Sudanese leader Omar al-Bashir has left Nigeria, a diplomat at his
embassy said Tuesday, following demands from human rights activists for
the arrest of the man indicted for genocide and war crimes in Darfur.
Human
rights lawyers filed a suit in the Federal High Court on Monday to try
to compel Nigeria's government to arrest al-Bashir. And a civil rights
group urgently appealed to the International Criminal Court to refer the
government to the United Nations Security Council for allowing the
visit.
Presidential spokesman Reuben Abati told The Associated
Press that al-Bashir had come to attend the African Union summit, and
not at Nigeria's invitation. He said Nigeria's action in allowing him to
come was in line with instructions from the African Union, which has
told its 53 member states not to cooperate with the European-based court
that some accuse of targeting Africans.
The International
Criminal Court belatedly demanded that Nigeria "immediately arrest" the
fugitive. It noted that it could refer the Nigerian government to the
U.N. Security Council for failing to execute an order of the court, of
which it is a member.
A statement released Tuesday but dated
Monday recalled that the court has issued two arrest warrants for
al-Bashir, in 2009 and 2010, to stand trial for five counts of crimes
against humanity, two counts of war crimes and three counts of genocide
against the Fur, Masalit and Zagawa tribes in Darfur.
The U.S.
Embassy said Tuesday it regrets Nigeria's decision to welcome an
indicted criminal. Former colonizer Britain expressed its
"disappointment" on Monday.
Nigeria was forced in the past to hand
over an internationally wanted criminal — former Liberian President
Charles Taylor, the warlord who began that country's devastating civil
war in 1989.
In
2003, Taylor resigned under pressure and a promise from Nigeria's
government to give him a safe haven. When democratically elected leader
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf demanded his extradition in 2006, Nigeria came
under huge international pressure and was forced to go back on its word
and hand him over.
Taylor was in May sentenced to 50 years in
prison by the international Special Court for Sierra Leone at The Hague,
not for crimes committed in his own country but for his responsibility
for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in neighboring
Sierra Leone.
A diplomat at the Sudanese embassy in Abuja, the
Nigerian capital, told The Associated Press that al-Bashir left at 3
p.m. Monday, less than 24 hours after he arrived and in the middle of a
two-day summit ending Tuesday. The diplomat, who refused to give his
name, said his hasty departure had nothing to do with the pressure for
his arrest.
Leaders from eight other African countries are attending the summit, including Kenya, which has shunned al-Bashir.
On
Tuesday, human rights activists continued with a planned protest. A few
dozen people gathered outside the government secretariat and planned to
march to the heavily guarded International Conference Center to picket
the summit, said human rights lawyer Chino Obiagwu, who heads the
Nigerian Coalition on the ICC.
South Africa, Malawi, Uganda,
Kenya, Zambia, and Central Africa Republic "have specifically made clear
Bashir will be arrested on their territory, seen to it that other
Sudanese officials visit instead of Bashir, relocated conferences or
otherwise avoided his visits," Obiagwu said.
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