Adal Voice of Eritrean's

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Sudanese warning on peacekeepers

BBC

26/07/08

Sudan has again warned it cannot guarantee the safety of UN and African Union peacekeepers in Darfur if its president is indicted for war crimes.

A presidential adviser said that if the International Criminal Court indicted Omar al-Bashir, Sudan could not be held responsible for the troops’ well-being.

Earlier this month, the ICC prosecutor asked judges in The Hague to issue an arrest warrant for President Bashir.

The judges are expected to announce their decision in a few weeks’ time.

The adviser, Bona Malual, told the BBC the government was not expelling the joint UN/AU force (Unamid), or even threatening the troops.

It was, he said, simply saying how Sudan would view the situation.

Seven UN peacekeepers were killed in an ambush in northern Darfur the week before the prosecutor’s request.

Visas in question

Mr Malual, a veteran south Sudanese politician, was speaking in Ethiopia, which he is visiting as part of Sudan’s diplomatic offensive against the indictment.

UN peacekeeping department)

The UN and African Union operate a hybrid mission in Darfur

He was more forthright than any other Sudanese spokesman has been so far about the effect a possible indictment might have on peacekeeping and humanitarian operations in Darfur, says the BBC’s Elizabeth Blunt in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa.

Mr Malual suggested Unamid could become a kind of Trojan Horse, bringing the threat of arrest into Sudan’s own sovereign territory.

He said it meant that the government could not be held responsible for the security and well-being of the peacekeepers and other foreign nationals in Darfur.

It was not a question of asking them to withdraw, he said, but if they did not take this seriously, and left their people in Darfur and anything happened to them, then it was their own responsibility.

The only thing the government might do, he added, would be to cancel the visas and permits they needed to remain in the country

July 26, 2008 Posted by Adal voice of Eritrean's | News & Information | | No Comments Yet

NORWAY:It was the second attack this month at an asylum center

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20 seeking asylum hurt in Norway

OSLO, NORWAY

26/07/08

News & Observer, NC ( Web )

A group of men wielding knives, machetes and iron bars stormed into a center for asylum-seekers in a nighttime attack that left more than 20 people hurt, police said Friday.

Five Chechen immigrants were arrested after the violence late Thursday, which police said might have been sparked by tension between different ethnic groups at the facility.

Police spokesman Per Tore Fremstad said many of the injured were Kurds, but he added it was not yet clear whether the attack had targeted Kurds specifically.

Center director Ole Morten said the men arrested after the attack were not residents of the center.

Investigators said it was too early to speculate on a motive, but they added that there had been a “conflict between ethnic groups” at the asylum center Wednesday.

The facility houses about 200 people from Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, Russia, Somalia and Eritrea.

It was the second attack this month at an asylum center in Norway. On July 18, police said a 16-year-old Somali boy was seriously wounded after several shots were fired at a center for asylum-seekers in Asker, outside Oslo

July 26, 2008 Posted by Adal voice of Eritrean's | News & Information | | No Comments Yet