VOA标准英语2010-Bashir Victory Expected; Rivals Weigh Imp(在线收听) |
A Sudanese election official displays a ballot for observers to view, during the counting process at polling station in Khartoum, Sudan, 16 April 2010
Sudanese-born Mohamed Suleiman is president of the San Francisco, California Bay Area Darfur Coalition, which holds rallies to raise American public awareness about Sudan atrocities and prompts U.S. policymakers to tighten sanctions against incumbent President Omar Hasan al-Bashir. Suleiman says that the Bashir government is likely to try and use its newly won legitimacy to deter secession by the south in next year’s planned referendum, to thwart southern claims to lucrative oil revenues near the disputed border town of Abyei, and to discourage pressures to bring President Bashir before the International Criminal Court (ICC) to face war crimes charges.
Suleiman says he thinks that the almost certain victory this year by the ruling Nation Congress Party will embolden Sudanese government leaders to act aggressively on all fronts as long as they believe the international community views the outcome of the vote as legitimate and is reluctant to tighten resistance to the policies being pursued by the newly elected government. “They will feel empowered because what Bashir’s government and the NCP are shooting for in these elections is to have some kind of international legitimacy because the west thinks that to avert war is to be nice to the NCP, and they’re hoping that the NCP will be nice to the southerners in 2011 for the referendum, and that will make the secession easy,” he observed. Instead, says Suleiman, Khartoum will be prepared to go to war if necessary to prevent the south from seceding and it will justify its actions by touting its commitment to preserving the unity of the nation. The major leverage the international community has on the Sudanese leader is the case of international war crimes charges and possibly additional charges of genocide being considered by the I.C.C. Suleiman says President Bashir’s legal problems are the main tool that governments trying to safeguard southern Sudan’s bid for a referendum can hold over President Bashir to make him carry out terms of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement. Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir could face trial at the International Criminal Court at the Hague for war crimes and crimes against humanity he is accused of committing for having fueled a government war against hundreds of thousands of civilians in Sudan's western Darfur region. Suleiman says fighting over the weekend between the south Sudan army and various Arab tribes from Darfur near the border of the southern state of western Bahr al-Ghazal in which at least 55 deaths were reported could be the first sign of Khartoum’s determination to push the international community to make a deal with him. Listen to Mohamed Suleiman's interview with VOA's Howard Lesser
|
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2010/4/98367.html |