South Africa will on Friday seek to
defend its failure to arrest visiting Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir who is
wanted on charges of genocide, at an unprecedented hearing before international
war crimes judges.
It will be a humbling moment for
Pretoria, one of the leading voices in the creation of the International
Criminal Court, whose lawyers will be fending off accusations that it failed in
its obligations to the tribunal.
To the frustration of the ICC’s prosecutors,
Bashir remains in office and at large despite two international warrants for
his arrest issued in 2009 and in 2010.
He faces 10 charges, including three of genocide as well as war crimes and crimes against humanity in the western Darfur region.
The deadly conflict broke out in
2003 when ethnic minority groups took up arms against Bashir’s Arab-dominated
government, which launched
a brutal counter-insurgency.
At least 300,000 people have since
been killed and 2.5 million displaced in Darfur, the UN says.
Several victims of the lingering
conflict in the western Sudanese region, who now live in The Netherlands, will
attend Friday’s hearing which opens at 0730 GMT in the tribunal in The Hague.
– Long wait for justice –
The UN Security Council asked the ICC as long ago as 2005 to probe the crimes in Darfur where conditions remain “dire,” according to Monica Feltz, executive director of the rights group, International Justice Project.
The UN Security Council asked the ICC as long ago as 2005 to probe the crimes in Darfur where conditions remain “dire,” according to Monica Feltz, executive director of the rights group, International Justice Project.
The 10 Darfurians who will watch the
hearing are “hoping to see that their story is told, and that their voices are
heard, and that the international community still cares,” Feltz told AFP.
“They’re been waiting for over eight
years to see justice in this case,” she added, voicing disappointment the
victims were not granted permission to actually take part in the hearing.
The issue is centred on South
Africa’s refusal to arrest Bashir when he attended an African Union summit in
Johannesburg in June 2015, insisting he had “head of state immunity” and
allowing him instead to slip out of the country.
The judges will have to decide
whether Pretoria violated its obligations under the court’s founding Rome
Statute by not arresting him and handing him over for trial.
South Africa insists it was caught
on the horns of a dilemma: between its obligations to both the ICC and to laws
providing heads of state with immunity.
– ‘No-one is above the law’ –
The ICC’s prosecutors have hit back, pointing out that in the past South Africa told Bashir he would be arrested if he set foot in the country.
The ICC’s prosecutors have hit back, pointing out that in the past South Africa told Bashir he would be arrested if he set foot in the country.
“No one is above the law, even heads
of state,” insisted Feltz.
Friday’s hearing is “a historic
opportunity for the court to demonstrate that its charges must be taken with
extraordinary seriousness,” said Wanda Akin and Raymond Brown, two legal representatives
of the victims, in a joint statement.
They urged the court to send “an
unmistakable message that open defiance of its writ will not be permitted.”
The judges will return their
decision at a later date, and may decide to report South Africa to the UN
Security Council for eventual sanctions.
Although this is the first public
hearing of its type, last year the ICC referred Chad, Djibouti and Uganda to
the UN for also failing to arrest Bashir. So far no action has been taken
against them.
The Sudanese leader was a guest last
month at an Arab League summit hosted by Jordan — also a signatory to the Rome
Statute.
South Africa moved this year to withdraw from the court, angered by the case against it.
But it formally revoked its decision
last month after its own High Court ruled in February that it would be
unconstitutional.
Although the date of the hearing was
set late last year, it also comes at a moment of political tension in South
Africa as embattled President Jacob Zuma faces growing calls to resign.
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