The International Criminal Court (ICC) has urged India to arrest and
hand over Sudanese President Omar Al-Bashir, who is wanted on genocide
charges and expected to participate in the ongoing Africa-India
Summit. Bashir is accused of masterminding war crimes in his campaign to
crush a revolt in Sudan’s western Darfur region, a move that led the
ICC to issue warrants for his arrest in 2009 and 2010.
Along with at least 40 other African leaders, the 71-year-old
president is expected to arrive in New Delhi on Wednesday to attend the
Summit aimed at boosting trade and investment between the two
regions. ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda told newsmen that even though
India is not an ICC signatory, it should act as a UN Security Council
resolution had lifted Bashir’s immunity under international law and
urged all states to fully cooperate with the ICC.
“As states ponder over such matters, it is fundamentally important
not to forget the victims who deserve justice for the unimaginable
atrocities they have suffered,” Bensouda’s said late Monday. “By
arresting and surrendering ICC suspects, India can contribute to the
important goal of ending impunity for the world’s worst crimes.” She
added. Indian officials were not immediately available for comment, but
Foreign Ministry spokesman Vikas Swarup, when asked the country’s
position, told newsmen that “India is fully compliant with its
international legal obligations.”
This is not the first time the ICC has asked a foreign government to
arrest and hand over Bashir. South Africa, which is a signatory to the
ICC and obliged to implement warrants from the court, was criticised in
June for allowing Bashir to leave an AU summit, defying a ruling by its
own court ordering his detention. Sudan has previously accused the ICC
of being a political tool to target African leaders.
As the body had indicted Laurent Gbagbo, former president of the
Republic of Cote d’Ivoire, and Muammar Gaddafi, the late leader of Libya
on war crime. But Amnesty International India said the two warrants
against Bashir charged him with criminal responsibility on 10 counts,
including murder, torture and rape, and appealed to India to detain the
Sudanese president.
“As a country which aspires to a more prominent global position,
India must not turn a blind eye to these charges,” “The Indian
government must show true leadership by helping bring Omar al-Bashir to
trial.” India is the second largest exporter to Sudan after China,
selling everything from chemicals, pharmaceuticals and machinery to iron
and steel- Several Indian oil, gas and construction firms operate in
Sudan.
According to data from India’s foreign ministry total bilateral trade
between India and Sudan surged to 1.4 billion dollars in 2014 from 327
million dollars in 2005/06.
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