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Sudan: Pro government demonstration as foreigner´security is guaranteed
2,000 pro government Sudanese demonstrated in Khartoum on Sunday to oppose international attempts to indict President Omar al-Beshir for alleged war crimes in Darfur. Yesterday, African Union also expressed opposition to such move by both United States and International Criminal Court (ICC). Some fear that indicting Beshir could trigger Sudanese forces against UN and African Union peacekeepers. Thus, as the demonstration unfolded, Sudan government assured foreign representatives at International Organizations that their life was guaranteed.
Sudan reassures foreigners as demo slams ICC 13/07/2008 16h55KHARTOUM (AFP) - Sudan vowed on Sunday to guarantee foreigners' safety as around 1,000 protesters slammed the United States and International Criminal Court for an expected indictment of their head of state. President Omar al-Beshir presided over a crisis cabinet meeting for two and a half hours in a bid to close ranks before the chief ICC prosecutor is on Monday widely expected to name the Sudanese ruler a war crimes suspect. Ministers rejected any move by the court to prosecute Sudanese leaders for alleged war crimes in Darfur, said state media.
"As for those who are here in the different diplomatic organisations, we don't think they are going to be under any pressure from the Sudanese citizens. Everything will be secure," said Information Minister Al-Zahawi Malek."Their lives and possessions and all these things are secure. The Sudanese people are very friendly indeed," he added when asked if Sudan could guarantee it would not ask UN officials or foreign diplomats to leave.
"We have this ICC resolution but we don't connect it. Everyone here, while they are in Sudan, will be safe," he said.Western embassies have advised nationals to limit unnecessary travel and the United Nations has stepped up its security levels amid fears that the ICC's move to charge the sitting head of state could spark violent retaliation.Western officials fear Sudan could expel members of the UN-led peacekeeping mission in Darfur or aid groups. Contingency plans have been made for an evacuation and non-essential staff have been told to stay at home on Monday.After the cabinet meeting, the information minister said that Sudan was thinking over what steps to take once a clear decision was announced in The Hague. He said the cabinet agreed to respond with "legal steps" and to keep the Sudanese public fully abreast of the developments. Around 1,000 demonstrators rallied in Khartoum outside the Council of Ministers before the crisis government meeting, angrily denouncing the anticipated charges at the government-sponsored protest.
Chanting: "Down, down USA" as well as Islamic slogans and brandishing banners reading: "Khartoum condemns Ocampo accusation" and "You are joking, Ocampo," in reference to ICC chief prosecutor Luis Morno-Ocampo. Traffic was jammed during the protest which one demonstrator on the sidelines said was instigated by calls on radio and television to support the president, who seized power in an Islamist-backed bloodless coup 19 years ago.Sudanese officials have been locked in emergency talks for days, requested an Arab League crisis meeting and summoned ambassadors to warn that the government will make a political response to any ICC move on its top members.
Foreign ministry spokesman Ali al-Sadiq said the authorities were stepping up security, particularly around the British, French and US embassies in Khartoum, and predicted "chaos" following any indictment of the president. Fears have been voiced that naming Beshir could trigger a military response from either Sudanese forces or their proxies against UN and African Union peacekeepers, and embolden Darfur rebels who attacked Khartoum in May. Sudan has warned that it could "destroy" the already stalled peace process in Darfur and even have a spin off affect on other African countries, which provide the bulk of troops to the UN-led peacekeeping mission in Darfur. The information minister on Sunday alluded to the travel ban -- which would accompany any formal arrest warrant of Beshir -- in preventing the president from pressing foreign diplomacy and other peace efforts outside Sudan.
Sudan refuses to recognise the ICC or arrest warrants issued for secretary of state for humanitarian affairs Ahmed Haroun and Arab militia leader Ali Kosheib. It says it has established its own court to try Darfur cases.The UN Security Council ordered the international court in 2005 to investigate those suspected of murder, rape and looting in Darfur. "Whatever the diplomatic battle, we are going to do it within the United Nations," said the foreign ministry spokesman. "We are going to work hard with our friends and peace-loving members of the Security Council to avert whatever might result from the ICC announcement." The African Union, which has far warmer relations with Sudan than the United Nations, on Saturday warned that ICC plans to prosecute government officials could jeopardise peace efforts in Darfur. Darfur rebel groups have expressed delight at the prospect of an ICC arrest warrant for Beshir.
Related story: AU: beware of Darfur 'charges'
Related sources: Sudan: Genocide charges a big mistake, Khartoum rallies to support Bashir
PS: Anonymous comments are not welcome as they promote bias and diminish Citizen Journalism. Just like anonymous sources, they impaired the right to information and distort notions on confidential sources




Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (17)
at 13:34 on July 13th, 2008
Foreigners safe? Tell that to the 7 UN peacekeepers killed and 22 wounded Tuesday in Northern Darfor.
at 13:44 on July 13th, 2008
Isn't a Highlight supposed to be an excerpt, not the whole darned article? Looks like the whole thing, reformatted, to me.
at 13:59 on July 13th, 2008
Thanks for asking PEP. I guess your question comes from traditional editorial thinking in journailsm. I also wondered it myself but NP explanation on Higlight says "Highlight: Share the news with the click of a button! Highlight grabs anything on the web you think is news" and "Just like your digital camera is your capture device for the outside world Highlight is your capture device on the web". Out of rpetect for other people´s ideas and thought, I personally like to ackowle enven journalist initials if prsent. As you may agree, it only talks about the web and takes in as much a digital camera. You are most welcome to add any other view, source or comments in the appropriate section of the story.
at 15:30 on July 13th, 2008
Read a bit further, to here.
It isn't "traditional journalism" that's at stake here--it's ethics (this is a general comment, not applied to you personally) and also the very real legal realities of copyright law and plagiarism.
Really.
at 14:18 on July 13th, 2008
PEP and Rahul, under the Good Stuff flagging rules in the NP guidelines for what is good stuff it states also what is NOT Good Stuff: "Only a quoted article or Highlight from a third party." But when even the Super Editors are flagging these types of postings it is easy to see how confusing this whole thing can get.
at 15:35 on July 13th, 2008
Yea, I know. Once upon a time I was told to not flag a simple highlight, but only to flag highlight if there was good commentary with it. Over time, I watched staffers merrily flag highlights with little or no commentary.
at 14:26 on July 13th, 2008
Thanks for your comments. Caoimhin, in the case you mention, it looks like Edmund Jenks wrote an original blog entry and then posted it to NP using the highlight tool. I think Jordan was justified in giving the story a Good Stuff flag.
at 14:40 on July 13th, 2008
You're right Julian, thanks for pointing that out! There is still a great deal of confusion and conversation about what is acceptable and what is not. Where do we get clarification?
at 15:20 on July 13th, 2008
The Good Stuff explanation page may clarify some of your questions. A basic principle is that any post that adds a personal perspective to highlighted news, be it through an interesting photo, short commentary, or link to related information, is a useful contribution. Does that help at all?
at 15:21 on July 13th, 2008
We can just humbly offer the tools, while you guys and gals find novel ways of using them. For example, we had a guy who used the voice report system to conduct an audio interview, and I sometimes use my own member page as a sort live-blog during my content shifts (The testing work would contain too many swear-words and wouldn't be professional).
at 15:32 on July 13th, 2008
OK, excuse me for interrupting the Pontius Pilate moment (wink!), but let me ask this--does this mean that NP staff no longer is interested in people using Highlight vs. copy-and-paste? When I first joined NP, that was explained to me as a very big concern. Has that changed?
at 15:48 on July 13th, 2008
PEP, that hasn't changed. We encourage everyone to use the highlight tool instead of copy-and-paste.
at 22:39 on July 13th, 2008
Highlight tool is just the same as copy and paste, just with a widget to do the work for you, kinda.
at 22:50 on July 13th, 2008
Yep, except that Highlight Tool is supposed to be used to provide an excerpt--not steal a whole darned article.
at 22:55 on July 13th, 2008
Except too many use highlight tool to copy the whole article with just a link at the bottom and no author attribution. No credit to the author.
at 22:59 on July 13th, 2008
Yep. And it's up to staff to catch 'em, and fix it. What ever happened to the wrench? Seems like anything goes these days, and at most a staffer might stop by, if enough members comment first, to say "oh, we would prefer that you" do this or that. Even if a poster is compiling a history of stolen stuff. I've written to two staffers about a new member who posts only stolen material, without highlight or quotes, that's been passed through his blog.A steady stream of them. So far, no response from staff; no penalty to the poster.
That's....sending a message, I think.
at 23:42 on July 13th, 2008
rahul, I like this story. It's good stuff. Good story Rahul, and thanks for letting us have a users forum on your comments section! :)