Al Bashir tainted ANC now wants SA’s exit from International Criminal Court
The ANC wants the country to withdraw from the International Criminal Court, saying the court has lost direction and no longer fulfilled its mandate.
The ANC wants the country to withdraw from the International Criminal Court, saying the court has lost direction and no longer fulfilled its mandate.
Zuma will not comply with a high court ruling and is ready to face the consequences. ActionSA says he is ready to flee the country and the Zondo Commision.
Sudanese pro-democracy protesters won further concessions from the army that overthrew President Omar al-Bashir, as upheaval in the ruling military council signals a power struggle among the remnants of his 30-year regime.
Sudan’s military overthrew President Omar al-Bashir and announced it would rule the oil-producing North African nation through a transitional council for the next two years.
This is a situation no one would have imagined – protesters in Sudan calling for the resignation of President Omar al-Bashir.
Years after al-Bashir escaped justice in South Africa, a fed-up Sudanese population is rising up in a bid to topple him from power.
The Supreme Court has dismissed the State’s appeal against a high court ruling that government’s failure to arrest Omar Al-Bashir was inconsistent with its constitutional duties.
The Mail & Guardian reports that axed finance minister Nhlanhla Nene said no to South African Airways opening a new route to Khartoum in Sudan.
The International Criminal Court has given South Africa more time to explain why it failed to arrest Sudan’s President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, accused by the ICC of war crimes, when he visited the country in June.
As the Syrian refugee outrage grows, attention is sure to widen to include Africa’s equally tragic crisis – and those “Big Men” whose actions have created it.