Thursday, August 06, 2015

We’ve No Right to Violate African Union Rules, Says Zuma
August 7, 2015

CAPE TOWN. — Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir did not come to the country on South Africa’s invitation, President Jacob Zuma said in the National Assembly yesterday.

“Bashir coming to South Africa — it was by invitation of the African Union (AU) and once he is here, he is a guest of the AU,” he said in response to a question by the DA Mmusi Maimane.

Maimane had asked what steps President Zuma was taking to strengthen the separation of powers. In a follow-up, he asked how the President was upholding the law, but not arresting President Bashir as per the law.

President Zuma said he had answered the question and his answer stood.

He said after the AU asked to hold the summit in South Africa, wherever it operated while in the country, it became AU area.

“That’s why the minister of international relations and co-operation, 10 days before, gazetted the area that would be the AU area, from the airport to the specific areas where the head of states would be staying,” President Zuma said.

— News24.


South African president defends failure to arrest Sudan's Bashir

CAPE TOWN

South African President Jacob Zuma defended the decision to let Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir evade an arrest warrant and leave the country in June, saying on Thursday the wanted leader had had immunity as a guest of the African Union.

Bashir - accused of masterminding genocide during Sudan's Darfur conflict - was allowed to leave an AU summit and fly home in defiance of a local court ruling ordering his detention under a warrant from the International Criminal Court (ICC).

"Bashir's coming to South Africa, it was on the invitation of the AU (African Union)," Zuma said in his first comments on the incident since Bashir's departure.

"He is the guest of the AU," Zuma told opposition politicians who demanded an explanation in parliament.

Bashir's exit triggered an international outcry and highlighted deep rifts between the global court and African powers who have accused the ICC of bias against the continent.

The Hague-based tribunal - set up to try the worst crimes when local courts fail - has so far only charged Africans.

Mmusi Maimane, head of the opposition Democratic Alliance, caller Bashir "a man wanted ... for genocide against Africans," and asked Zuma why he had not kept previous promises to enforce the warrant - as all ICC members are bound to do.

Zuma told parliament Bashir would have been detained if he had visited South Africa as an individual, rather than as a delegate to an AU summit.

Pretoria has said it will review its membership of the ICC and challenge a high court ruling that found the state erred in letting Bashir leave.

Zuma received support from one of his most vocal critics, opposition firebrand Julius Malema, who told parliament on Thursday: "We are not going to agree for the arrest of an African leader in South Africa to polarize Africa and make South Africa an enemy of the whole of Africa."

Bashir has dismissed the ICC charges and says he does not recognize the court.

(Reporting by Wendell Roelf; Editing by James Macharia and Andrew Heavens)

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