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Sudan Tribune

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Darfur war crimes suspect transferred to Khartoum

January 17, 2009 (KHARTOUM) — A Darfur war crimes suspect wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) has been transferred to Khartoum according to a pro-government newspaper.

Ali Kushayb
Ali Kushayb
The Akhir Lahza newspaper quoting sources at the justice ministry sources said that militia commander Ali Mohamed Ali Abdel-Rahman, also know as Ali Kushayb underwent investigation.

However the sources said that the outcome of the interrogation “is inconclusive since they have not been completed”.

The sources did not say why Kushayb was moved to the Sudanese capital from the town of Nyala in South Darfur where he is believed to have been held in custody.

The newspaper said that the Darfur special prosecutor Nimr Ibrahim Mohamed will continue to hear witnesses’ testimonies after returning from Cairo where he will take part in a conference on crime prevention.

The judges of the ICC issued arrest warrants last year for Kushayb and Ahmed Haroun, state minister for humanitarian affairs on 51 counts of alleged crimes against humanity and war crimes. But Khartoum has so far refused to hand them over.

Sudan has appeared to be backing away from pledges made last August to prosecute Kushayb soon.

“Kushayb will be tried in Sudan’s domestic courts. He is under investigation. He will be held accountable” the Sudanese justice minister Abdel-Basit Sabdarat told the Associated Press from Cairo in October.

However he did not say when he the trial will commence or what charges will be pressed against him.

The Sudanese justice undersecretary Abdel-Daim Zumrawi told Reuters at the time that Kushayb has been detained in Sudan several months ago and that evidence against him is complete.

“The prosecutors have collected all the evidence against them. I am not sure whether it will be placed before a court…Kushayb has been under arrest for a long time” Zumrawi said.

But a report created by the Sudanese government in September and forwarded by the African Union (AU) to the UN Security Council (UNSC) made no mention of the militia leader being in custody or investigation being completed.

The report obtained by Sudan Tribune which was not made public states that on September 2nd the Darfur special prosecutor submitted his first report on his work showing that he has reviewed Kushayb’s case but that it is still in its early stages.

“The newly constituted investigation team perused the investigation diary of he report no. (2868) in which colonel Hamdi Sharafeldin, Ali Kushaib and others are named as accused persons, the committee after determining the unfinished process relating to this case visited Nyala and Ginena” the report says.

“In Ginena, they questioned a number of witnesses in the above case and decided to resume the questioning of other witnesses when availed”.

This was the only time Kushayb’s case was mentioned throughout the report.

The announcement of Kushayb’s detention came almost three months after the ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo announced in mid-July that he requested an arrest warrant against Sudanese president Omar Hassan Al-Bashir.

Following that Sudan has been looking into ways that would allow it to avoid confrontation with the international community over the ICC through conducting trials for lesser suspects.

Khartoum had long claimed that Kushayb was in custody since November 2006 for investigations into allegations of violations he committed during the peak of the Darfur conflict in 2004.

Sudan’s former Justice Minister Mohamed Ali al-Mardi told a news conference in Khartoum in February 2007 that “Ali Kushayb, along with two other individuals, was sent for trial. He was detained as a suspect, questioned, his statements were evaluated and witness statements recorded, and then the decision was taken to refer him to court”.

But in March 2007 Kushayb’s trial was delayed when the defendants filed an appeal with the Justice ministry after which Abu-Zeid told reporters that Kushayb’s appeal was denied that there is “sufficient evidence to proceed with the case”.

Shortly afterwards the Sudanese justice ministry ordered a ban on publishing reports or details relating to criminal cases on Darfur conflict and many observers at the time voiced skepticism over Khartoum’s seriousness to try perpetrators of crimes in the war ravaged region.

In October 2007 Sudan’s former foreign minister Lam Akol told the pro-government daily Al-Rayaam from New York that Kushayb was freed “due to lack of incriminating evidence against him”.

However Al-Mardi issued a quick denial to the Al-Rayaam report describing it as “false” without directly commenting on Akol’s statements.

The former Justice Minister was asked again by Al-Rayaam last November on the whereabouts of Kushayb and he reiterated that the militia leader was “never released” before saying that he refrained from commenting on the issue “because it is under investigation”.

In April the spokesman for the Sudanese embassy in London, Khalid Al-Mubarak was quoted by Voice of America (VOA) as saying that Haroun and Kushayb were not prosecuted “because there is no evidence against them”.

Again in June Amin Hassan Omar, a leading figure in the National Congress Party (NCP) and a state minister also confirmed Kushayb’s release.

The ICC Statute prevents investigation into crimes that were looked into by local judiciary under the concept of “complementarity”.

Sudan must prosecute Haroun and Kushayb for the same accusations brought against them by the ICC in order for the latter to lose jurisdiction over their cases.

Sudan has not ratified the Rome Statute, but the UN Security Council (UNSC) triggered the provisions under the Statute that enables it to refer situations in non-State parties to the world court if it deems that it is a threat to international peace and security.

(ST)

3 Comments

  • Akol Liai Mager
    Akol Liai Mager

    Darfur war crimes suspect transferred to Khartoum
    Khartoum is a wrong place for this man and his masters, however, Hague is the right place where they are wanted to clear their names from ICC charges.

    Admitting wrong doing and taking full responsibility of its result might bear genuine forgiveness from the victims and possiblly pardon from God.

    No man or a woman who live in our world of today that’s 100% perfect, but there are plenty of people who are always trying their best to be perfect by acknowldging other people suffering as a result of their acts.

    Reply
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