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Al-Bashir Arrest Warrant Issued By International Criminal Court

MIKE CORDER   03/ 4/09 10:08 PM ET   AP

Bashir

THE HAGUE, Netherlands — The president of Sudan became a wanted man Wednesday when the International Criminal Court charged him with war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur _ its first action against a sitting head of state and one that could set the stage for more world leaders to be indicted.

President Omar al-Bashir's government retaliated by expelling 10 humanitarian groups from Darfur and seizing their assets, threatening lifesaving operations, a U.N. spokeswoman said.

Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said the United States supported the court's action "to hold accountable those who are responsible for the heinous crimes in Darfur." Up to 300,000 people have died and 2.7 million have fled their homes in the region.

U.N. officials in Sudan will continue to deal with al-Bashir because he remains the president of the country, U.N. spokeswoman Michele Montas said in New York.

In the Sudanese capital of Khartoum, the government denounced the warrant as part of a Western conspiracy aimed at destabilizing the vast oil-rich nation south of Egypt. "There will be no recognition of or dealing with the white man's court, which has no mandate in Sudan or against any of its people," the Information Ministry said.

Several thousand people waving pictures of al-Bashir and denouncing the court turned out in a rally in Khartoum. Some waved posters of chief prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo's face with pig ears superimposed to chants of, "Cowardly pig, you will not get to the Sudan."

Al-Bashir, who denies the accusations, drove through the capital after the warrant was announced, waving at crowds. Security was tightened at many embassies, and some diplomats and aid workers stayed home amid fears of retaliation against Westerners.

The decision by the court lays the groundwork for potential indictments of other heads of state who have been mentioned as possible targets of war crimes investigations, including leaders of other African nations and Israel.

"Head of state immunity no longer is a bar to prosecuting heads of state who commit war crimes and crimes against humanity during their time in office," said David Crane, an international law professor at Syracuse University and former prosecutor of the Sierra Leone tribunal that indicted Liberian President Charles Taylor and put him on trial in The Hague. Slobodan Milosevic was indicted while still president of Yugoslavia in 1999 by the tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.

Both Milosevic and Taylor were indicted by temporary courts. Wednesday's ruling is significant because the International Criminal Court is permanent.

Crane said the principle could even extend to former U.S. President George W. Bush over claims officials from his former administration may have engaged in torture by using coercive interrogation techniques on terror suspects.

Congressional Democrats and other critics have charged that some of the harsh interrogation techniques amounted to torture, a contention that Bush and other officials rejected.

The prospect of The Hague-based court ever trying Bush is considered extremely remote. The U.S. government does not recognize the court and the only other way it could be investigated is if the Security Council were to order it, something unlikely to happen with Washington a veto-wielding permanent member of the council.

The Security Council adopted a resolution ordering the International Criminal Court to investigate Darfur in 2005, leading to the charges against al-Bashir even though Sudan does not recognize the court's jurisdiction.

Richard Dicker, director of the International Justice Program at Human Rights Watch, said the ruling would likely fuel discussion about investigations of possible crimes by Bush administration officials.

Moreno Ocampo had accused Sudanese troops and the janjaweed Arab militia they support of murdering civilians and preying on them in refugee camps. He said the militia also waged a campaign of rape to drive women into the desert, where they die of starvation.

ICC spokeswoman Laurence Blairon said that in issuing the warrant for the arrest of al-Bashir for war crimes and crimes against humanity, the three-judge panel said he is suspected of responsibility for "intentionally directing attacks against an important part of the civilian population of Darfur, Sudan, murdering, exterminating, raping, torturing and forcibly transferring large numbers of civilians, and pillaging their property."

But the judges said there was insufficient evidence to support charges of genocide.

If al-Bashir is brought to trial and prosecuted, he faces a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.

The U.N. said the humanitarian groups Sudan had ordered expelled include Oxfam, Solidarities, Doctors Without Borders, CARE and Mercy Corps, and seized assets.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called the move a "serious setback to lifesaving operations in Darfur," according to U.N. deputy spokeswoman Marie Okabe.

Sudanese Vice President Ali Osman Mohammed Taha confirmed that 10 "associations" were asked to stop operating in Sudan. He said they used humanitarian aid "as a cover" to conceal a political agenda.

African and Arab nations fear the warrant will destabilize the whole region, bring even more conflict in Darfur, and threaten the fragile peace deal that ended decades of civil war between northern and southern Sudan.

China, which buys two-thirds of Sudan's oil, offered support for the African and Arab positions and urged the court to drop the warrant.

"China opposes anything that could disrupt efforts to realize peace in Darfur and in Sudan," Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang in a statement posted Thursday to the ministry's official Web site.

Some African nations reportedly threatened to pull out of the court in retaliation for a warrant. Thirty African countries are among the court's 108 member states.

In a show of defiance Tuesday in anticipation of the decision, al-Bashir told supporters, "We are telling them to immerse it in water and drink it," a common Arabic insult meant to show extreme disrespect.

Efforts to arrest the president could be put in the spotlight later this month, with al-Bashir still planning to travel to Doha, Qatar, to attend an Arab Summit.

"With this warrant the International Criminal Court has essentially put out a wanted poster for President Omar al-Bashir," said Dicker, the HRW official.

Crane predicted al-Bashir would eventually end up in The Hague.

"Omar al-Bashir will notice his standing in the world, his place in the African Union as well as his political support at home will begin to soften and dry up," Crane said by telephone. "People do not like to be seen dealing with an indicted war criminal."

Al-Bashir refuses to deal with the court, and there is no international mechanism to arrest him. The main tool the court has is diplomatic pressure for countries to hand over suspects.

Moreno Ocampo suggested al-Bashir could be arrested if he flies out of Sudan.

"As soon as Mr. al-Bashir travels in international airspace, his plane could be intercepted and he could be arrested. That is what I expect," the prosecutor said.

"Like Slobodan Milosevic or Charles Taylor, Omar al-Bashir's destiny is to face justice," Moreno Ocampo said.

Sudan refuses to arrest suspects, and U.N. peacekeepers and other international agencies in the country have no mandate to implement the warrant, and Sudanese officials have warned them not to try.

Asked why the judges did not issue the warrant for genocide, Blairon said genocide requires a clear intention to destroy in part or as a whole a specific group, and prosecution evidence failed to prove that intent.

She said prosecutors could ask again for genocide charges to be added to the warrant if they can produce new evidence. Moreno Ocampo said he would study the ruling before deciding whether to keep pursuing genocide charges.

The war in Sudan's western Darfur region began in 2003, when rebel ethnic African groups, complaining of discrimination and neglect, took up arms against the Arab-dominated government in Khartoum.

___

Associated Press Writers Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations and Sarah El-Deeb in Khartoum, Sudan, contributed to this report.

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THE HAGUE, Netherlands — The president of Sudan became a wanted man Wednesday when the International Criminal Court charged him with war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur _ its first ...
THE HAGUE, Netherlands — The president of Sudan became a wanted man Wednesday when the International Criminal Court charged him with war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur _ its first ...
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02:38 PM on 03/05/2009
Abusive leaders? Like George Bush?
04:17 PM on 03/05/2009
all dictators rely heavily on a villian,,,

and so does

Barack Obama relies very heavily on a villain
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0903/04/acd.01.html
05:10 PM on 03/05/2009
Obama is not a Dictator neither is he abusing his power of office like Bush did, no matter how long a bow you think you can draw. Sudan like the US are not members or signatories to the ICC. Unless the ICC prosecutor is making a point, that the ICC can still hold him responsible whether or not Sudan is a signatory.

Bashir might be guilty but until Bush and his cohorts and the others responsible for the Iraq debacle, the death and mutilation of millions the exercise is weightless. Unless they intend hauling Israel and those mass murderers responsible for the torture and ghettoizing of the Palestinians, the collective punishment inflicted, the racial subjugation, ethnic cleansing and genocide against a people whose only crime is that Israel covets their land. then the whole ICC exercise against Bashir will still look like a West beat up against under developed Sudan.
10:38 AM on 03/05/2009
Video: Failing Darfur
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bkaQVXgSIIQ&feature=channel_page
10:37 AM on 03/05/2009
09:48 AM on 03/05/2009
Why the International Criminal Court instead do not prosecute Bush or OImert for his vvar crimes?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mommadona
I paint. I blog. Therefore, I am.
07:40 AM on 03/05/2009
Ahhhh - Life mimics art once again...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-lj056ao6GE&NR=1
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zull2
I'm not as here as you think I am?
03:08 AM on 03/05/2009
The real problem here is China, but no one dares say a word against them. Heck, we get to bail out AIG with 30 billion more of our taxpayer dollars that don't exist primarily because China still has a lot tied up in AIG. Then China turns around and throws huge tariffs at our exports in order to protect their own economy even though they're supposedly supposed to keep those tariffs down like the US has. And here they are learning the United States' worst habit, propping up evil puppet dictators in order to get cheap oil.

Then again, you show any fortitude against China, and who knows...you could be starting up a whole new Cold War.
05:55 AM on 03/05/2009
You're absolutely correct. China also backs the North Koreans of course, but tell that to the posters here who believe it is AIPAC and the Dick Cheney who control the world..
01:14 PM on 03/05/2009
Actually, I think the problem is with the West. The West and the US do not play fair. They are a minority of the world population but what to consume and control the world resources.

China is simply looking out for its interest when the US and the West is trying to destabilize them like they tried in the past.

I think China is simply learning from the best. Use non-interference and by any mean secure resources for it growth. I think the West perfected this technique of supporting genocide whenever it serves the West interest.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fireslayer
02:40 AM on 03/05/2009
Time for the African Union to get a big aid package from NATO.

Time to end ethnic cleansing. Start here, But don't stop.

Time to declare Darfur an Internatinal Safe Haven.

Then move into the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza,

But don't stop there.

There is plenty of good work to be done in Montana and the Dakotas. And Chiapas, Michoucan and Guerrero. And about all that imminet domain in the West Indies. Sri Lanka, are you listening? East Timor might stand a little attention.

And how about the 4th and 5th Wards in Houston? 9th Ward of New Orleans, we are all ears..
12:41 AM on 03/05/2009
The ICC is such a fraud. It mostly European countries in it. I wonder if they ever going to issue a warrant on Bush. LOL. The ICC has no legitimacy and shouldn't be called International when it is really a front for Western imperalism. LOL.
02:13 AM on 03/05/2009
There are 39 European countries in the ICC.

There are 30 African Countries in the ICC

There are 24 Countries in the Americas in the ICC

There are 8 Asian countries in the ICC

There are 7 Oceanic countries in the ICC

While Europe has the most countries in it, non-European countries account for over half of it's membership. So suck it jerk.

Bay the way, glad to see you are in favour of genocide. Cheers!
01:10 PM on 03/05/2009
I am not in favor of genocide or hypocrisy. These organization are sole for the purpose for the West to exert their power upon weaker nations. That is why Bush or the US won't be facing war crimes charges.

It was racial superiority in the past, now it is "moral and ethical" superiority. Frankly, Europe and the West has none. So shove it.

I am glad to see your imperialistics and colonialist attitude still linger brightly in the West.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SPQR1775
12:28 AM on 03/05/2009
I agree with Al-Bashir, the "International Court" have gone only after ethnic leaders from the Balkans to Africa. Why not go after the Israelis, there is so many warrants file with the Court against Israel and yet they refuse to arrest anyone. Why, no arrest Bush for the WAR on Iraq, Israel for bombing the UN center in Gaza, the American School in Gaza and so many other lives distroyed. The Court and all these world body will fall very soon.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cobobs
10:18 PM on 03/04/2009
However Bashir wants to push it, it is a signal: the end of impunity, but it should not be confined to African rulers of small and weak states. Then, it would really be meaningful.
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pewty
Psych RN, & wisenheimer
09:39 PM on 03/04/2009
300k dead...and we went to war with Iraq because Saddam was a 'bad' man? Would bush eventually attack this country?
techjockey
Keeping My Gratitude Higher Than My Expectations..
08:14 PM on 03/04/2009
Post a big bounty on him & some creative soul(s) will collaborate with his prostitute, mistress, or other power monster vice to haul him in.

Win Win for the world...
07:53 PM on 03/04/2009
This might re-ignite the North/South conflict...severe instability throughout the Sudan...the Sudan might implode and thus, seriously cause collateral damage (destabilize) to neighbouring countries.

This will be difficult to tackle...
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07:22 PM on 03/04/2009
Its unprecedented - first president still in office being charged by the ICC. Nothing much will happen I expect, but its a start.

George Clooney said it much better on his blog.

"Nothing new to report—except the shame of what man can do to man. And the secret seems to be that the longer it goes on, the more tolerant all of us become of it."
08:21 PM on 03/04/2009
"...and the secret seems to be that the longer it goes on, the more tolerant all of us become of it."
Just like what has happened to the Acholi people in Northern Uganda...over 20 years of genocide and suffering in concentration camps.
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06:13 AM on 03/05/2009
good point. Admittedly, I did not even know about that.

Its kind of a segregation of sad. People around the world tend to react to things closer to home, that affect them directly. That doesn t make it right. But with all the overload of information we have access to, its difficult to take to the streets for every atrocity committed. I am not saying thats ok . To do nothing. On his/her own, the individual seems to have fallen into a state of paralysis. Rabbit-caught-in-the-headlights syndrome. We just have to keep paying attention, and making our immediate surroundings aware. Bring awareness back. Its not a losing battle. And every little step taken, is a step in the right direction.
07:20 PM on 03/04/2009
About Time!!! I was sick and tired of the Bush Admin saying "No, that's would destabalize the region!"

Guess what? It already is! Omar al-Bashir SUPPORTS the instability, he's funds groups committing the genocide? You think you can make peace with him? Arrest his ass!