Tuesday, November 29, 2011

DRC: DR Congo's Vital Kamerhe leads calls to annul vote

 

Vital Kamerhe Vital Kamerhe helped run Joseph Kabila's campaign in 2006
Four opposition candidates in the Democratic Republic of Congo's election say it should be cancelled because of fraud and violence.
They include Vital Kamerhe, who said the rigging was on a large scale and "deliberately planned" with pre-marked ballot papers.
He was a close ally of President Joseph Kabila before breaking away in 2009.
Many voters were unable to cast their ballots on Monday and so polling was extended until Tuesday in some areas.
However, the BBC's Christophe Pons visited one such polling station in the capital, Kinshasa, and found that voting had still not taken place by Tuesday lunchtime.
Votes have been counted in some polling stations, but it is not clear when results would be announced.
Election officials are only now starting to organise the transport of these results to regional tallying centres, where provisional results can be announced, correspondents say.
'Fictitious polling stations'
Angry residents told him that there were 1,300 registered voters but only 100 ballot papers had been received.
Mr Kamerhe sent a letter to the election commission and international bodies, saying the vote should be annulled.

Start Quote

Voters who are at sites where ballots ran out and where the vote had to be interrupted for whatever reason are asked to stay calm and await further instructions”
End Quote Matthieu Mpita Election commission spokesman
"There can be no doubt as to the scale of the fraud, deliberately planned by those in power with the connivance of the national election commission," he said.
"Police chased witnesses from polling stations before counting could start."
Mr Kamerhe's aides also accused the UN peacekeeping mission in DR Congo of showing bias towards Mr Kabila.
"These elections must quite simply be annulled," the letter said.
The Open Society Initiative of Southern Africa, a non-governmental organisation which deployed 5,000 observers to polling stations, also expressed concerns about irregularities, the AFP news agency reports.
"The irregularities are so widespread it will be difficult for anyone to ignore and say they had no impact on the integrity of the vote," its country director, Pascal Kambale, is quoted as saying.
He said millions of of voters had been turned away from polling stations after being told they were at the wrong stations.
"A more worrying sign of a probable rigging attempt were a number of already-filled-in ballot papers that were discovered by people across the country," Mr Kambale is quoted as saying.
angry voters at Kinshasa polling station There were angry scenes at polling stations across the country
Three other candidates, including Senate speaker Leon Kengo, have also called for the results to be declared null and void.
In a joint statement, they said they had uncovered "fictitious" polling stations and pre-marked ballot papers.
They said they attached "no credibility" to the vote and "demand the invalidation, pure and simple, of these elections given the breaches and irregularities".
Our reporter says Mr Kamerhe's decision is the most significant as - along with Union for Democracy and Social Progress (UDPS) leader Etienne Tshisekedi - he was seen as one of the main opposition candidates.
The UDPS has made similar accusations but it has not backed the call for the results to be nullified.
It said it was confident that Mr Tshisekedi would win, despite the irregularities.
Mr Kabila is running for a second term against 10 other candidates.
More than 18,000 candidates are contesting 500 parliamentary seats.
UN sanctions
Our correspondent says many people who were unable to cast their ballots are angry.
Some European Union election observers were withdrawn from polling stations on Monday for their own security, Reuters says.

DR Congo polls in numbers

map
  • More than 30 million voters
  • More than 19,000 parliamentary candidates
  • 500 parliamentary seats
  • MPs paid $6,000 (£3,887) a month
  • The Kinshasa ballot will be a 56-page booklet of more than 1,500 candidates
  • 11 presidential candidates
  • 4,000 tonnes of ballot papers
  • 61 helicopters and 20 planes are delivering the election material
At least four people died after armed men - suspected to belong to a secessionist movement - attacked two polling stations in the southern mining city of Lubumbashi, a stronghold of Mr Kabila.
In the opposition stronghold of West Kasai, 15 polling stations were reportedly set on fire by voters angry at long delays. In the same province, there were unconfirmed reports of ballot boxes being full as polling opened.
After decades of conflict and mismanagement, DR Congo, a country two-thirds the size of Western Europe, has hardly any functioning transport infrastructure such as roads or railways.
The UN peacekeeping mission is using its helicopters to deliver voting materials to areas which have not yet voted, such as the central Bandundu province, Reuters reports.
There had been calls for the vote to be postponed but on the eve of polling, the head of the election commission said everything was 99% in place.
There were reports of lengthy delays at polling stations on Monday, with some voters telling the BBC they were unable to cast their ballots either because they could not find their names on the electoral register or because someone had already voted in their place.
Late on Monday, election commission spokesman Matthieu Mpita said voting would take place on Tuesday in at least 400 polling stations across the country but that the polls could also be extended in other areas.
"Voters at polling stations that never received ballots and which have not yet opened should await the delivery of the materials," he is quoted by the AP news agency as saying.
"Voters who are at sites where ballots ran out and where the vote had to be interrupted for whatever reason are asked to stay calm and await further instructions."
Meanwhile, the UN security council has added one of the parliamentary candidates, Ntabo Ntaberi Cheka, to its sanctions list, AFP reports.
Mr Cheka, the head of a militia group, is wanted for allegedly organising mass rapes in eastern DR Congo in 2009.
The French, UK and US missions to the UN said Mr Cheka would be subject to a worldwide travel ban and assets freeze, AFP reports
"Our missions strongly encourage the Congolese government to implement the existing arrest warrant currently outstanding against Cheka," they said in a joint statement, AFP reports.

Source: BBC News, 29 November 2011 Last updated at 17:48 GMT

Côte d'Ivoire :Gbagbo a été transféré à La Haye (Parquet).

ABIDJAN -- L'ex-président ivoirien Laurent Gbagbo a été transféré mardi devant la Cour pénale internationale (CPI) à La Haye (Pays-Bas) en exécution d'un mandat d'arrêt international, a annoncé mardi le Parquet d'Abidjan.

Dans un communiqué lu au journal de 20H (locale et GMT) de la télévision publique ivoirienne, le porte-parole du Parquet d'Abidjan, Noël Djé, a indiqué que les juges de la CPI ont "émis le mercredi 23 novembre 2011 un mandat d'arrêt contre l'ancien chef de l'Etat Laurent Gbagbo" après des enquêtes sur les violences post-électorales en Côte d'Ivoire.

"Le mandat lui a été notifié par le procureur de la République d'Abidjan-Plateau ce mardi 29 novembre 2011 à Korhogo en présence de ses avocats et en exécution de ce mandat, Laurent Gbagbo a été transféré à la CPI à La Haye", a déclaré le porte-parole du Parquet et substitut du procureur de la République.

La CPI a été autorisée à enquêter sur les violences lors de l'élection présidentielle qui a fait au moins 3 000 morts pour des "crimes de guerre" et "crimes contre l'humanité".

Le procureur de la CPI, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, a séjourné à Abidjan du 15 au 16 octobre.

Laurent Gbagbo a été arrêté le 11 avril et assigné à résidence à Korhogo dans le nord du pays.

Son arrestation a mis fin à cinq mois de bras de fer autour du fauteuil présidentiel avec son rival Alassane Ouattara et à deux semaines de guerre dans la capitale économique ivoirienne Abidjan.



Source: Xinhuanet, Publié le 2011-11-30 09:25:06

RDC: Violences et confusion lors des élections en RDC

Reportage | Kinshasa Envoyé spécial - Dans un pays où tant de promesses n'ont jamais été tenues, le chef de l'Etat sortant, Joseph Kabila, a tenu sa parole : les élections présidentielle et législatives ont bien eu lieu, lundi 28 novembre, en République démocratique du Congo (RDC). Mais à quel prix ? Celui d'une indescriptible confusion, associée à des violences parfois meurtrières mais localisées, qui soulève déjà la question de la crédibilité voire de la validité de ce scrutin pluraliste, le deuxième depuis l'indépendance de l'ancienne colonie belge en 1960 toujours traumatisée par deux guerres ravageuses de 1996 à 2003.
A Kinshasa, lundi, dès l'aurore, des foules d'électeurs ont bravé les trombes d'eau qui noyaient les chaussées défoncées. Dans la cour de l'école Epelingomo du quartier surpeuplé de Kingasani, ils se bousculaient par centaines, hurlant devant les portes des bureaux de vote, leur carte d'électeurs brandie au-dessus de la tête. "Les Congolais n'aiment pas l'ordre", constatait dépité le président du centre de vote Israël Mbaya Tshimankinda.


Si les Congolais n'aiment pas l'ordre, ils doivent alors aimer la Commission électorale nationale indépendante (CENI). Kiala Faustin, un enseignant de 48 ans, peut en témoigner. "Comment je vais voter ?", se lamente-t-il. En juillet, il était venu dans cette même école pour s'inscrire. "On m'avait dit que je voterais ici", se rappelle-t-il. Mais sur sa carte d'électeur figure un mystérieux collège Seneve où il est censé se rendre mais dont personne n'a jamais entendu parler, ici, dans ce dédale de ruelles sablonneuses grand comme une petite ville. "Erreur informatique ou bureau fictif ?", se demande-t-il.

Avant le vote, on avait relevé de fausses adresses de bureaux sur la liste publiée par la CENI. L'opposition y avait vu une manoeuvre frauduleuse de la part d'une CENI dirigée par un proche de Joseph Kabila. Aux bureaux fictifs, et donc sans électeurs le jour du vote, correspondront des procès-verbaux comptabilisés en faveur du président sortant, s'alarmait l'opposition.

En attendant d'en savoir plus, M. Mbaya Tshimankinda cherche surtout à éviter l'émeute dans sa cour d'école. Ses bureaux ont ouvert avec trois heures de retard, lorsqu'enfin la CENI lui a fait parvenir la liste électorale les bulletins, "en nombre insuffisant", dit-il. Et il doit faire sans isoloir en carton - "ils m'ont expliqué qu'il n'y en a plus".

Les électeurs s'asseyent donc, certains pour la première fois, sur un banc d'école et transpirent à retrouver la photo de leur favori sur une liste de 1 329 candidats à la députation dans cette circonscription (pour 15 sièges) imprimée sur un bulletin de 53 pages. Il n'y a pas non plus de lampe pour le dépouillement dans ce quartier vivant souvent au rythme du soleil. Ni d'encre indélébile pour éviter les votes multiples. "Qu'est-ce que ça doit être en province ?", soupire un observateur.

Autre casse-tête : les "omis", ces Congolais détenteur d'une carte d'électeur affiliée à un bureau de vote mais qui n'apparaissent pas sur les listes. La CENI leur a permis au dernier moment de voter dans leur centre d'inscription. Ce qui ouvre le champ aux fraudes et à la contestation post-électorale. Ainsi, dans la salle numéro 4 du centre de vote du quartier Masina II ouvert dans les locaux d'une paroisse presbytérienne, la liste d'émargement de ces "omis" comporte déjà une trentaine de noms écrits à la main sur des feuilles volantes. S'y ajoute celle des votes par dérogation. Au total, près de 30 % d'électeurs supplémentaires qui, au soir du comptage, pourraient faire passer le taux de participation au-dessus des 100 %. Plus grave, peu de chose empêche un "omis" de se rendre dans un autre bureau de vote pour recommencer l'opération.

Ceci dit, les onze candidats de la présidentielle à un tour - système imposé par Joseph Kabila pour battre une opposition divisée et compenser sa perte de popularité - sont sur un pied d'égalité. Une égalité démocratique devant le chaos que le chef de l'Etat partage avec "l'opposant historique" Etienne Tshisekedi (79 ans) et ses deux frères ennemis de l'opposition Vital Kamerhe (51 ans), ex-président de l'Assemblée nationale et Léon Kengo (76 ans), président du Sénat.

Devant une telle anarchie, c'est presqu'un miracle si l'on ne rapportait pas, mercredi matin d'incidents plus sérieux dans la capitale. Ce ne fut pas le cas à Lubumbashi, capitale du Katanga (sud-est), où au moins dix personnes ont été tuées lors d'une attaque d'un bureau de vote. Dans le Kasaï occidental, fief d'Etienne Tshisekedi, des bureaux de vote ont été incendiés après la découverte d'urnes déjà bourrées. Dans l'Est, des combats entre groupes armés ont conduit à la fermeture de bureaux.

"Difficile de dire aujourd'hui quelle influence tout cela aura sur le résultat final", relativisait un observateur américain. Inquiet, il se demandait si le même chaos allait dominer les opérations de comptage et de centralisation des résultats. Beaucoup plus pessimiste, un membre étranger du comité technique électoral (un organe consultatif de la CENI) ne voyait pas comment "la CENI, qui affirmait dimanche, et contre toute évidence, être prête à 100 %, pourra déclarer ce vote transparent". Il ajoutait : "C'est un fiasco total et pourtant prévisible que la communauté internationale a laissé faire. Et si cela dégénérait en guerre civile ?"

Lundi soir sur les ondes de la radio Okapi, Franklin Tshamala, un cadre de la majorité présidentiel dont le candidat est donné favori au regard de sa force de frappe financière, administrative et sécuritaire, avait vu un vote "calme". Du côté de Vital Kamerhe et de Léon Kengo, en revanche, on réfléchissait déjà à faire annuler le scrutin. Une option écartée par Etienne Tshisekedi qui, dès la fin du vote, lançait la bataille des chiffres, invérifiables, au sujet de sa large victoire dans l'est du pays. Les résultats de la présidentielle sont prévus avant le 6 décembre. Ceux des législatives, pas avant le mois de janvier. La RDC entre dans une zone de hautes turbulences.

Author: Christophe Châtelot





Source: Le Monde, Article paru dans l'édition du 30.11.11

RDC: En RDC, quatre candidats réclament l'invalidation des résultats du scrutin.

La tension reste vive en République démocratique du Congo, où des candidats à la présidentielle ont demandé, mardi 29 novembre, l'annulation des scrutins présidentiel et législatifs de la veille en dénonçant de nombreuses "irrégularités".
Dans une déclaration commune, MM. Kengo, Antipas Mbusa Nyamwisi et Adam Bombole Intole dénoncent des bureaux de vote "fictifs, ou à tout le moins non localisables", des bulletins de vote "parallèles, pré-remplis ou vierges au profit" du candidat Joseph Kabila, le chef de l'Etat sortant, ou de candidats députés de sa majorité.

Ils dénoncent aussi "l'utilisation des moyens de l'Etat" par M. Kabila, la non-ouverture de bureaux de vote, l'insuffisance de bulletins "provoquant artificiellement une baisse du taux de participation" et des dépouillements à huis clos après le "refus d'admettre la présence de témoins de l'opposition" dans plusieurs bureaux. Les trois candidats déclarent n'accorder aucun crédit aux résultats qui pourraient résulter de pareils scrutins dont ils "exigent l'invalidation pure et simple".

De son côté, l'opposant Vital Kamerhe a lui aussi demandé l'annulation des scrutins. "Aucun doute n'est permis quant à l'ampleur de la fraude délibérément planifiée par le pouvoir avec la connivence de la CENI", la Commission électorale nationale indépendante, écrit-il dans une lettre datée de lundi, et adressée notamment à Joseph Kabila. "Les élections (...) doivent être tout simplement annulées", estime l'ex-président de l'Assemblée nationale, qui liste une soixantaine de cas de "fraude", "manipulation de votes" et "violation" de la loi électorale à travers le pays.

>> Lire notre reportage "Violences et confusion lors des élections en RDC"

LE VOTE S'EST POURSUIVI MARDI


Des électeurs ont pu encore voter mardi dans des bureaux qui avaient ouvert en retard la veille ou n'ont jamais pu fonctionner, en raison du mauvais déploiement du matériel électoral. La mission de l'ONU au Congo a indiqué que les Nations unies avaient continué à acheminer, mardi, du matériel électoral dans certaines régions où le vote n'avait pas débuté, notamment dans la province de Bandundu (Centre).

Des observateurs des scrutins s'étaient déjà inquiétés des nombreuses irrégularités et incidents constatés à travers le pays lors du scrutin auquel 32 millions d'électeurs étaient appelés. Les Etats-Unis ont dit lundi espérer que "les informations faisant état d'anomalies" s'avéreraient "isolées", a déclaré Mark Toner, un porte-parole du département d'Etat.

La commission électorale a pour sa part jugé "satisfaisant" le déroulement du scrutin. "Nous avons 63 000 bureaux de vote. Si nous en avons un millier qui posent problème, ce sera gérable", avait déclaré dimanche soir le porte-parole de la CENI, Matthieu Mpita.

Mercredi 30 novembre, les missions internationales d'observation du Centre Carter et de l'Union européenne doivent chacune présenter leurs premières conclusions sur le scrutin. Entamé lundi soir dans des conditions souvent difficiles, le dépouillement s'est poursuivi mardi dans de nombreux bureaux. Les résultats provisoires de la présidentielle sont attendus le 6 décembre, ceux des législatives le 13 janvier.



RDC : un chef de milice candidat aux élections sanctionné par l'ONU

Le Conseil de sécurité de l'ONU a ajouté, mardi 29 novembre, un chef de milice de la République démocratique du Congo candidat aux élections sur sa liste de personnes sanctionnées, ont indiqué des diplomates. Ntabo Ntaberi Sheka, chef du groupe Mai Mai Sheka, s'est présenté aux législatives dans l'est du pays bien qu'il soit recherché pour son rôle dans des viols en série commis en 2010.

La France, le Royaume-Uni et les Etats-Unis sont à l'origine de la demande de sanctions visant Ntabo Ntaberi Sheka, le chef des Mai-Mai Sheka, un groupe armé responsable d'attaques dans le district de Walikale, dans l'est du pays. M. Sheka est placé sur la liste des personnes visées par une interdiction de voyager dans le monde et le gel de leurs avoirs.

Source:LEMONDE.FR avec AFP et Reuters, du 30/11/2011 

Sudan's Darfur conflict : Questions & Answers

Q&A: Sudan's Darfur conflict


Members of Sudan Liberation Army, file image
As many as 300,000 people have died in the conflict

Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir and the main rebel group in Darfur, the Justice and Equality Movement (Jem), are about to sign a ceasefire.
It is being seen as an important step to achieving peace before a national election in April.
Some 2.7 million people have fled their homes since the conflict began in the arid western region, and the UN says about 300,000 have died - mostly from disease.
How did the conflict start?
The Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) and Justice and Equality Movement (Jem) began attacking government targets in early 2003, accusing Khartoum of oppressing black Africans in favour of Arabs.
Darfur, which means land of the Fur, has faced many years of tension over land and grazing rights between the mostly nomadic Arabs, and farmers from the Fur, Massaleet and Zaghawa communities.
How did the government respond to the rebellion?
It admits mobilising "self-defence militias" following rebel attacks.
But it denies any links to the Arab Janjaweed militia - who are accused of trying to drive out black Africans from large swathes of territory.

KEY REBEL PLAYERS
Darfur map
SLM: Minni Minnawi's faction
SLM: Abdul Wahid Mohammad Ahmed al-Nur's faction
Jem: Khalil Ibrahim, one of the first rebel groups
President Omar al-Bashir has called the Janjaweed "thieves and gangsters".
But refugees say air raids by government aircraft would be followed by attacks from the Janjaweed, who would ride into villages on horses and camels, slaughtering men, raping women and stealing whatever they could find.
The US and some human rights groups have said genocide is taking place - though a UN investigation team in 2005 concluded that war crimes had been committed but there had been no intent to commit genocide.
Trials have been announced in Khartoum of some members of the security forces suspected of abuses - but this is viewed as part of a campaign against attempts to get suspects tried at the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague.
What has happened to Darfur's civilians?
The United Nations says more than 2.7 million people have fled their homes and now live in camps near Darfur's main towns.

SEARCH FOR PEACE
May 2006: Khartoum makes peace with main Darfur rebel faction, Sudan Liberation Movement; Jem rejects the deal
May 2008: Unprecedented assault by Jem on Khartoum
Jul 2008: ICC calls for arrest of President Bashir
Nov 2008: President Bashir announces ceasefire
Nov 2008: ICC calls for arrest of three rebel commanders
Feb 2009: Army says it has captured key town of Muhajiriya
Feb 2009: Khartoum and Jem sign a deal in Qatar
Darfuris say the Janjaweed patrol outside the camps and men are killed and women raped if they venture too far in search of firewood or water.
Some 200,000 people have also sought safety in neighbouring Chad. Many of these are camped along a 600km (372 mile) stretch of the border and remain vulnerable to attacks from the Sudan side.
Chad's eastern areas have a similar ethnic make-up to Darfur and the violence has spilled over the border area, with the neighbours accusing one another of supporting each other's rebel groups.
Many aid agencies have been working in Darfur but they are unable to get access to vast areas because of the insecurity.
Several were banned from northern Sudan after the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for President Bashir in 2009 for alleged war crimes.
How many have died?
The United Nations says up to 300,000 people have died from the combined effects of war, hunger and disease.

File pic of Sudanese Janjaweed fighter
Janjaweed gunmen are accused of prowling outside refugee camps
President Bashir puts the death toll at 10,000.
Accurate figures are difficult to research and have made no distinction between those dying as a result of violence and those dying as a result of starvation or disease in the camps.
The numbers are crucial in determining whether the deaths in Darfur are genocide or - as the Sudanese government says - the situation is being exaggerated.
Is anyone trying to stop the fighting?
Yes.
There are thousands of peacekeepers in the region under the auspices of a joint African Union-UN peacekeeping mission, Unamid.
Last August, the UN's outgoing military commander General Martin Agwai said the conflict was effectively over and isolated attacks and banditry were the region's main problems now.
There was a peace deal in 2006, but only one of many rebel factions signed up to it.
Qatar, the United Nations, the African Union, Arab League and Chad have all helped to arrange peace talks between Khartoum and Jem over the past few years.
The US envoy to Darfur, Scott Gration, has also been involved in talks aimed at getting the rebel groups to agree a common position so they can take part in broader peace talks.
It is hoped that the ceasefire with Jem will see other rebels sit down at the negotiating table.
Who is to blame?
The international community lays much of the blame on Mr Bashir.

Omar al-Bashir
Omar al-Bashir says ICC charges reflect Western hostility to Sudan
He has frequently been accused of supporting the pro-government militias.
The International Criminal Court in The Hague issued an arrest warrant last year for war crimes and crimes against humanity.
An attempt to add genocide to the charge was initially refused - but prosecutors appealed and the court's pre-trial chamber has now been ordered to reconsider genocide charges.
Rebel groups have also been held responsible for some atrocities.
But the case against rebel leader Bahar Idriss Abu Garda, accused of planning the killing of 12 African Union peacekeepers in 2007, was dropped this year as the ICC ruled there was not enough evidence to support a trial.

Q&A: Sudan's Darfur conflict


Members of Sudan Liberation Army, file image
As many as 300,000 people have died in the conflict

Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir and the main rebel group in Darfur, the Justice and Equality Movement (Jem), are about to sign a ceasefire.
It is being seen as an important step to achieving peace before a national election in April.
Some 2.7 million people have fled their homes since the conflict began in the arid western region, and the UN says about 300,000 have died - mostly from disease.
How did the conflict start?
The Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) and Justice and Equality Movement (Jem) began attacking government targets in early 2003, accusing Khartoum of oppressing black Africans in favour of Arabs.
Darfur, which means land of the Fur, has faced many years of tension over land and grazing rights between the mostly nomadic Arabs, and farmers from the Fur, Massaleet and Zaghawa communities.
How did the government respond to the rebellion?
It admits mobilising "self-defence militias" following rebel attacks.
But it denies any links to the Arab Janjaweed militia - who are accused of trying to drive out black Africans from large swathes of territory.

KEY REBEL PLAYERS
Darfur map
SLM: Minni Minnawi's faction
SLM: Abdul Wahid Mohammad Ahmed al-Nur's faction
Jem: Khalil Ibrahim, one of the first rebel groups
President Omar al-Bashir has called the Janjaweed "thieves and gangsters".
But refugees say air raids by government aircraft would be followed by attacks from the Janjaweed, who would ride into villages on horses and camels, slaughtering men, raping women and stealing whatever they could find.
The US and some human rights groups have said genocide is taking place - though a UN investigation team in 2005 concluded that war crimes had been committed but there had been no intent to commit genocide.
Trials have been announced in Khartoum of some members of the security forces suspected of abuses - but this is viewed as part of a campaign against attempts to get suspects tried at the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague.
What has happened to Darfur's civilians?
The United Nations says more than 2.7 million people have fled their homes and now live in camps near Darfur's main towns.

SEARCH FOR PEACE
May 2006: Khartoum makes peace with main Darfur rebel faction, Sudan Liberation Movement; Jem rejects the deal
May 2008: Unprecedented assault by Jem on Khartoum
Jul 2008: ICC calls for arrest of President Bashir
Nov 2008: President Bashir announces ceasefire
Nov 2008: ICC calls for arrest of three rebel commanders
Feb 2009: Army says it has captured key town of Muhajiriya
Feb 2009: Khartoum and Jem sign a deal in Qatar
Darfuris say the Janjaweed patrol outside the camps and men are killed and women raped if they venture too far in search of firewood or water.
Some 200,000 people have also sought safety in neighbouring Chad. Many of these are camped along a 600km (372 mile) stretch of the border and remain vulnerable to attacks from the Sudan side.
Chad's eastern areas have a similar ethnic make-up to Darfur and the violence has spilled over the border area, with the neighbours accusing one another of supporting each other's rebel groups.
Many aid agencies have been working in Darfur but they are unable to get access to vast areas because of the insecurity.
Several were banned from northern Sudan after the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for President Bashir in 2009 for alleged war crimes.
How many have died?
The United Nations says up to 300,000 people have died from the combined effects of war, hunger and disease.

File pic of Sudanese Janjaweed fighter
Janjaweed gunmen are accused of prowling outside refugee camps
President Bashir puts the death toll at 10,000.
Accurate figures are difficult to research and have made no distinction between those dying as a result of violence and those dying as a result of starvation or disease in the camps.
The numbers are crucial in determining whether the deaths in Darfur are genocide or - as the Sudanese government says - the situation is being exaggerated.
Is anyone trying to stop the fighting?
Yes.
There are thousands of peacekeepers in the region under the auspices of a joint African Union-UN peacekeeping mission, Unamid.
Last August, the UN's outgoing military commander General Martin Agwai said the conflict was effectively over and isolated attacks and banditry were the region's main problems now.
There was a peace deal in 2006, but only one of many rebel factions signed up to it.
Qatar, the United Nations, the African Union, Arab League and Chad have all helped to arrange peace talks between Khartoum and Jem over the past few years.
The US envoy to Darfur, Scott Gration, has also been involved in talks aimed at getting the rebel groups to agree a common position so they can take part in broader peace talks.
It is hoped that the ceasefire with Jem will see other rebels sit down at the negotiating table.
Who is to blame?
The international community lays much of the blame on Mr Bashir.

Omar al-Bashir
Omar al-Bashir says ICC charges reflect Western hostility to Sudan
He has frequently been accused of supporting the pro-government militias.
The International Criminal Court in The Hague issued an arrest warrant last year for war crimes and crimes against humanity.
An attempt to add genocide to the charge was initially refused - but prosecutors appealed and the court's pre-trial chamber has now been ordered to reconsider genocide charges.
Rebel groups have also been held responsible for some atrocities.
But the case against rebel leader Bahar Idriss Abu Garda, accused of planning the killing of 12 African Union peacekeepers in 2007, was dropped this year as the ICC ruled there was not enough evidence to support a trial.

Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir and the main rebel group in Darfur, the Justice and Equality Movement (Jem), are about to sign a ceasefire.

It is being seen as an important step to achieving peace before a national election in April.
Some 2.7 million people have fled their homes since the conflict began in the arid western region, and the UN says about 300,000 have died - mostly from disease.

How did the conflict start?

The Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) and Justice and Equality Movement (Jem) began attacking government targets in early 2003, accusing Khartoum of oppressing black Africans in favour of Arabs.
Darfur, which means land of the Fur, has faced many years of tension over land and grazing rights between the mostly nomadic Arabs, and farmers from the Fur, Massaleet and Zaghawa communities.

How did the government respond to the rebellion?

It admits mobilising "self-defence militias" following rebel attacks.
But it denies any links to the Arab Janjaweed militia - who are accused of trying to drive out black Africans from large swathes of territory.


KEY REBEL PLAYERS
Darfur map
SLM: Minni Minnawi's faction
SLM: Abdul Wahid Mohammad Ahmed al-Nur's faction
Jem: Khalil Ibrahim, one of the first rebel groups

President Omar al-Bashir has called the Janjaweed "thieves and gangsters".
But refugees say air raids by government aircraft would be followed by attacks from the Janjaweed, who would ride into villages on horses and camels, slaughtering men, raping women and stealing whatever they could find.
The US and some human rights groups have said genocide is taking place - though a UN investigation team in 2005 concluded that war crimes had been committed but there had been no intent to commit genocide.
Trials have been announced in Khartoum of some members of the security forces suspected of abuses - but this is viewed as part of a campaign against attempts to get suspects tried at the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague.

What has happened to Darfur's civilians?

The United Nations says more than 2.7 million people have fled their homes and now live in camps near Darfur's main towns.


SEARCH FOR PEACE
May 2006: Khartoum makes peace with main Darfur rebel faction, Sudan Liberation Movement; Jem rejects the deal
May 2008: Unprecedented assault by Jem on Khartoum
Jul 2008: ICC calls for arrest of President Bashir
Nov 2008: President Bashir announces ceasefire
Nov 2008: ICC calls for arrest of three rebel commanders
Feb 2009: Army says it has captured key town of Muhajiriya
Feb 2009: Khartoum and Jem sign a deal in Qatar

Darfuris say the Janjaweed patrol outside the camps and men are killed and women raped if they venture too far in search of firewood or water.
Some 200,000 people have also sought safety in neighbouring Chad. Many of these are camped along a 600km (372 mile) stretch of the border and remain vulnerable to attacks from the Sudan side.
Chad's eastern areas have a similar ethnic make-up to Darfur and the violence has spilled over the border area, with the neighbours accusing one another of supporting each other's rebel groups.
Many aid agencies have been working in Darfur but they are unable to get access to vast areas because of the insecurity.
Several were banned from northern Sudan after the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for President Bashir in 2009 for alleged war crimes.

How many have died?

The United Nations says up to 300,000 people have died from the combined effects of war, hunger and disease.


File pic of Sudanese Janjaweed fighter
Janjaweed gunmen are accused of prowling outside refugee camps

President Bashir puts the death toll at 10,000.
Accurate figures are difficult to research and have made no distinction between those dying as a result of violence and those dying as a result of starvation or disease in the camps.
The numbers are crucial in determining whether the deaths in Darfur are genocide or - as the Sudanese government says - the situation is being exaggerated.

Is anyone trying to stop the fighting?

Yes.
There are thousands of peacekeepers in the region under the auspices of a joint African Union-UN peacekeeping mission, Unamid.
Last August, the UN's outgoing military commander General Martin Agwai said the conflict was effectively over and isolated attacks and banditry were the region's main problems now.
There was a peace deal in 2006, but only one of many rebel factions signed up to it.
Qatar, the United Nations, the African Union, Arab League and Chad have all helped to arrange peace talks between Khartoum and Jem over the past few years.
The US envoy to Darfur, Scott Gration, has also been involved in talks aimed at getting the rebel groups to agree a common position so they can take part in broader peace talks.
It is hoped that the ceasefire with Jem will see other rebels sit down at the negotiating table.

Who is to blame?

The international community lays much of the blame on Mr Bashir.


Omar al-Bashir
Omar al-Bashir says ICC charges reflect Western hostility to Sudan

He has frequently been accused of supporting the pro-government militias.
The International Criminal Court in The Hague issued an arrest warrant last year for war crimes and crimes against humanity.
An attempt to add genocide to the charge was initially refused - but prosecutors appealed and the court's pre-trial chamber has now been ordered to reconsider genocide charges.
Rebel groups have also been held responsible for some atrocities.
But the case against rebel leader Bahar Idriss Abu Garda, accused of planning the killing of 12 African Union peacekeepers in 2007, was dropped this year as the ICC ruled there was not enough evidence to support a trial.


Source: BBC News, Page last updated at 14:39 GMT, Tuesday, 23 February 2010

Profile: Sudan's Omar al-Bashir

Profile: Sudan's Omar al-Bashir


President Omar al-Bashir
Omar al-Bashir led the army before seizing power
Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir's career has been defined by war. He came to power in a coup in 1989 and has ruled Africa's largest country with an iron fist ever since.
When he seized power, Sudan was in the midst of a 21-year civil war between north and south.
Although his government signed a deal to end that conflict in 2005, another one was breaking out at the same time - in the western region of Darfur, where President Bashir is accused of organising war crimes and crimes against humanity.
"He's a man for whom dignity and pride are very important and he's a man who's quite hot-headed - prone to angry outbursts especially when he feels his pride has been wounded," Sudan analyst Alex de Waal told the BBC News website.
Despite the international arrest warrant, he has been re-elected as president.
Before first taking to the helm, he was a commander in the army - responsible for leading operations in the south against the late rebel leader John Garang.
When he signed the peace deal with Garang and his Sudan People's Liberation Movement, he took pains to stress the deal had not been a defeat.

ACCUSATIONS AGAINST BASHIR
Genocide:
Killing members of the Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa ethnic groups
Causing these groups serious bodily or mental harm
Inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about these groups' physical destruction
Crimes against humanity:
Murder
Extermination
Forcible transfer
Rape
Torture
War crimes:
Attacks on civilians in Darfur
Pillaging towns and villages
"We did not sign it after we had been broken. We signed it while we were at the peak of our victories," he said.
His goal has always been to keep a unified Sudan, and his biggest fear is that the south will vote to secede in 2011 - a referendum was part of the peace deal.
His attitude to Darfur, where a conflict has raged since 2003 when rebels took up arms at alleged government discrimination, shows a similar belligerence.
But he denies international accusations that he has backed Arab Janjaweed militias accused of war crimes against the region's black African communities.
For years, Mr Bashir resisted the deployment of UN peacekeepers to Darfur and any criticism from the West tends to make him and his allies dig in their heels.
"We are telling those people who are saying that they want to put pressure on the Khartoum government that we will remain firm and never bow to anyone except the Almighty God," he told cheering crowds in 2004.
Stick waving
It is at these rallies, often dressed in his military uniform, that Mr Bashir seems in his element - waving his walking stick in the air.

Hassan al-Turabi
He's a military person who has been in power for a while and he wants to assert military power
Islamist leader Hassan al-Turabi
He is more shy when it comes to the media and rarely gives one-to-one interviews.
Correspondents say this may be because he is not very articulate, unlike his former enemy Garang, who died not long after becoming national vice-president.
But this means, says Mr de Waal, that the president is often underestimated.
"He is smarter than he appears. He's somebody who apparently has a huge grasp of detail, but he's very conscious of the fact that he's not highly educated," Mr de Waal says.
He is said to enjoy a better relationship with Garang's successor, Salva Kiir, precisely because the two men are career soldiers - ill at ease with clever, well-spoken politicians.
Born in 1944 into a farming family, Mr Bashir joined the army as a young man and rose through the ranks. He fought in the Egyptian army in the 1973 war against Israel.
As head of state, his game has largely remained soldiering - the political lead being taken by two other figures.
The first in the 1990s was Hassan al-Turabi, a prominent Sunni Muslim who advocates an Islamic state and ushered in a bill introducing Sharia to all provinces but the south.

map
After their fall-out in 2000, Mr Turabi told the BBC: "He's a military person who has been in power for a while and he wants to assert military power."
Then Osman Ali Taha, now first vice-president, who negotiated the north-south deal, came to the fore. But his influence has since waned and the president has taken centre stage.
"Bashir has emerged as exercising more power himself. There's no one figure that overshadows him," says Mr de Waal.
His longevity in office, he adds, is probably down to the fact that powerful rivals in the ruling National Congress Party distrust each other more than they do Mr Bashir.
Oil money flows
Little is known about the Sudanese leader's private life. He has no children and when in his 50s took a second wife.
He married the widow of Ibrahim Shams al-Din, considered a war hero in the north - as an example to others, he said.
The Darfur problem is just traditional conflict over resources
President Bashir
The long civil war had seen many colleagues fall, and he implored others to marry again so war widows could be taken care of.
Mr Bashir has presided over a flourishing economy. When he became president, it was punishable by death to be found in possession of US dollars.
Now, there are pockets full of dollars as the oil flows, controls have been lifted and the telecommunications system revolutionised.
Such business acumen and forethought, however, have not been extended countrywide, nor has the oil wealth.
But Mr Bashir denies accusations that these issues may be the underlying cause of unrest in Darfur.
"In reality, the gist of the Darfur problem is just traditional conflict over resources, which has been coated with claims of marginalisation," he has said.
He was angered and humiliated in May 2008 when Darfur rebels nearly entered Khartoum, his fortress capital.
Many feared the International Criminal Court's indictment against him in March 2009 on five counts of crimes against humanity and two of war crimes would provoke Mr Bashir into flexing his muscles.
But he has since made peace with the Jem rebels who attacked Omdurman, just across the River Nile from Khartoum.
He has even said he would let the south secede - with its oil fields - if that is the outcome of the 2011 referendum.
Either he is mellowing with age, or he realises that Sudan cannot afford another conflict.
Letting the south go may be the price he is willing to pay to remain in power in the north.


Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir's career has been defined by war. He came to power in a coup in 1989 and has ruled Africa's largest country with an iron fist ever since.

When he seized power, Sudan was in the midst of a 21-year civil war between north and south.
Although his government signed a deal to end that conflict in 2005, another one was breaking out at the same time - in the western region of Darfur, where President Bashir is accused of organising war crimes and crimes against humanity.
"He's a man for whom dignity and pride are very important and he's a man who's quite hot-headed - prone to angry outbursts especially when he feels his pride has been wounded," Sudan analyst Alex de Waal told the BBC News website.
Despite the international arrest warrant, he has been re-elected as president.
Before first taking to the helm, he was a commander in the army - responsible for leading operations in the south against the late rebel leader John Garang.
When he signed the peace deal with Garang and his Sudan People's Liberation Movement, he took pains to stress the deal had not been a defeat.


ACCUSATIONS AGAINST BASHIR
Genocide:
Killing members of the Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa ethnic groups
Causing these groups serious bodily or mental harm
Inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about these groups' physical destruction
Crimes against humanity:
Murder
Extermination
Forcible transfer
Rape
Torture
War crimes:
Attacks on civilians in Darfur
Pillaging towns and villages

"We did not sign it after we had been broken. We signed it while we were at the peak of our victories," he said.
His goal has always been to keep a unified Sudan, and his biggest fear is that the south will vote to secede in 2011 - a referendum was part of the peace deal.
His attitude to Darfur, where a conflict has raged since 2003 when rebels took up arms at alleged government discrimination, shows a similar belligerence.
But he denies international accusations that he has backed Arab Janjaweed militias accused of war crimes against the region's black African communities.
For years, Mr Bashir resisted the deployment of UN peacekeepers to Darfur and any criticism from the West tends to make him and his allies dig in their heels.
"We are telling those people who are saying that they want to put pressure on the Khartoum government that we will remain firm and never bow to anyone except the Almighty God," he told cheering crowds in 2004.

Stick waving

It is at these rallies, often dressed in his military uniform, that Mr Bashir seems in his element - waving his walking stick in the air.


Hassan al-Turabi
He's a military person who has been in power for a while and he wants to assert military power
Islamist leader Hassan al-Turabi

He is more shy when it comes to the media and rarely gives one-to-one interviews.
Correspondents say this may be because he is not very articulate, unlike his former enemy Garang, who died not long after becoming national vice-president.
But this means, says Mr de Waal, that the president is often underestimated.
"He is smarter than he appears. He's somebody who apparently has a huge grasp of detail, but he's very conscious of the fact that he's not highly educated," Mr de Waal says.
He is said to enjoy a better relationship with Garang's successor, Salva Kiir, precisely because the two men are career soldiers - ill at ease with clever, well-spoken politicians.
Born in 1944 into a farming family, Mr Bashir joined the army as a young man and rose through the ranks. He fought in the Egyptian army in the 1973 war against Israel.
As head of state, his game has largely remained soldiering - the political lead being taken by two other figures.
The first in the 1990s was Hassan al-Turabi, a prominent Sunni Muslim who advocates an Islamic state and ushered in a bill introducing Sharia to all provinces but the south.


map

After their fall-out in 2000, Mr Turabi told the BBC: "He's a military person who has been in power for a while and he wants to assert military power."
Then Osman Ali Taha, now first vice-president, who negotiated the north-south deal, came to the fore. But his influence has since waned and the president has taken centre stage.
"Bashir has emerged as exercising more power himself. There's no one figure that overshadows him," says Mr de Waal.
His longevity in office, he adds, is probably down to the fact that powerful rivals in the ruling National Congress Party distrust each other more than they do Mr Bashir.

Oil money flows

Little is known about the Sudanese leader's private life. He has no children and when in his 50s took a second wife.
He married the widow of Ibrahim Shams al-Din, considered a war hero in the north - as an example to others, he said.

The Darfur problem is just traditional conflict over resources
President Bashir

The long civil war had seen many colleagues fall, and he implored others to marry again so war widows could be taken care of.
Mr Bashir has presided over a flourishing economy. When he became president, it was punishable by death to be found in possession of US dollars.
Now, there are pockets full of dollars as the oil flows, controls have been lifted and the telecommunications system revolutionised.
Such business acumen and forethought, however, have not been extended countrywide, nor has the oil wealth.
But Mr Bashir denies accusations that these issues may be the underlying cause of unrest in Darfur.
"In reality, the gist of the Darfur problem is just traditional conflict over resources, which has been coated with claims of marginalisation," he has said.
He was angered and humiliated in May 2008 when Darfur rebels nearly entered Khartoum, his fortress capital.
Many feared the International Criminal Court's indictment against him in March 2009 on five counts of crimes against humanity and two of war crimes would provoke Mr Bashir into flexing his muscles.
But he has since made peace with the Jem rebels who attacked Omdurman, just across the River Nile from Khartoum.
He has even said he would let the south secede - with its oil fields - if that is the outcome of the 2011 referendum.
Either he is mellowing with age, or he realises that Sudan cannot afford another conflict.
Letting the south go may be the price he is willing to pay to remain in power in the north.

Source: BBC News,

Profile: Sudan's Omar al-Bashir


President Omar al-Bashir
Omar al-Bashir led the army before seizing power
Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir's career has been defined by war. He came to power in a coup in 1989 and has ruled Africa's largest country with an iron fist ever since.
When he seized power, Sudan was in the midst of a 21-year civil war between north and south.
Although his government signed a deal to end that conflict in 2005, another one was breaking out at the same time - in the western region of Darfur, where President Bashir is accused of organising war crimes and crimes against humanity.
"He's a man for whom dignity and pride are very important and he's a man who's quite hot-headed - prone to angry outbursts especially when he feels his pride has been wounded," Sudan analyst Alex de Waal told the BBC News website.
Despite the international arrest warrant, he has been re-elected as president.
Before first taking to the helm, he was a commander in the army - responsible for leading operations in the south against the late rebel leader John Garang.
When he signed the peace deal with Garang and his Sudan People's Liberation Movement, he took pains to stress the deal had not been a defeat.

ACCUSATIONS AGAINST BASHIR
Genocide:
Killing members of the Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa ethnic groups
Causing these groups serious bodily or mental harm
Inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about these groups' physical destruction
Crimes against humanity:
Murder
Extermination
Forcible transfer
Rape
Torture
War crimes:
Attacks on civilians in Darfur
Pillaging towns and villages
"We did not sign it after we had been broken. We signed it while we were at the peak of our victories," he said.
His goal has always been to keep a unified Sudan, and his biggest fear is that the south will vote to secede in 2011 - a referendum was part of the peace deal.
His attitude to Darfur, where a conflict has raged since 2003 when rebels took up arms at alleged government discrimination, shows a similar belligerence.
But he denies international accusations that he has backed Arab Janjaweed militias accused of war crimes against the region's black African communities.
For years, Mr Bashir resisted the deployment of UN peacekeepers to Darfur and any criticism from the West tends to make him and his allies dig in their heels.
"We are telling those people who are saying that they want to put pressure on the Khartoum government that we will remain firm and never bow to anyone except the Almighty God," he told cheering crowds in 2004.
Stick waving
It is at these rallies, often dressed in his military uniform, that Mr Bashir seems in his element - waving his walking stick in the air.

Hassan al-Turabi
He's a military person who has been in power for a while and he wants to assert military power
Islamist leader Hassan al-Turabi
He is more shy when it comes to the media and rarely gives one-to-one interviews.
Correspondents say this may be because he is not very articulate, unlike his former enemy Garang, who died not long after becoming national vice-president.
But this means, says Mr de Waal, that the president is often underestimated.
"He is smarter than he appears. He's somebody who apparently has a huge grasp of detail, but he's very conscious of the fact that he's not highly educated," Mr de Waal says.
He is said to enjoy a better relationship with Garang's successor, Salva Kiir, precisely because the two men are career soldiers - ill at ease with clever, well-spoken politicians.
Born in 1944 into a farming family, Mr Bashir joined the army as a young man and rose through the ranks. He fought in the Egyptian army in the 1973 war against Israel.
As head of state, his game has largely remained soldiering - the political lead being taken by two other figures.
The first in the 1990s was Hassan al-Turabi, a prominent Sunni Muslim who advocates an Islamic state and ushered in a bill introducing Sharia to all provinces but the south.

map
After their fall-out in 2000, Mr Turabi told the BBC: "He's a military person who has been in power for a while and he wants to assert military power."
Then Osman Ali Taha, now first vice-president, who negotiated the north-south deal, came to the fore. But his influence has since waned and the president has taken centre stage.
"Bashir has emerged as exercising more power himself. There's no one figure that overshadows him," says Mr de Waal.
His longevity in office, he adds, is probably down to the fact that powerful rivals in the ruling National Congress Party distrust each other more than they do Mr Bashir.
Oil money flows
Little is known about the Sudanese leader's private life. He has no children and when in his 50s took a second wife.
He married the widow of Ibrahim Shams al-Din, considered a war hero in the north - as an example to others, he said.
The Darfur problem is just traditional conflict over resources
President Bashir
The long civil war had seen many colleagues fall, and he implored others to marry again so war widows could be taken care of.
Mr Bashir has presided over a flourishing economy. When he became president, it was punishable by death to be found in possession of US dollars.
Now, there are pockets full of dollars as the oil flows, controls have been lifted and the telecommunications system revolutionised.
Such business acumen and forethought, however, have not been extended countrywide, nor has the oil wealth.
But Mr Bashir denies accusations that these issues may be the underlying cause of unrest in Darfur.
"In reality, the gist of the Darfur problem is just traditional conflict over resources, which has been coated with claims of marginalisation," he has said.
He was angered and humiliated in May 2008 when Darfur rebels nearly entered Khartoum, his fortress capital.
Many feared the International Criminal Court's indictment against him in March 2009 on five counts of crimes against humanity and two of war crimes would provoke Mr Bashir into flexing his muscles.
But he has since made peace with the Jem rebels who attacked Omdurman, just across the River Nile from Khartoum.
He has even said he would let the south secede - with its oil fields - if that is the outcome of the 2011 referendum.
Either he is mellowing with age, or he realises that Sudan cannot afford another conflict.
Letting the south go may be the price he is willing to pay to remain in power in the north.

Profile: Sudan's Omar al-Bashir


President Omar al-Bashir
Omar al-Bashir led the army before seizing power
Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir's career has been defined by war. He came to power in a coup in 1989 and has ruled Africa's largest country with an iron fist ever since.
When he seized power, Sudan was in the midst of a 21-year civil war between north and south.
Although his government signed a deal to end that conflict in 2005, another one was breaking out at the same time - in the western region of Darfur, where President Bashir is accused of organising war crimes and crimes against humanity.
"He's a man for whom dignity and pride are very important and he's a man who's quite hot-headed - prone to angry outbursts especially when he feels his pride has been wounded," Sudan analyst Alex de Waal told the BBC News website.
Despite the international arrest warrant, he has been re-elected as president.
Before first taking to the helm, he was a commander in the army - responsible for leading operations in the south against the late rebel leader John Garang.
When he signed the peace deal with Garang and his Sudan People's Liberation Movement, he took pains to stress the deal had not been a defeat.

ACCUSATIONS AGAINST BASHIR
Genocide:
Killing members of the Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa ethnic groups
Causing these groups serious bodily or mental harm
Inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about these groups' physical destruction
Crimes against humanity:
Murder
Extermination
Forcible transfer
Rape
Torture
War crimes:
Attacks on civilians in Darfur
Pillaging towns and villages
"We did not sign it after we had been broken. We signed it while we were at the peak of our victories," he said.
His goal has always been to keep a unified Sudan, and his biggest fear is that the south will vote to secede in 2011 - a referendum was part of the peace deal.
His attitude to Darfur, where a conflict has raged since 2003 when rebels took up arms at alleged government discrimination, shows a similar belligerence.
But he denies international accusations that he has backed Arab Janjaweed militias accused of war crimes against the region's black African communities.
For years, Mr Bashir resisted the deployment of UN peacekeepers to Darfur and any criticism from the West tends to make him and his allies dig in their heels.
"We are telling those people who are saying that they want to put pressure on the Khartoum government that we will remain firm and never bow to anyone except the Almighty God," he told cheering crowds in 2004.
Stick waving
It is at these rallies, often dressed in his military uniform, that Mr Bashir seems in his element - waving his walking stick in the air.

Hassan al-Turabi
He's a military person who has been in power for a while and he wants to assert military power
Islamist leader Hassan al-Turabi
He is more shy when it comes to the media and rarely gives one-to-one interviews.
Correspondents say this may be because he is not very articulate, unlike his former enemy Garang, who died not long after becoming national vice-president.
But this means, says Mr de Waal, that the president is often underestimated.
"He is smarter than he appears. He's somebody who apparently has a huge grasp of detail, but he's very conscious of the fact that he's not highly educated," Mr de Waal says.
He is said to enjoy a better relationship with Garang's successor, Salva Kiir, precisely because the two men are career soldiers - ill at ease with clever, well-spoken politicians.
Born in 1944 into a farming family, Mr Bashir joined the army as a young man and rose through the ranks. He fought in the Egyptian army in the 1973 war against Israel.
As head of state, his game has largely remained soldiering - the political lead being taken by two other figures.
The first in the 1990s was Hassan al-Turabi, a prominent Sunni Muslim who advocates an Islamic state and ushered in a bill introducing Sharia to all provinces but the south.

map
After their fall-out in 2000, Mr Turabi told the BBC: "He's a military person who has been in power for a while and he wants to assert military power."
Then Osman Ali Taha, now first vice-president, who negotiated the north-south deal, came to the fore. But his influence has since waned and the president has taken centre stage.
"Bashir has emerged as exercising more power himself. There's no one figure that overshadows him," says Mr de Waal.
His longevity in office, he adds, is probably down to the fact that powerful rivals in the ruling National Congress Party distrust each other more than they do Mr Bashir.
Oil money flows
Little is known about the Sudanese leader's private life. He has no children and when in his 50s took a second wife.
He married the widow of Ibrahim Shams al-Din, considered a war hero in the north - as an example to others, he said.
The Darfur problem is just traditional conflict over resources
President Bashir
The long civil war had seen many colleagues fall, and he implored others to marry again so war widows could be taken care of.
Mr Bashir has presided over a flourishing economy. When he became president, it was punishable by death to be found in possession of US dollars.
Now, there are pockets full of dollars as the oil flows, controls have been lifted and the telecommunications system revolutionised.
Such business acumen and forethought, however, have not been extended countrywide, nor has the oil wealth.
But Mr Bashir denies accusations that these issues may be the underlying cause of unrest in Darfur.
"In reality, the gist of the Darfur problem is just traditional conflict over resources, which has been coated with claims of marginalisation," he has said.
He was angered and humiliated in May 2008 when Darfur rebels nearly entered Khartoum, his fortress capital.
Many feared the International Criminal Court's indictment against him in March 2009 on five counts of crimes against humanity and two of war crimes would provoke Mr Bashir into flexing his muscles.
But he has since made peace with the Jem rebels who attacked Omdurman, just across the River Nile from Khartoum.
He has even said he would let the south secede - with its oil fields - if that is the outcome of the 2011 referendum.
Either he is mellowing with age, or he realises that Sudan cannot afford another conflict.
Letting the south go may be the price he is willing to pay to remain in power in the north.