HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH

‘Justice for Darfur’ Campaign Launched

Sudan Should Arrest War Crimes Suspects Now

(The Hague, April 25, 2008) – One year after the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued arrest warrants for two war crimes suspects in Darfur, human rights organizations around the world are launching a “Justice for Darfur” campaign, calling for the two to be arrested.

The organizations behind the campaign, including Amnesty International, Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies, Coalition for the International Criminal Court, Human Rights First, Human Rights Watch, and Sudan Organization Against Torture, have joined forces to call on the United Nations Security Council, regional organizations and individual governments to press Sudan to cooperate with the ICC.  
 
The ICC has been investigating crimes in the region following a decision three years ago by the UN Security Council to refer to it the situation in Darfur. One year ago – on April 27, 2007 – the ICC issued two arrest warrants against Sudan’s former State Minister of the Interior Ahmad Harun and “Janjaweed” leader Ali Kushayb for 51 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity. Today the two men – who face charges of persecution, rape, and killing of civilians in four West Darfur villages – remain at large.  
 
“The thousands of people who suffered murder, rape and persecution in Darfur deserve justice,” said Dismas Nkunda, co-chair of the Darfur Consortium, a group of African and Middle Eastern nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). “Instead, all they have had is disdain from their own government, and empty words from the international community. It is time for that to change.”  
 
The Sudanese government has publicly and repeatedly refused to surrender either Kushayb or Harun to the court. Instead, Harun has been promoted to state minister for humanitarian affairs, responsible for the welfare of the very victims of his alleged crimes. As well as having considerable power over humanitarian operations, he is responsible for liaising with the international peacekeeping force (UNAMID) tasked with protecting civilians against such crimes. The other suspect, Ali Kushayb, was in custody in Sudan on other charges at the time the ICC warrants were issued, but in October 2007 the government announced he had been released, reportedly due to “lack of evidence.”  
 
“The Sudanese government has shown blatant disregard both for the authority of the Security Council and for the victims of their brutality,” said Richard Dicker, director of the International Justice Program at Human Rights Watch. “So far, Sudan has faced no consequences for this brazen snubbing of the court and the council”.  
 
The members of “Justice for Darfur” are urging the UN Security Council to pass a resolution calling on Sudan to cooperate fully with the ICC and immediately arrest Harun and Kushayb and surrender them to the court.  
 
“Now is the time for the Security Council to act to ensure that the men are arrested and surrendered to the ICC without further delay, as a first step towards ending impunity for the vast scale of horrific crimes committed in Darfur,” said Christopher Hall, senior legal adviser for Amnesty International’s International Justice Project.  
 
The “Justice for Darfur” campaign organizers called on states and regional organizations – including the European Union, a strong supporter of the ICC and a key player in bringing the Darfur crimes to the ICC prosecutor – to press Sudan to cooperate with the ICC and comply with the warrants.  
 
“Through the ‘Justice for Darfur’ campaign, organizations will work together to generate as much pressure as possible on the international community to follow through on its commitment to justice for the victims of these crimes,” said Moataz El Fegiery, executive director at the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies.  
 
The following organizations are part of the “Justice for Darfur” campaign:  
Action des chrétiens pour l’abolition de la torture - France  
Aegis Trust  
Amnesty International  
Arab Center for the Independence of the Judiciary and the Legal Profession  
Bahrain Centre for Human Rights  
Bahrain Human Rights Society  
Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies  
Center for Peace, Legal Advice and Psychosocial Assistance – Vukovar  
Civil Resource Development and Documentation Centre – Nigeria  
Coalition for the International Criminal Court  
Collectif Urgence Darfour  
Darfur Consortium  
Darfur Union UK  
Fédération Internationale des ligues des Droits de l’Homme  
Human Rights First  
Human Rights Watch  
International Criminal Court Student Network UK  
Kalangala District NGO Forum  
Land Center for Human Rights  
League of Human Rights  
Prepared Society Kenya  
Recherches et Documentation Juridiques Africaines  
Save Darfur Canada  
Society for Threatened Peoples International  
Socio-Economic Rights & Accountability Project  
Students Taking Action Now: Darfur – Canada  
Sudan organization against Torture  
UN Watch  
Waging Peace  
 
To view a letter from the “Justice for Darfur” campaign to the United Nations Security Council, please visit:  
http://hrw.org/english/docs/2008/04/24/darfur18636.htm  
 
To view a letter from the “Justice for Darfur” campaign to the European Union, please visit:  
http://hrw.org/english/docs/2008/04/24/darfur18635.htm  
 
For more information on the “Justice for Darfur” campaign, please visit: www.justice4darfur.org



Related Material

Justice for Darfur
Letter

Crisis in Darfur
Country Page

Sudan
Country Page

Africa
Country Page

Take Action

Advocacy Impact, May 9, 2008