Kenya stirs up region with arrest warrant for Sudan's Bashir
Criticism has been widespread since the Kenyan High Court issued an arrest warrant for Sudan's President Bashir, who is also the subject of an international arrest warrant.
Sudan's President Omar Hassan al-Bashir (R) waves to participants while the president's advisor Nafi Ali Nafi watches during the National Congress Party's third general conference in Khartoum on Nov. 24, 2011.
Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah/Reuters
Nairobi, Kenya
An arrest warrant issued this week by the Kenyan high court for Sudan鈥檚 President Omar al-Bashir set off a new diplomatic row. In spite of initial remarks by the Sudan foreign ministry that downplayed the warrant 鈥 chalking it up to an internal Kenyan power play on a politically sensitive issue 鈥 the ministry announced Tuesday that the Kenyan ambassador was being given 72 hours notice to leave the country.
According to an official in the Kenyan Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the announcement by the Sudanese government聽of the expulsion of Kenyan Ambassador聽to Sudan Robert Ngesu came as 鈥渁 complete surprise and [was] really unnecessary.'' Echoing a public statement issued by Foreign Minister Moses Wetangula about the 鈥溾 move by the Kenyan High Court, the official told Enough that the ruling is ''an unnecessary distraction,鈥 adding, 鈥淲e are focusing on Somalia right now.鈥
Indeed, the issuance of the arrest warrant comes at a diplomatically tense moment in Kenya, with the army engaged in its first offensive across the border in Somalia as part of a regional effort to defeat the militant group Al Shabab. Somalia鈥檚 Transitional Federal Government (TFG) responded to Kenya鈥檚 incursion with an initially tepid response, and Al Shabab has vowed dramatic retaliation. Coincidentally, the Kenyan court鈥檚 ruling on the arrest warrant came as news emerged of the聽聽trade bloc 鈥 another example of strained relations as Sudan, now separate from South Sudan, tries to find its footing in the region.
But the timing of the High Court鈥檚 ruling wasn鈥檛 deliberate, said George Kegoro, the executive director of the聽, or ICJ, the group that filed the application for the arrest warrant. He said ICJ submitted its application in October 2010, shortly after President Bashir visited Kenya to attend the ceremony promulgating the country鈥檚 new constitution. In international headlines, Bashir鈥檚 attendance largely overshadowed the event, sparking condemnation because Kenya, a party to the ICC鈥檚 Rome Statute, permitted Bashir鈥檚 visit following ICC-issued arrest warrants for war crimes allegedly committed in Darfur.
鈥淲hen Bashir visited Kenya, we felt the law should be upheld,鈥 Kegoro told Enough. ICJ applied for a provisional arrest warrant provided for in Kenya鈥檚聽, for which a suspect is eligible if he or she is wanted by the ICC and may come to Kenya. In its ruling, the High Court said Bashir鈥檚 arrest "."
Critics of the Kenyan court鈥檚 move have tried to dismiss the ruling as an attempt by ICJ 鈥 a vocal supporter of the ICC鈥檚 process to prosecute crimes related to Kenya鈥檚 post-election violence 鈥 to make a political statement in support of the International Criminal Court after Bashir successfully visited a number of ICC member countries.
Kegoro of ICJ rejects the suggestions. 鈥淲e are above political intrigue,鈥 he said. 鈥淥nce these dramas die down we can work with the [Kenyan] authorities to determine how this ruling can play out and be complied with.鈥 He added that he 鈥渉as no reason to doubt鈥 government officials who have indicated they will appeal the ruling after reviewing the written judgment, which will likely be issued next week.
Kenya鈥檚 Ambassador Ngesu is expected to return to Nairobi tomorrow, according to the foreign ministry source. Asked to confirm reports that Foreign Minister Wetangula would travel to Khartoum on Thursday to try to smooth over the tensions, the official said the ministry is 鈥渨orking on that.鈥
鈥揕aura Heaton blogs for the Enough Project at .