Sudan court charges ousted president al-Bashir with illegal foreign fund deals

A Sudan court on Saturday charged former president
Omar al-Bashir with illegal foreign fund deals, offences which could put him
behind bars for a decade.
Al-Bashir, 75, had arrived in a courtroom in
Khartoum on Saturday where he began his third trial session on money found at
his residence.
Judge Al-Sadiq Abdelrahman said at the third session
of Bashir’s trial that foreign funds of multiple currencies were found at his
home.
The judge said illegal acquisition of wealth was
punishable by up to 10 years in jail, while illicit use of foreign funds
carried up to three years.
Al-Bashir’s lawyer, Mohamed al-Hassan al-Amin, said
in previous statements to Al Arabiya and Al Hadath that the amount found in
Bashir’s possession came as “a grant.”
Al-Amin had also stressed that al-Bashir “did not
take a dollar” of this money.
The trial was adjourned until September 7, said an
AFP correspondent who attended the session.
Al-Bashir was ousted in April after mass protests
against his three-decade rule rocked Sudan for months.
Sudan has embarked on a transition to civilian rule
following a power-sharing deal signed on August 17 by protest leaders and the
generals who ousted al-Bashir.
Protesters have called for al-Bashir to face justice
not just over corruption but for his role in the country’s deadly conflicts.
The former Sudanese leader is wanted by the
International Criminal Court in The Hague over his role in mass killings in the
western region of Darfur.
“Now is the time for the people of Sudan to choose
law over impunity and ensure that the ICC suspects in the Darfur situation
finally face justice in a court of law,” ICC prosecutor Fatou Bensouda told the
UN Security Council in June.
Sudan’s prosecutor general has said al-Bashir would
also be charged over the killings during the anti-regime protests which
eventually led to his ouster.