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Sudan Tribune

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Mbeki’s Darfur panel to visit Sudan neighboring countries

April 11, 2009 (KHARTOUM) – The African Union (AU) panel headed by former South African leader Thabo Mbeki is scheduled to visit a number of Sudan’s neighbors to listen to their views on bringing peace to Darfur.

The pro-government Sudanese Media Center (SMC) quoting a senior unnamed official said the panel will visit Chad, Libya, Eritrea, Egypt and Saudi Arabia for consultation and discussions.

The official added that the commission will seek to meet Darfur rebels and would later make a second visit to Sudan.

The AU panel formed last February has been tasked with looking into ways to balance accountability with bringing peace into Darfur and will submit a report to the summit next July.

They paid a visit to Sudan and met with Sudanese president Omer Hassan Al-Bashir as part of its fact-finding mission though the specifics of its work remain unclear.

The idea of the panel surfaced when the International Criminal Court (ICC) announced last year that it is reviewing criminal charges against Sudanese president Omer Hassan Al-Bashir.

The AU strongly criticized the ICC move accusing The Hague based court of being biased towards Africans and said that the arrest warrant approved in March, threatens peace prospects in Darfur.

The eight-member panel is comprised of three former African heads of state including South Africa’s Thabo Mbeki, Burundi’s Pierre Buyoya and Nigeria’s General Abu Salam Abu-Bakr.

Other members of the panel include Director of African Rights Rakiya Abdullahi Omar from Somalia, former minister Tiéblé Dramé from Mali, Special Envoy of former President Olusegun Obasanjo on the Trial of suspects of war crimes and human rights violations in Darfur Al-Hajji Mohammed from Nigeria, Judge Florence Mumba from Zambia, and former Foreign Minister of Egypt Ahmed Maher.

Some observers have expressed skepticism about the role of the panel saying its goal is to save Bashir from ICC prosecution.

The Sudanese head of state have praised the work of the panel last week.

“We thank the AU and the former presidents headed by Mbeki who came here … But we don’t want those Khawajas [Westerners]” Bashir told a crowd in Darfur.

Sudan has refused to recognize jurisdiction of the ICC which was empowered to investigate the Darfur through a UN Security Council (UNSC) resolution in March 2005.

A Darfur special prosecutor was appointed last year by Khartoum to probe right abuses committed in Darfur since 2003 but so far nothing has emerged on its findings.

A proposal for a hybrid court consisting of Sudanese, African and Arab judges was also rejected by Khartoum.

(ST)

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