Prosecutors appeal al-Bashir genocide decision

By MIKE CORDER
Associated Press Writer
Prosecutors at the International Criminal Court have appealed the tribunal’s decision not to indict Sudan’s president on charges of waging genocide in Darfur, according to a document released Tuesday.
The court charged Omar al-Bashir with war crimes and crimes against humanity in March for allegedly orchestrating a campaign of murder, torture, rape and forced expulsions in Darfur province. But judges said there was insufficient evidence to merit charging him with genocide.
Al-Bashir is the first sitting head of state indicted by the world’s first permanent war crimes tribunal since it was established in 2002.
But Sudan’s president defiantly refuses to recognize the court’s jurisdiction, and African Union leaders said Friday they would not arrest and extradite him.
Since the court indicted him and issued an international arrest warrant, al-Bashir has traveled outside Sudan several times without being arrested. The international court has no police force and relies on other countries to execute arrest warrants.
The appeal filed Monday and released Tuesday said the judges who rejected the three genocide charges were wrong in applying “an evidentiary burden that is inappropriate for this procedural stage.”
They argue that prosecutors need only prove that there are “reasonable grounds to believe” al-Bashir was responsible for genocide when asking for judges to file charges.
Instead, prosecutors said, the judges applied a “higher level of proof, one that can be identified only with the standard of proof ‘beyond a reasonable doubt.'”
Prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo was in the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa on Tuesday for talks on Darfur with African Union representatives.
African officials believe Moreno Ocampo focuses too sharply on their continent. His office has launched prosecutions in four countries — all of them in Africa.
His appeal accuses al-Bashir of mobilizing the entire Sudanese state apparatus with the aim of destroying a substantial part of the Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa ethnic groups in Darfur over more than six years.
Fighting in Darfur since 2003 has left up to 300,000 people dead and driven another 2.7 million from their homes, the United Nations says.

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