The prosecutor at the International Criminal Court
officially called for an arrest warrant on Monday for Sudan’s president, Omar Hassan al-Bashir,
accusing him of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity executed
during the past five years of atrocities in the Darfur
region of his country.
The prosecutor’s chase of the Sudanese president added
supplementary instability to the already hectic circumstances in Darfur. While some diplomats and analysts expressed their
concerns regarding the fact that the prosecutor’s actions would destabilize the
attempts of promoting peace and providing aid to the millions ousted by
violence, others said it offered new strength to compel the Sudanese government
to cease the clash in Darfur.
It was the first time the prosecutor of the International
Criminal Court had accused anyone of genocide. Furthermore, it was also the
first time the prosecutor had brought charges against a sitting head of state
since the court was founded in 2002. However, two other presidents, Slobodan
Milosevic of Serbia and
Charles Taylor of Liberia,
were indicted by other international war crimes courts, also while they were
state leaders.
When he made his request public, the prosecutor, Luis
Moreno-Ocampo, said president Bashir had “masterminded and implemented” a
strategy to annihilate three major cultural groups in Darfur, the Fur, the
Masalit and the Zaghawa. Luis Moreno-Ocampo added that Omar al-Bashir used
government soldiers and Arab militias in order to meet his targets and killed
approximately 35,000 people in the attacks aimed at the inhabitants of
different communities.
At a news conference at the court in The
Hague, Argentinean Luis Moreno-Ocampo
said he had presented his evidence to the three judges who will conclude
whether to issue the arrest warrant. A verdict is expected this autumn, lawyers
at the court said.
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