Sudan's Bashir Cites US Precedents Against It, Calls Lockheed
"Bizarre," Urged to Forgive JEM
Byline: Matthew Russell Lee of Inner
City Press in Africa: News Analysis
KHARTOUM,
June 5 -- The UN
Security Council Ambassadors were dressed-down by Sudanese President Al
Bashir
on Thursday, in harsher terms than the Ambassadors afterwards
acknowledged to
the press. After Bashir had finished his opening speech, all
journalists were
asked to leave, so that the Council members' questions and Basher's
answered
would stay secret.
Surprisingly soon after
this closed-door
meeting began, the Ambassadors emerged, some of them grim-faced, and
trooped
out to their bus. Sudan's Ambassador to the UN told Inner City Press
that the
procurement issue sprang directly from the PAE / Lockheed Martin no-bid
contract. He said that his president had told the Ambassadors that
Sudan would
never turn over any of its people to the ICC, particularly when a
member of the
Security Council also doesn't accept the jurisdiction of the ICC.
Back at the
Rotana Hotel, Inner City Press asked if President Bashir had spoken
about a
member denying ICC jurisdiction, and if so how the Council had
responded. UK
Ambassador Sawers, gesturing to U.S. Ambassador Alejandro Wolff, said
he'd
leave the response to the member in question.
There are others, Amb. Wolff noted. He then said
that since it involved
a Security Council resolution under Chapter VII of the UN Charter,
Sudan is
required to comply.
Inner City
Press asked for a response to a more specific
fairness question: since the U.S. has a veto on the Security Council,
it could
never be referred to the ICC by the Council. But that is how Sudan has
been
referred. Their reasons and our reasons
to argue jurisdiction are different, Wolff said. And then the official
press
conference was over, with nary a mention of the "local procurement"
issue which President al Bashir had raised even in the opening meeting.
UN's Ban and Sudan's al Bashir, American planes and contracts not shown
Sources who
were inside the meeting tell Inner City Press that Bashir specifically
attacked
the PAE - Lockheed contract in comments to the Council. Why choose an
American
company to build camps? he asked. Since the U.S. says that its
companies can't
do business in Sudan, why is the UN assisting a violation of a
sanctions
regime? He asked under what legal regime this was done, and he did not
get an
answer.
Bashir also
asked, even if Sudan does
allow Thai peacekeepers to deploy, why they would be
brought in on American planes? Since both the Lockheed contract and the
current
air transport plans are attributable to
the previous chief of the UN Department of Field Support, it has been
suggested
that the issues be revisited by the new DFS head, Susana Malcorra.
On the ICC,
Bashir said pointedly that Sudan learned it disregard from its
"elders," the United States. Bashir asked why, if the U.S. could
invade Afghanistan and Iraq, and fire missiles into Somalia, Sudan
can't act
against Chad-backed rebels who make an attack on Khartoum. The Council
wanly
tried to convince him to forgive, in essence, the JEM. This doesn't
seem
likely.
Footnote: Also
being revisited is the Council's
modus operandi in IDP camps. On Thursday at the Zamzam camp in Darfur,
only the
UK's John Sawers was able to get out of the staged meeting and talk to
some
displaced people, if only in the market. Other Ambassadors faced
questions of
why they were removed from the people, that no one knew who they were.
Several
expressed dissatisfaction at the co-head's "grand-standing," calling
it "the John Sawers show." Our take, in fairness, is that it's not
easy running events for four straight days. We'll be watching the
France / Ripert
show closely -- especially in light of word on the Khartoum street that
Monsieur R may not now by head of Peacekeeping. Watch this site.
* * *
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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