The African Union on Monday asked the United Nations Security Council to delay a decision by the International Criminal Court (ICC) on whether to indict Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir on war crimes.
”The AU requests the UN Security Council to defer the process initiated by the ICC, taking into account the need to ensure that the ongoing peace process is not jeopardised,” Nigerian Foreign Minister Ojo Maduekwe told reporters.
”We are asking for a delay within the rules of the Rome Statute,” he said at the end of AU’s Peace and Security Council meeting in Addis Ababa.
The UN Security Council can pass a resolution to defer for a period of 12 months any investigation or prosecution by the ICC and the delay may be renewed by the council under the same conditions.
”The AU invites the [AU] commission to take all necessary steps for the establishment, within the period of 30 days of this meeting, of a high-level panel made up of distinguished Africans to examine the situation,” Maduekwe added.
”We urge the Sudanese government to take immediate steps in investigating human rights violations in Darfur,” he said.
ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo accuses Bashir of personally instructing his forces to annihilate three non-Arab ethnic groups in Darfur, masterminding murder, torture, pillaging and the use of rape to commit genocide.
Last week, Moreno-Ocampo asked ICC judges to issue a warrant for Bashir’s arrest. If granted, which could take several months, it would be the first issued by The Hague-based court against a sitting head of state.
Arab League ministers have rejected the court’s move and on Sunday the group’s Secretary General, Amr Mussa, held talks with Bashir in attempt to stall possible war-crimes charges.
The UN says that up to 300Â 000 people have died and more than 2,2-million have fled their homes since the conflict erupted in February 2003. Sudan says 10Â 000 have been killed.
It began when African ethnic minority rebels took up arms against the Arab-dominated Khartoum regime and state-backed Arab militias, fighting for resources and power in one of the most remote and deprived places on Earth. — AFP