TheGuardian Conscience, Nurtured by Truth
Tuesday, July 16, 2013
Vol. 29, No. 12,619
www.ngrguardiannews.com
N150
Wary of arrest, Sudan’s president shuns AIDS summit in Abuja From Mohammed Abubakar, Chukwuma Muanya, Lemmy Ughegbe, Emeka Anuforo and John Okeke, Abuja MILD drama unfolded at A the ongoing Abuja +12 Special Follow-Up Summit on HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, Malaria and other related diseases as Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir who has two international arrest warrants against him failed to turn up to make his presentation. The International Criminal Court (ICC) in 2009 and 2010 issued two warrants of arrest against Al-Bashir over the
• Nigeria rules out handling over Al-Bashir to ICC • Civil groups disagree, say govt risks global outrage • Jonathan, AU unveil plan to check disease conflict in Sudan’s Darfur region, where government forces and local Arab militias are fighting rebels drawn mainly from black African populations. Some civil society organisations have also called on the Nigerian authorities to arrest him if he showed up.
Al-Bashir, who arrived in Abuja on Sunday to a red-carpet welcome and a full guard of honour, has not appeared in any of the sessions of the summit. He was expected to participate at the summit like many other Heads of State. When he was called to make a pres-
entation, there was heavy silence. Alas, he was nowhere to be found. Since he was indicted by the ICC in 2006 after being accused of masterminding atrocities during the Darfur conflict, which left hundreds of thousands dead, he has been refused trips to Uganda,
South Africa, Malawi and Zambia. Only Chad and Djibouti have received him in the past year. His visit to Nigeria is seen as his first to the West African region since the warrants were issued. The African Union (AU) has repeatedly spoken of its
reservation over the ICC’s warrants, stressing that it will not respect the decision of the court. In 2010, AU called on the United Nations Security Council to delay war crimes proceedings against the Sudanese president. In a statement in response to the warrants, the AU had said: “The AU has always emphasized its commitment to justice and its total rejection of impunity. At the same time, the AU reiterates that the search for justice should be pursued in a manner not CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
Equatoria President, Nguena Mbasogo (left); President Goodluck Jonathan; Ethiopian Prime Minister and AU Chairman, Hailemariam Dessalegn; wife of South Africa’s President and Chairman, AU Commission, Nkosazana Zuma; PHOTO: PHILIP OJISUA and other African leaders, during the opening of the African Union Heads of Government Special Summit on Tuberculosis and HIV and AIDS in Abuja… yesterday.
Suspended councillors accuse Reps of bias in Rivers’ crisis From Kelvin Ebiri and Ann Godwin, Port Harcourt CCUSING the House of A Representatives of bias, 15 suspended Obio-Akpor councillors yesterday provided another perspective on the political crisis in Rivers State. The councillors and their chairman, Timothy Nsiri, whose suspension in April by a majority of the House of As-
• Exonerate Mbu, blame state govt for lawmakers’ crisis • Say Amaechi ignores police advice • Patience Jonathan urges peace sembly members has aggravated the political crisis in Rivers State, condemned the attack on one of the lawmakers representing Obio-Akpor constituency in the legisla-
ture in Port Harcourt, Michael Chinda. Addressing journalists in Port Harcourt yesterday, the councillors said they were dismayed that the House of
Representatives acted swiftly to protect the state House legislature, but failed to come to their rescue when they were dismissed by the lawmakers for spurious reasons.
“A lawmaker is a lawmaker no matter the level at which we operate and so we deserve similar protection from superior legislative houses like the way the Reps came to save our state Assembly which first meted out unfair treatment to us,” they said. The councillors who disclosed that two of their colleagues have decamped to Governor Chibuike
Amaechi’s camp, said they expected the House of Representatives to have taken a holistic consideration of the state’s crisis to avoid another rift that might lead to the taking over of the role of the governor should there be a fight at the Government House. They said: “In our thinking, digging to the root of the matter will give a lasting soCONTINUED ON PAGE 4