نعى اليم ...... سودانيز اون لاين دوت كم تحتسب الزميل فتحي البحيري فى رحمه الله
وداعاً فتحي البحيري
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Re: السودان : 10 من قائمة المتهمين في انتهاكات دارفورالدولية مسؤولين كبار في الحكومة السودان (Re: Roada)
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Sudan rejects trying its nationals outside the country
www.chinaview.cn 2005-02-06 09:09:38
KHARTOUM, Feb. 5 (Xinhuanet) -- Sudanese First Vice President Ali Othman Mohammed Taha announced Saturday his government's refusal to try Sudanese war crime suspects outside the country.
"The prosecution of the alleged Sudanese suspects in some courts out of the country is an issue we reject," Taha was quoted by the Sudan News Agency as saying.
Taha stressed that "Sudan has its own just courts which will apply the law on whoever is held responsible for any violations of humanitarian law".
He called on the international investigation committee on Darfur to present to Sudanese courts any evidence on the alleged human rights violations in Darfur.
The five-person panel appointed by the United Nations decided there was enough evidence of atrocities to justify taking suspects to the International Criminal Court, which was set up in The Hague in 2002 as a permanent body to try war crime suspects.
The United States has proposed that a special war crimes tribunal for Darfur be set up in Tanzania and be run by the UN and the African Union.
Top UN envoy for Sudan Jan Pronk said Wednesday that the UN panel on Darfur has named 51 people responsible for human rights violations in the troubled region.
Some Sudanese government officials and allied militia leaders as well as some leaders of the Darfur rebels are on the list, said Pronk.
The UN official said the international committee had found that government officials and the militia groups leaders are responsible for violations against the international law and that the rebel groups also did similar violations that amount to war crimes.
Tens of thousands of people have been killed in Darfur and as many as 1.85 million people are internally displaced or have fled to neighboring Chad since rebel groups took up arms against the Sudanese government in February 2003. Enditem
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