Africa Horn |
Sudan war crimes suspects surrender for trial |
2010-06-17 |
[Al Arabiya Latest] Two Sudan rebel leaders arrived in The Hague on Wednesday after surrendering to appear before the International Criminal Court on war crimes charges, the court said. "Abdullah Banda Abakaer Nourain and Saleh Mohammed Jerbo Jamus, both suspected of having committed war crimes in Darfur, Sudan, arrived voluntarily this morning at the International Criminal Court," a statement said. "Both suspects will stay at the location assigned to them by the court until their first appearance before the chamber" on Thursday morning. The men face three counts of war crimes allegedly committed in an attack on the Haskanita military base in north Darfur on Sept. 29, 2007, which claimed 12 African Union peacekeepers. The attack was allegedly carried out by fighters of the Sudanese Liberation Army-Unity under the command of Jerbo, and splinter forces of the Justice and Equality Movement led by Banda. "It is alleged that the attackers, numbering approximately 1,000, were armed with anti-aircraft guns, artillery guns and rocket propelled grenade launchers," said the court statement. "During and after the attack, they allegedly destroyed AMIS communications installations, dormitories, vehicles and other materials and appropriated AMIS property, including refrigerators, computers, cellular phones, military boots and uniforms, 17 vehicles, fuel, ammunition and money." A pre-trial chamber had found there were reasonable grounds to believe that Band and Jerbo were criminally responsible for murder, an intentional attack on peacekeepers, and pillaging, said the statement. Summonses for the men to appear were issued under seal in August last year. Arrest warrants were not considered necessary. This case is the fourth before the ICC involving alleged war crimes in Darfur. Arrest warrants are outstanding for Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir, former government minister Ahmed Haroun and militia leader Ali Kosheib. The ICC has turned down a prosecution bid to prosecute fellow rebel chief Bahar Idriss Abu Garda over the Haskanita attack, finding insufficient evidence to link him to the killings. The United Nations says more than 300,000 people have been killed since the Darfur conflict broke out in 2003, when minority rebels took up arms against the Arab-dominated Sudanese government for a greater share of resources and power. The Sudanese government puts the death toll at 10,000. |
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Africa Horn |
ICC asks Security Council for Sudan intervention |
2010-05-27 |
[Al Arabiya Latest] The International Criminal Court will ask the UN Security Council to intervene given Sudan's "lack of cooperation" in pursuing two senior government allies for alleged war crimes, according to a court document seen Wednesday. "After taking all possible measures to ensure cooperation", the court said, it has concluded that "the Republic of Sudan is failing to comply with its cooperation obligations ... in relation to the enforcement of warrants of arrest" issued in April 2007 for former government minister Ahmed Haroun and militia leader Ali Kosheib. Signed by three judges, the court document instructed the registry to inform the U.N. about Sudan's lack of cooperation "in order for the Security Council to take any action it may deem appropriate". |
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Africa Horn |
Sudan war crimes suspect to head province |
2009-05-09 |
![]() Bashir, who himself is wanted for war crimes in Darfur, issued a decree late Thursday appointing Harun governor of south Kordofan, where the political and administrative status of Abyei remains one of the most contentious outstanding issues in the implementation of a North-South peace deal in Sudan. Harun had been holding the position of minister of state for humanitarian affairs despite an arrest warrant issued against him by the International Criminal Court in 2007, accusing him and militia leader Ali Kosheib of war crimes in Darfur. |
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Africa Horn | ||
Sudan in "crisis" over ICC cooperation: minister | ||
2008-09-06 | ||
Sudan's foreign minister has said his country's government is facing a "crisis" of disagreement over cooperation with the International Criminal Court (ICC) whose prosecutor wants to arrest the country's president. "There is a crisis in the government, there is a very serious debate," Deng Alor told journalists after meeting his Dutch counterpart Maxime Verhagen in The Hague. "We hope we will reach a consensus before any further move is made by the ICC," the minister said.
"The discussion is still on ... there is not much time left" before the judges of the ICC decide whether or not to issue an arrest warrant for the president. This was expected to happen by mid-October, the minister said, adding that an indictment of Bashir could "affect" peace agreements in the country and cause further instability. Alor said peace efforts in Sudan's war-ravaged Darfur region and a peace agreement that ended more than two decades of conflict in the country's south -- Africa's longest civil war -- could unravel if the court orders al-Bashir's arrest.
Bashir has consistently refused to hand them over to the court. | ||
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Africa Horn | |
Sudan rejects ICC arrest warrants | |
2007-05-03 | |
The International Criminal Court (ICC) has issued its first arrest warrants over the Darfur conflict for a Sudanese minister and a Janjaweed militia leader accused of murder, torture and rape.
In documents released on Wednesday the judges said there were "reasonable grounds" to conclude that Ahmed Haroun, Sudan's secretary of state for humanitarian affairs and a former minister in charge of Darfur, and Ali Kosheib, a principal leader of the Khartoum-backed Janjaweed, were "criminally responsible" for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in Darfur. | |
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