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TERROR WARS
Sudan's Bashir, minister dance after ICC warrant
by Staff Writers
Khartoum, Sudan (AFP) March 3, 2012


Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir danced on Saturday with his defence minister at a rally for paramilitary troops two days after the International Criminal Court issued a warrant for the latter's arrest.

"We will start a major campaign to face the enemies of God and the state," Defence Minister Abdelrahim Mohammed Hussein told more than 1,000 members of the People's Defence Force (PDF), formed during the country's 22-year civil war.

The rally, designed to showcase the PDF's fighting readiness, was the first of its kind since the 2005 peace deal that ended the civil war and led to South Sudan's independence last July after an overwhelming vote to separate.

It came as analysts and diplomats warn that escalating tensions between the two countries threaten to erupt into direct conflict.

Bashir and Hussein, both in military uniform, danced together to a PDF rallying song after the president announced an expansion of the PDF forces.

"We will call these troops a 'deterrence force'," Bashir said at a Khartoum football stadium.

He said he was ordering all state governors to open training camps for fresh PDF recruits.

Each state is to form one brigade, with an additional seven coming from the capital Khartoum, the president said after rifle-toting male and female members of the militia staged a march-past.

The new recruits will "beat anyone who tries to disturb the security of Sudan," Bashir vowed.

On Thursday The Hague-based International Criminal Court said it had issued an arrest warrant for Hussein, covering crimes against the civilian population in Darfur, in Sudan's western region.

"We want to say to them: we will defend the dignity of Sudan" and its Islamist regime, Bashir responded.

Hussein, 60, is the sixth person sought by the ICC or before the court for crimes committed in Darfur, where rebel groups drawn from the region's non-Arab tribes rose up against the Arab-dominated Khartoum government in 2003.

Among those being sought is Bashir himself.

The court's chief prosecutor, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, said in December when he asked for the warrant against Hussein that it would cover crimes against humanity and war crimes committed in Darfur from August 2003 to March 2004.

Hussein, who was interior minister from 2001 to 2005 and also Bashir's special representative for Darfur from 2003 to 2004, is wanted for allegedly coordinating attacks against civilians in villages of west Darfur.

Sudan's foreign ministry said the warrant against Hussein means "nothing" and Khartoum does not care about the decision.

At the rally, Bashir also responded to comments on Wednesday by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

She accused him of trying to undermine the new South Sudan, and added that Washington would consider increasing pressure on Bashir to reverse course.

Sudan has been under US economic sanctions since 1997.

"The Americans always said they will treat Sudan with a carrot and stick. We want to say to them: we don't want their carrot because their roots are poisoned and nasty. And we don't fear their stick."

On Thursday South Sudan alleged Sudanese MiG warplanes bombed oil and water wells 74 kilometres (46 miles) inside its frontier while ground troops moved 17 kilometres into oil-rich Unity State.

Khartoum denied the claims, but the US expressed alarm. It called such incidents "unacceptable," and said they threaten to raise tensions between the two states.

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Libya army graduates first Tripoli-trained troops
Tripoli (AFP) March 4, 2012 - The Libyan national army on Sunday graduated its first batch of soldiers drawn from the ranks of former rebels in the capital of Tripoli, a military officer said.

"This is the first military unit formed by the national army in Tripoli," Colonel Omar Abdullah said of the graduating class of 225 troops.

"It is a symbol of revolutionaries being streamlined into a system with a mission of protecting the state," he added, gesturing to the men in khaki.

The national army in Libya, which has been refashioning itself after the toppling of slain dictator Moamer Kadhafi's regime in October, is trying to recruit and train former rebel fighters.

"Our doors are open to all revolutionaries," the colonel told AFP.

The newly established 23 of October brigade takes its name from the date when the now ruling National Transitional Council of Libya declared "liberation" of the country from Kadhafi's 42-year-old rule.

The unit received four months of training in military drills and security measures, including the protection of important personalities, self-defence and disarming opponents, a graduate said.

"This is a big chance for us to protect a country which is finally ours," said Ala Naser al-Din, 31, a resident of Souk al-Jumaa neighbourhood, scene of clashes when Tripoli was overrun by anti-Kadhafi fighters in August.

Libyan authorities have repeatedly urged former rebels across Libya to return to civilian life or fall under the authority of the interior or defence ministries.

However, in the eastern city of Benghazi, revolutionary brigades this week staged two days of protests in front of the Ouzu hotel demanding payment and calling for the interior minister's resignation, an AFP correspondent said.



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