A South African
court on Sunday issued a temporary ban on Sudanese President Omar
al-Bashir leaving the country after the International Criminal Court
called for him to be arrested at a summit in Johannesburg.
Bashir, who is wanted over alleged war crimes, crimes against humanity
and genocide in the Darfur conflict, mostly travels to countries that
have not joined the ICC, but South Africa is a signatory of the court's
statutes.
The Pretoria High Court said in a statement it was "compelling
respondents to prevent President Omar Al-Bashir from the leaving the
country until an order is made in this court".
The hearing is set to take place later Sunday, the opening day of the African Union summit.
The ruling came after the Southern African Litigation Centre, a legal
rights group, launched an urgent court application to force the
authorities to arrest Bashir.Bashir joined a group photograph of leaders
at the summit despite the calls for his arrest.
More than
300,000 people have been killed in the conflict and fighting has forced
some 2.5 million people to flee their homes, the United Nations says.
Khartoum, however, disputes the figures, estimating the death toll at no more than 10,000.
"Allowing President al-Bashir into South Africa without arresting him would be a major stain on South Africa's reputation for promoting justice for grave crimes," said Elise Keppler of Human Rights Watch."South Africa's legal obligations as an ICC member mean cooperating in al-Bashir's arrest, not in his travel plans."
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