bashir
has always denied his or his government's involvement in the killing, and has
himself estimated the death toll from the conflict at 10,000.
Burundi in
focus
The two-day
AU summit is also due to discuss the political unrest in Burundi, where violent
protests have taken place against President Pierre Nkurunziza's plans to run
for a third five-year term.
The threat
posed by Islamist militant groups such as Nigeria's Boko Haram will also be on
the agenda of talks, as will the issue of migration, amid the current flood of
African and Middle Eastern migrants trying to cross the Mediterranean by boat
to Europe.
Nearly
1,800 people have drowned so far this year during the attempt, according to the
International Organization for Migration.
tj/ (AFP, AP, Reuters)

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