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Africa Horn
Report: Top Sudan leaders had role in Darfur crimes
2005-12-13
Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir and 20 other government, military and Janjaweed militia members should be investigated for ordering, condoning or carrying out atrocities in the Darfur region, a leading human rights group said. The 85-page report by the New York-based Human Rights Watch, released on Sunday, documents through eyewitness accounts, government papers and its own investigations of their alleged role in committing war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur since mid-2003. "The Sudanese government at the highest levels is responsible for widespread and systematic abuses in Darfur," the report said. "The Sudanese government's systematic attacks on civilians in Darfur have been accompanied by a policy of impunity for all those responsible for the crimes."

The report was prepared for use by the International Criminal Court, which the U.N. Security Council assigned in March to indict individuals responsible for the abuses. Its prosecutor, Luis Moreno Ocampo, addresses the council on Tuesday but has not yet ordered any indictments. In addition, the rights group said the U.N. Security Council should incorporate the list of names in its register of suspects eligible for travel and other sanctions. The council voted for the sanctions nine months ago but has taken no action.

Tens of thousands of Sudanese have been killed since a revolt in Darfur began in early 2003 by non-Arab villagers who accused the government of neglect and repression. The report charged that Khartoum in retaliation armed Arab Janjaweed militia and drafted them into police and other security forces as they looted, raped and drove 2 million people out of their homes. The Khartoum government over the past two years has vigorously denied its affiliation with the Janjaweed and set up its own special courts to try suspects. But Human Rights Watch said the government has made no "genuine" effort to investigate, discipline or prosecute those responsible.

By early 2004 it was clear, even to some soldiers, that civilians were the targets, said the report, entitled "Entrenching Impunity: Government Responsibility for International Crimes in Darfur." One former soldier was quoted as telling Human Rights Watch that when he protested to his commander, he was told, "You have to attack the civilians." Although the Sudanese government probably does not have full control over all militia any longer, the report says the "out of control" state of affairs provides the government with the deniability it believes it needs to counter international protests."
This has been somewhat more transparent than glass from Day One. Anyone who's been fooled at any point regarding Omar's connivance in the atrocities has had to work hard at it. But we've seen the UN work hard to convince itself of five impossible things before breakfast before, so I haven't been surprised at that, either.
Posted by:Fred

#2  What blows my mind, is that this is the world that Mama D and other New Orleansians live in (or at least they want to believe they live in), and yet, this is right here in front of our faces and we can't face it. If Mama D and her ilk spent 1/10 the energy pursuing these goons (instead of Blame Bush(tm) all the time), on something that is a REAL travesty, the world would truly be a better place(tm).
Posted by: BA   2005-12-13 13:29  

#1  The report was prepared for use by the International Criminal Court, which the U.N. Security Council assigned in March to indict individuals responsible for the abuses.

Much as I'd like to see these Sudanese bastards hang, something seems... wrong, in having an NGO preparing a report for use by the ICC.

Then again, I shouldn't be surprised, since the intial set-up and staffing of the court was done with full consultation of the NGOs.
Posted by: Pappy   2005-12-13 01:49  

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