In Darfur, Displaced Hope Bashir Faces ICC Trial
that former
officials, including ousted president Omar al-Bashir, would face trial
under the International Criminal Court, has been welcomed by people in
the war-torn Darfur region. The charges against Bashir and three
others, include genocide and war crimes committed in Darfur after civil
war broke out in 2003. But Sudanese officials have also indicated the
trial might not take place in The Hague.
Mohamed Eisa was 12 years old when militias attacked his village in Eastern Darfur 10 years ago, killing his father and cousins, and forcing the rest of the family to flee for their lives.
He’s been living for the past decade in Western Sudan's Kalma Camp, the largest in Darfur for internally displaced people, with an estimated half-million residents.
Like most victims of the war in Darfur, Eisa blames former president
Omar al-Bashir’s government for the conflict, which the U.N. says has
left around 300,000 people dead and 2.5 million displaced since 2003.
The war that broke out in Darfur between the Sudanese government and
three rebel groups quickly turned ethnic as mainly Arab militias
targeted black Africans.
But peace is slowly returning to Darfur as rebels and the government have engaged in talks.
During peace talks with Darfur rebels on February 11, the Sudanese
delegation agreed that all those wanted by the ICC should be handed over
to stand trial for genocide and war crimes charges in Darfur.
For the displaced, like Eisa, seeing Bashir on trial at the ICC would bring some comfort to families like his.
He
says handing Bashir to the International Criminal Court could achieve
justice and also build confidence between the (warring) groups in peace
talks. The victims of genocide and historical repression, not to
mention the refugees and displaced people, says Eisa, could feel justice
if Bashir goes on trial.
The ICC charged Bashir with crimes in Darfur in 2009 but, Sudan refused to recognize the court’s authority.
Sudanese officials have indicated while the trial might be in front of the ICC, it might not take place in The Hague.
Information Minister Faisal Salih told the Reuters news agency handing over Bashir was one option. Another option would be the ICC coming to Sudan, he said, or the two forming a hybrid court.
FILE - Then-Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir addresses the National Dialogue Committee meeting at the Presidential Palace in Khartoum, Sudan, April 5, 2019.
One of Bashir’s
lawyers, Zain al-Abdeen Mohammed, argues Sudan’s courts should have
jurisdiction and are qualified to handle any cases related to Darfur.
"If there’s any accusation against the former president, the trial
should be in Sudan as there’s an independent judiciary system," he
said. "The alleged crimes in the Darfur conflict, including genocide
and war crimes, are included in Sudanese law. Binding Sudan to the
International Criminal Court is not a legal issue but a political one,
and they will legally resist it," he said.
Bashir’s supporters have protested handing him to the ICC, saying it would be against Sudan's sovereignty and the dignity of the army, which Bashir commanded for three decades.
Military officers in Sudan’s transitional government served in the Darfur conflict and stand accused of rights abuses.
General Mohammed Hamadan Dagalo, a former brigade commander in the Janjaweed militia that is accused of mass killings and rape in Darfur, is the deputy chairman of Sudan’s ruling sovereign council.
The
Sudanese Professional Association (SPA), which led the protests against
Bashir’s rule, argues Sudan’s laws and courts are not fit to prosecute
the former president or others for war crimes.
Bashir, who was ousted by the military in April after months of
protest, has already faced trial in Sudan and, in December, was
sentenced to just two years in prison for corruption.
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