Rights Group Urges Nigeria to Bar Visit by Sudan's Bashir

Human Rights Watch on Saturday urged Nigeria to bar Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir from attending a health summit next week and demanded the war crimes-indicted leader be arrested if he visits.
Nigeria is a member of the International Criminal Court, which has charged Bashir with war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity over the conflict in Sudan's Darfur region.
Khartoum confirmed that Bashir has been invited to the Nigerian capital, which is hosting an African Union HIV/AIDS summit that opens Monday.
"I understand that there is (an) invitation," to visit Abuja, Sudan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Abubakr Al-Siddiq told Agence France Presse.
"The visit will take place soon," he added.
An official at the Sudanese embassy in Nigeria, who requested anonymity, told AFP that Bashir is "coming for the AU summit," and that he is "expected in Abuja tomorrow (Sunday)."
Nigerian officials were not available to comment.
Associate director of the International Justice Programme at Human Rights Watch, Elise Keppler, told AFP the prospective visit marks "a real test of Nigeria's commitment to the ICC."
Since The Hague-based court issued the indictments against Bashir in 2009, his visits, or proposed travel, to ICC member states have sparked repeated controversy.
Some court members, including Chad, Djibouti and Kenya have allowed such visits, but others like Botswana, South Africa and Uganda have ensured that Bashir stay away.
A number of states "have found a way out of this problem and Nigeria should do the same," Keppler told AFP.
If Bashir in fact visits, Nigeria "should arrest the ICC fugitive," she added.
Countries that have signed on to the world's only permanent court for war crimes and crimes against humanity have a legal obligation to arrest any indicted suspect found within their territory.
A number of African leaders, including some at the African Union, have charged that the Bashir arrest warrant has hampered efforts to conduct continental diplomacy.

While AFP / Naharnet quotes Human Rights Watch that Nigeria should arrest Omar al-Bashir on the ICC warrant for war crimes and genocide, it should be noted that earlier this month the head of UN Peacekeeping Herve Ladsous met with Bashir in Khartoum.
It doesn't seem that HRW commented about UN official Ladsous meeting with Bashir. HRW's Ken Roth refused to disclose even the topics of his meeting with Ban at the UN.
These are questions that both HRW and Ladsous' Department of Peacekeeping Operations should answer. The Free UN Coalition for Access (FUNCA) has been asking a range of DPKO missions questions about their own human rights practices.
Ladsous' strategy, when questioned for example about this meeting with Bashir, has been to run to what he views as a friendly media platform, AFP. When Naharnet runs AFP material, you should be aware of this seeming blindspot. And we'll see what happens in Nigeria - and at the UN.
Matthew Russell Lee, Inner City Press