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Bashir At Arab League Summit Given Red-Carpet Welcome

BRIAN MURPHY   03/29/09 01:54 PM ET   AP

Bashir

DOHA, Qatar — Qatar's leader embraced Sudan's president in a red-carpet welcome Sunday as he arrived to attend an Arab Summit in his most brazen act of defiance against an international arrest warrant on charges of war crimes in Darfur.

For host Qatar _ a key U.S. ally that is home to American warplanes and more than 5,000 U.S. troops _ the Arab League meeting beginning Monday also showcases its desire to stake out a prominent role in regional affairs even at the risk of angering the West.

Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir had promised to attend the 22-nation gathering after assurances from members they would not enforce the International Criminal Court's arrest order issued March 4. But his lavish arrival sent an apparent message that al-Bashir will have a center stage role at the two-day meeting.

Wearing a traditional Sudanese robe and white turban, a smiling al-Bashir was greeted at the airport with an embrace and kiss by Qatar's emir. They later had coffee with the head of the Arab League, Amr Moussa.

It was a low-risk trip for al-Bashir with high symbolic value for his Arab backers, who argue that carrying out the ICC's arrest would further destabilize Sudan as the Darfur conflict between the Arab-led government and ethnic African rebels enters its seventh year.

Only Jordan and two other tiny Arab League members, the Comoros and Djibouti, are party to the ICC charter, but can take no action on Qatari soil. Arab foreign ministers have endorsed a draft resolution for the summit rejecting the ICC's arrest warrant.

ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo has said that al-Bashir should be arrested once he leaves Sudanese airspace, but it was unclear whether any military forces were monitoring his flight. The United States does not recognize the ICC's jurisdiction, citing fears that Americans would be unfairly prosecuted for political reasons. But President Barack Obama earlier this month denounced the "genocide" in Darfur.

The Sudanese government's battle against rebels in the western Darfur region has killed up to 300,000 people and driven 2.7 million from their homes since 2003, according to the United Nations.

"The president is performing his duties and is going to visit more countries either on bilateral bases or for regional meetings," said al-Bashir's foreign policy adviser, Mustafa Osman Ismail. The Sudanese leader also visited Eritrea, Egypt and Libya over the past week.

"What is required from all of us is to stand with our brothers in Sudan and its leadership in order to prevent dangers that affect our collective security," Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem said.

But the Arab ministers rejected an offer from Sudan to host an emergency Arab summit. Instead, Arab governments promised to increase diplomatic visits to Sudan.

The Doha gathering is another chance for Qatar to enhance its role as a regional broker _ with the growing confidence to occasionally break ranks with traditional regional heavyweights Egypt and Saudi Arabia and their Western allies.

In January, Qatar hosted a Gaza crisis conference that included two leaders sharply at odds with Washington: Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal. The following month, Qatar mediated preliminary talks between Sudan's government and the most powerful Darfur rebel group.

But Qatar's rulers are careful not to step too far from the Western-leaning fold.

The nation serves as a strategic military hub for U.S. operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. Qatari officials who have also invested huge efforts to become an international sports venue _ including bidding for the 2022 World Cup _ worry that a maverick reputation could harm their chances.

Human Rights Watch issued an appeal for Arab leaders to press Sudan to allow the return of 13 foreign humanitarian aid groups expelled in retaliation for the warrant.

The Arab League also "should not reward Sudan's behavior by supporting a suspension of al-Bashir's case, which would only encourage further abuses," said Richard Dicker, director of the group's international justice program.

___

Associated Press Writer Salah Nasrawi contributed to this report.

(This version CORRECTS that total number of displaced is 2.7 million.)

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DOHA, Qatar — Qatar's leader embraced Sudan's president in a red-carpet welcome Sunday as he arrived to attend an Arab Summit in his most brazen act of defiance against an international arrest w...
DOHA, Qatar — Qatar's leader embraced Sudan's president in a red-carpet welcome Sunday as he arrived to attend an Arab Summit in his most brazen act of defiance against an international arrest w...
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11:12 PM on 03/30/2009
After all Bashir went to Doha,Attended the A.L. summit and got the Arab solidarity for his case .
The ICC is a new form of international terrorism,double standard organization god knows how much mony Ocambo received for this.Bashir is not criminal.
02:34 PM on 03/30/2009
You know, some news I'd heard from NPR that was very poorly covered in this article? Egypt sent no representatives to this conference, and a large number of the participants sent no high-level representatives. Kind of kicks the legs under the whole "open arms" of the Arab League image.

Another fun fact in the article? If Bashir were to fly to the US, I'm not sure we could arrest him. In theory we could hand him over to the ICC but they have no jurisdiction so it would be completely voluntary on our part -- and I'm betting it's a precedent our government wouldn't be brave enough to set. As a purely fatuous thought exercise, if Bashir did come to the US, are there any legal grounds under which he could be arrested and either tried here, or sent elsewhere for trial?
09:00 AM on 03/30/2009
A red carpet?
Anyways, looks like the U.S. was involved in that Israeli strike in Sudan last week. http://www.governmentalityblog.com/my_weblog/2009/03/the-us-part-in-israeli-strike-in-sudan.html
06:37 AM on 03/30/2009
Bashir is hanging out with his fellow criminals. No one will dare touch him. He is a big criminal surrounded many famous criminals. It would be nice to get the punk arrested and tried.
12:49 AM on 03/30/2009
Let the Is-lame-ics fight each other like cheap hores in a souk.The world is better off for it.
01:22 AM on 03/30/2009
hummmm...Just like world is better off after USSR!
11:38 PM on 03/30/2009
The world is certainly better without USSR. And IsLame would end up in trashbin of history as well.
12:05 AM on 03/30/2009
Everyone, do yourselves a favor and look down the list of thread starters. Take note of who was /really/ responsible for turning this from a discussion about Bashir's status as an indicted war criminal, to a twin strategy of anti-Arab/anti-Muslim propaganda and an exoneration of Israel's war crimes. Take note of who /reall/y mentioned Israel first, and take note of the lack of respect these posters have for the American public at large.
08:26 AM on 03/30/2009
It's is always all about Israel to you, take a look at yourself.
09:02 AM on 03/30/2009
Chaos4700, you're pathetic. You should get you head examined, unless you're an Jihadist, then you need some other treatment.
10:30 AM on 03/30/2009
And here's exactly what I'm talking about. Not an ounce of civility or rationality in the pro-Israeli lobby. It's all bluster and crude remarks and religious intolerance.
11:57 PM on 03/29/2009
Its not about the ICC or anything else its about a guy who killed 400.000 people.
When Israel gets to that number , then you can talk or compare .
Until then,,, dream on
11:46 PM on 03/29/2009
Name a country that has global reach, and you can probably name 4 or 5 "unsavory" countries it deals with on a regular basis. The only people who get screwed over by this arrangement of course are the poor people in the poorer country, whose brutal "leaders" are kept in power by the richer country's largess.
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Haditup2here
8 Years of Insanity and now you're mad?
11:20 PM on 03/29/2009
Well, I guess like China, Sudan's resources are more important than the blood of those who are shed through gen.ocide-- but then again, the U.S. doesn't seem to have a problem with the continuation of providing Is.rael with their weapons.
12:52 AM on 03/30/2009
Because Is.rael is an important ally. Actually the only one US ever had in ME.
And most of the is-lame are a collection of corrupt chiefdoms and fanatiics who are held in check only by the fear of Western power.
Got it? Then get it.
01:23 AM on 03/30/2009
"Actually the only one US ever had in ME."

Because with "ally" like this you can never have any other ally!...Ironic?
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Haditup2here
8 Years of Insanity and now you're mad?
11:09 PM on 04/02/2009
Tell me this. What vital resources has Is.rael exported to the U.S? How many military operations have they participated in with the U.S? Better yet, how have they worked towards maintaining Global Peace (scratch that)? Well, let me make it easy for you since your grasping of logic seems to be limited. The country of Is.ra.el is a leech to the same extent that B.us.h is an id!0t -- and soareyou.

Got it? Then get it.
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skialethia
αω vs military might
09:04 PM on 03/29/2009
It really makes me laugh to see all the hasbara gang all congregated here screaming about the Arabs failure to enforce the ICC warrant against Bashir, when they and their belovedIsrael don't even recognize the ICC's authority!

We'll see how much they scream against the U.S.'s failure to enforce an ICC warrant against Israeltyrants and thugs who also committed crimes against humanity?

I'm sure they will be right at home with the Arabs position at this time.

You see what happens when you fail to be on the side of justice? It strips you of all credibility!
09:25 PM on 03/29/2009
"...You see what happens when you fail to be on the side of justice? It strips you of all credibility!..."

YES INDEED
09:56 PM on 03/29/2009
Thank you skialethia, no state has such an inherent right that they can freely and perpetually violate international law since inception (starting with the UN resolution, 181, that drew its first borders). After breaking over 60 UN resolutions, Israel would be hard-pressed to claim any rights at all!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bitsko
He of the smoldering eyes
09:02 PM on 03/29/2009
Ever hear of diplomatic impunity?
08:54 PM on 03/29/2009
Flashback Time:

"September 24, 2008 (WASHINGTON) — The United States will veto any UN Security Council (UNSC) resolution that defers the International Criminal Court (ICC) indictment of Sudanese President Omar Al-Bashir and other officials, a senior U.S. official said today.

“If asked—if forced to vote today—the United States, even if it was 191 countries against one, would veto an Article 16 [resolution],” Ambassador Richard Williamson, the U.S. special envoy to Sudan said at a hearing of the US Commission on International Religious Freedom."
http://www.darfurpeace.org/us-will-veto-attempts-to-defer-icc-move-against-sudan-president-official
08:48 PM on 03/29/2009
Any one who compares Darfur and Bashir to what happened in Gaza
cannot be taken seriously, not remotely.
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skialethia
αω vs military might
08:51 PM on 03/29/2009
Before you even try to post something that ridiculous, answer me this...do you recognize the authority of the ICC overIsrael and the U.S.???

Once you answer that...then YOU CAN BE TAKEN SERIOUSLY.
08:57 PM on 03/29/2009
You are dealing with marginally educated people who view the world through a very narrow ideological prism. They are very provincial in their world outlook (sadly only 20% of Americans have a passport....one can only imagine how few have actually traveled).
08:26 PM on 03/29/2009
The Muslim world is in a death spiral. The Saudi dominated Sunni countries are trying to unite against the Shia Iranian threat and there will only be further tension. And how about the Saudi soccer team beating the Iranians..in Tehran with Ahmadinejad watching...effectively extinguishing any World Cup hopes?
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DD1Prime
08:05 PM on 03/29/2009
The political statement against the world court is far less troubling than the apparent endorsement of GENOCIDE - celebrating the President of Sudan while he has tossed out NGOs and restarted his military offensive against the South of his country. Given the history of the Arab League, religious and racial solidary has proven far more important to them than legal or moral standards.