Mr.
Moreno-Ocampo underscored
that the Council and regional organizations – such as the African Union (AU)
and the Arab League – must lead the effort to encourage Sudan to arrest the
two men and surrender them to the ICC.
“The
territorial State, the Sudan, has the legal obligation and the ability” to
arrest and surrender the suspects to the ICC, the Prosecutor said.
Although
“a degree of cooperation has been forthcoming” from the Sudanese Government,
to date, it has refused to allow for the questioning of Mr. Kushayb and Mr.
Harun, he told the Council. He said that he hopes that the Council can bring the
issue up when it visits Khartoum on 17 June as part of its weeklong mission to
the region.
“Today,
the Security Council recognized the need to emphasize and [remind] the Sudanese
authorities about their responsibility,” Mr. Moreno-Ocampo told reporters
after the Council meeting.
A
militia commander also known as the “colonel of colonels,” Mr. Kushayb
“personally led militia/Janjaweed during attacks” on four villages,
“presiding over summary executions and massive rapes,” Mr. Moreno-Ocampo
told the Council.
Mr.
Harun, who was appointed as Minister of State for the Interior and head of the
“Darfur security desk” in 2003, “recruited militia/Janjaweed and incited
them to violence with full knowledge that they, often in the course of joint
attacks with the Sudanese Army, would commit crimes against the civilian
population,” Mr. Moreno-Ocampo said.
Given
that Mr. Harun is currently his country’s Minister of State for Humanitarian
Affairs, Mr. Moreno-Ocampo told reporters that it is “unacceptable” that
“these people who were his victims are in his hands.”
In its
27 April decision, the ICC determined that there are reasonable grounds to
believe that the two suspects are criminally responsible for 51 counts of crimes
against humanity, including persecution, murder, rape and other forms of sexual
violence, torture and cruel treatment.
“The
key is their arrest and surrender,” Mr. Moreno-Ocampo said to the Council,
adding that his Office is finalizing its preparations for pre-trial proceedings
against the two men.
The
Prosecutor said that, in addition to the Darfur investigation which has been
going on for two years, his Office is also looking into current crimes committed
by all sides.
He said
that the Sudanese Government has launched “indiscriminate and
disproportionate” air strikes in Darfur from January through April. The ICC
has also heard reports that women who are internally displaced have been raped
when venturing outside their camps. It has also heard about local clashes which
in part have been allegedly motivated to reward people collaborating with the
Militia/Janjaweed.
Outside
Sudan, Mr. Moreno-Ocampo said the ICC is also looking into the spillover effects
in neighbouring Chad and the Central African Republic (CAR).
In
eastern Chad, he said that his Office has compiled information on reported
attacks on refugee camps and in the villages of Tiero and Marena in March. There
have been reported incursions by militia/Janjaweed from Sudan, as well as the
presence of Sudanese rebels in Chad and Chadian rebels in Sudan.
Meanwhile
in CAR, the ICC opened an investigation last month into crimes – including
massive rapes – allegedly committed between 2002 and 2003.
Mr.
Moreno-Ocampo voiced alarm that aid workers have been assaulted and beaten and
their vehicles have been hijacked, stressing that attacks on humanitarian
personnel are “prohibited under international humanitarian law and constitute
a war crime within the jurisdiction of the ICC.”
He also
expressed concern for attacks on UN peacekeepers in Sudan and AU troops. In the
period from early February to early May of this year alone, 11 AU peacekeepers
and police officers have been killed and five seriously wounded.
In a
related development, the UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS)
announced that the situation in Darfur last month was characterized by forced
civilian movement given increasing insecurity, rising tensions in camps, surging
numbers of the displaced and increasing targeted violence against aid
operations.
Almost
140,000 people have become internally displaced since the start of the year,
with at least 10,000 newly displaced in May, according to UNMIS.
The
Mission also called attention to the rising use of physical and mental violence
against non-governmental organizations’ compounds and staff.
The
Secretary-General’s Special Envoy for Darfur Jan Eliasson is arriving in New
York today and is scheduled to brief the Security Council tomorrow on his joint
efforts with the AU to revive the peace process, according to Ban Ki-moon’s
spokesperson.
The UN
and AU are expected to meet with Sudanese authorities in the Ethiopian capital
Addis Ababa on 11 and 12 June regarding the planned hybrid force, and the
Security Council will hear a briefing on the meeting’s outcome prior to its
departure for Africa on 14 June.
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