Chinese paper decries Sudan’s Bashir arrest move
CHINA: An international prosecutor could “pour oil on fire” by
seeking to arrest Sudan’s president, China’s top official newspaper
said, amplifying Beijing’s opposition to pursuing charges of genocide in
Darfur.
The International Criminal Court (ICC) prosecutor asked the court on
Monday to approve an arrest warrant for Sudanese President Omar Hassan
al-Bashir, accusing him of a campaign of tribal genocide that killed
35,000 people outright and another 100,000 through “slow death” in his
country’s war-stricken Darfur region.
Chinese officials have voiced concerns an indictment of Bashir could
derail struggling peace efforts in Darfur, and Beijing also faces
threats of protests over its ties with Sudan during the Olympic Games in
August, On Thursday, the People’s Daily, official newspaper of the
ruling Chinese Communist Party, added to criticism of the ICC.
“Don’t pour oil on fire,” said a commentary in the paper, adding that
Darfur is “at a sensitive and crucial time.”
China is a main investor in Sudan’s oil industry and Khartoum’s
biggest arms supplier, but it has also sought a mediating role in
securing piece in Darfur, where government-backed militia have battled
rebels for five years.
On Wednesday, China gave a ceremonial send-off to 172 People’s
Liberation Army engineers who will join the joint United Nations-African
Union peacekeeping operation struggling to contain strife in Darfur.
Beijing, Thursday, Reuters |