Sudan Pre-Indictment Frenzy at
UN, Gun-Jumping by Ocampo Alleged, AU in Town
Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of
Inner City Press at the UN: News Analysis
UNITED
NATIONS, February 12, updated
--
The pending indictment of Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir by the
International
Criminal Court was the talk of the UN on February 12. The New York
Times
reported that the decision to indict has been made. The ICC issued a
denial.
Ban Ki-moon's spokesperson was pelted with questions if the ICC
President gave
Ban a sealed envelope with the news -- denied -- and whether he last
meeting
with Bashir was as heated as portrayed in the Times. Inner City Press
caught up
with Sudan's Ambassador to the UN, walking the UN's second floor in his
national dress and cobra shoes, and asked him what he made of the
pending
indictment.
"They are telling us our country is too big,"
he
said, adding
that news of the indictment made "some brothers in Doha say we will
arrest
the president." Inner City Press asked who had made this threat.
"Khalil," he answered, naming the head of the Justice and Equality
Movement, which Sudanese troops recently faced down in South Darfur.
The UK's draft presidential statement on
that topic
is now officially
dead: it "did not have unanimity," Security Council president Yukio
Takasu said at the stakeout, confirming what Inner
City Press wrote two days
earlier, quoting a Libyan diplomat that his country would not agree
without a
paragraph taking note of the African Union's recommendation that the
ICC
process be suspended for one year.
ICC's Ocampo and UN's Ban in July 2008, Bashir indictment not shown
Inner City Press asked Sudan's
Ambassador if it had
ideas on who was the
New York Times' source?
"I think it was water-testing by the New York
Times," he said.
So they are working together?
"They are all conspirators."
Others says the Times was just desperate
for a
scoop. One wag quipped
this is the first instance of Carlos Slim journalism. Others cited Judy
Miller
and Jason Blair.
But even Sudan's Ambassador conceded the
indictment
would probably soon
issue. He said that ICC Prosecutor Moreno-Ocampo spoke days ago at Yale
and
said that the pre-trial chamber's work was done, and the indictment
would issue
in days. Inner City Press asked if this was taped, and the Ambassador
promised
a transcript.
Ban Ki-moon at his press
conference this
week expressed satisfaction that Sudan had only bombed the outskirts of
the
town in South Sudan, and that JEM had left. Sudan's Ambassador opined
that Ban
"wanted to say, I was advised not to talk to the President but I did,
and
look at the results I got. He did it for his own sake." He said another
phrase, but for diplomacy's sake we leave it out.
There is diplomacy at work. An Arab
League (and African Union) diplomat told Inner City Press that despite
the ICC denial, the decision has in fact been made, but some countries
are pressuring the ICC to hold off on announcing. If the Doha talks
between Khartoom and JEM are the reason, expect them to go on and on.
There will be a meeting between the Security
Council
and the African
Union and Arab League at 4 p.m. in the UN's basement. Watch this space.
Update of 4:02 p.m. -- In front
of Conference Room 8, Arab League's Samir Hosni says they have 7 votes
and
maybe Mexico and Turkey to stop the al-Bashir indictment. Meeting
begins.
Update of 6:54
p.m. -- meeting
breaks up, while Costa Rica's Urbana says they made a good
presentation,
France's LaCroix says, I don't think they have a majority. That is, for
suspending the indictment, Russia and China, Libya, Uganda and Burkina
Faso,
Vietnam -- and who? Turkey? Mexico? Mexico, it's said, is under
pressure in two
ways from NAM and G-77. More on this to follow. 10-4.
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