CONTACT:
Jimmy Mulla (202)-737-7200 ext 245
For Immediate Release
SLA Leader Says ICC Will Bring Justice to the Sudanese People and
Darfur
WASHINGTON, D.C (July 22, 2008) - Abdul Wahid El Nur, leader of the Sudan Liberation Movement/Army (SLM/A) based in
France, says his organization is in full support of the ICC indictment of
Sudan’s President Omar El Bashir, because ICC is the only body that will bring justice to
Darfur and to the Sudanese people.
In a July 19 Washington, D.C. briefing about the current developments in Sudan to members of Southern Sudanese Voice for Freedom, a Washington-based advocacy group, El Nur said, “there will not be any reconciliation unless those who commit crimes against humanity in Darfur and Sudan are prosecuted.” Anyone charged with genocide, he added, must face justice, without exception.
EL Nur is on a visit to the
U.S. capital to discuss the
Darfur situation with U.S administration officials. With no real progress on the ground and uncertain peace mediation efforts,
U.S. officials are eager to exchange views about the situation in
Darfur and seek ways to bring peace to that region. Once considered a dissident in the peace negotiations, El Nur is now considered an ally, holding meetings at the State Department with U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Jendayi Frazier, and with administration officials on the African desk at the White House.
El Nur said he is available to the ICC whenever it might call on him, “today, tomorrow or any time in the future,” because the SLM is seeking for justice and nothing less. He added that since
Sudan is a country with no laws and no due process to prosecute those who commit crimes, the ICC indictment is that much more crucial, and he called on the
United States,
France,
United Kingdom,
Israel, the UN and all countries that embrace human rights to support the ICC.
On Monday July 14, 2008 ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo indicted
Sudan’s President Omar Hassan El Bashir on 10 charges of genocide related to an almost five-year long campaign to exterminate three
Darfur tribes. According to the U.N, an estimated 300,000 lives have been lost in
Darfur and 2.5 million people have been driven from their homes. The indictment marks the first time a sitting head of state has been charged by the world war crimes tribunal.
EL Nur also talked about unity among the various factions in Darfur, and the role of the international community to bring peace to
Darfur.
On unity with other
Darfur rebel groups, El Nur said the SLM is working to unite its ranks, but admitted there are significant ideological differences between his group and the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM). According to El Nur, the JEM follows an Islamic ideology similar to one practiced by the current ruling Khartoum-based National Congress Party, whereas his group embraces secularism.
In another development, although unconfirmed, EL Nur said Minni Minawi, special assistant to the President of
Sudan and leader of the only rebel faction which signed the Darfur Peace Agreement (DPA), has resigned from the government of
Sudan.
El Nur concluded his remarks by saying that justice before peace is the way forward because the Sudanese believe that those who commit crimes must be prosecuted, to avoid “counter-genocide when victims gain power.”
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