China Opposes Any Sudan Indictments, Would Support
Suspending, Darfur Threat Level Raised
Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of
Inner City Press at the UN: News Analysis
UNITED NATIONS,
July 11 -- With the prospect of
Sudan's president being indicted for war crimes as early as July 14,
Inner City
Press on Friday asked Chinese Ambassador to the UN Wang Guangya if
China thinks
such an indictment would be helpful to people in Darfur. "I don't think
so," Ambassador Wang said. Impunity is part of the problem in Sudan, he
said, but "there are more important problems" such as political
negotiations, humanitarian access and "peacekeeping modalities." Video
here,
from Minute 1:43.
This last
is a reference to
already delayed deployment of peacekeepers in Darfur, which was at
least
partially suspended on Friday by the UN, as confirmed
to Inner City Press by
Australia's Defense Minister Joel Fitzgibbon. Sudan's Ambassador to the
UN told
Inner City Press that the UN has raised its threat level for Darfur to
the
highest category, Four, and raised the level for Khartoum to Three. He
had just
met with Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, telling him "we hold you
responsible if our President is indicted." Mr. Ban, he said, remained
impassive. The idea of asking the Security Council to suspend any
International
Criminal Court proceeding against President Omar al Bashir has been
broached.
Inner City
Press asked Amb. Wang for China's view on this. "There are elements in
the
[Rome] statute," he said. "It depends on the Council... the Council
members have to take up this responsibility." Video here,
from Minute 1:43. This last is taken to mean that
China supports putting a stop on the ICC and prospector Luis Moreno
Ocampo.
People were racing around Friday at the UN trying to determine when
such a
suspension resolution would have to be passed: before Ocampo asks the
judges to
indict or between the request and the indictment? Or, as Ugandan
indictee
Joseph Kony of the Lord's Resistance Army has demanded, in exchange for
any
peace, after the indictment?
Ocampo in front of the Council, accusations
of grandstanding not shown
Inner
City Press ask this month's Vietnamese Security Council president Le
Luong Minh
if any request had been made to discuss ICC suspension. "Not in the
Security Council framework," he replied. Video here.
But,
looking forward, would the U.S., France and / or the UK veto any draft
resolution to suspend ICC proceedings? Inner City Press asked U.S.
Ambassador
to the UN Zalmay Khalilzad, but he said, "I don't want to
answer
that today." In fairness, the U.S. sponsored Zimbabwe sanctions
resolution
had just be vetoed by both China and Russia, and Amb. Khalilizad wanted
to
speak about their votes, and that of South Africa, which he called
"disturbing" as well as longing for Jacob Zuma to take over, click
here for that.
After the Zimbabwe
sanctions resolution was voted down on Friday afternoon, French
Ambassador Jean-Maurice
Ripert, when asked if the proponents miscalculated by calling the vote,
pointed
out that there were 9 votes for -- including, notably, Burkina-Faso --
and that
the EU can continue with its own moves against Zimbabwe.
Inner City
Press asked
about South Africa's statement that Bernard Kouchner's statement that
only a
government led by the MDC would be legitimate worked against passage of
the
resolution. Ripert bristled, saying he was only answering so Inner City
Press
wouldn't call him unresponsive, and pointing to a July 4 statement
referring to
the March vote in Zimbabwe. Then he left. Video here,
at end.
But the Kouchner
quote, by Agence France Presse,
was that "the government is illegitimate if it isn't led by opposition
leader Mr Tsvangirai."
Would France veto a
resolution to suspend an ICC indictment? We will ask the question.
Watch this site.
Footnote: Of Burkina-Faso vote in
favor of Zimbabwe sanctions, Sudan's Ambassador pointed to the
appointment of that countries former former minister Bassole as Darfur
mediator and said, "everything must be paid for." He said he no loner
favors expansion of the Security Council to include more developing
countries, after Burkina-Faso's vote, he prefers to stick with the
Permanent Five and their vetoes. "It is better to deal with the Devil
than the disciplines," he said.
* * *
These reports are
usually also available through Google
News and on Lexis-Nexis.
Click
here for a Reuters
AlertNet piece by this correspondent
about Uganda's Lord's Resistance Army. Click
here
for an earlier Reuters AlertNet piece about the Somali National
Reconciliation Congress, and the UN's $200,000 contribution from an
undefined trust fund. Video
Analysis here
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