Sudan to issue arrest warrants for Zoe's Ark six
KHARTOUM (Reuters) - Sudan said on Wednesday it would issue arrest warrants for child trafficking against six French aid workers who were released after being pardoned by Chad for abducting 103 children.
Sudan's minister for social affairs, Samia Ahmed Mohamed, told Reuters 18 of the children were Sudanese. N'Djamena had still not agreed to return six from a holding camp in the east of Chad and she said she feared for their safety.
"A group of Sudanese lawyers will bring charges against the kidnappers for a crime they were not tried for -- child trafficking," she said.
The six from the Zoe's Ark organisation were sentenced to eight years' hard labour by a Chadian court last year and were allowed to serve their sentences in France. On Monday, Chadian President Idriss Deby pardoned them and they were released.
Sudan will ask Interpol to post arrest warrants for the six aid workers and compensation will be sought for the families of the Sudanese. "I am very astonished ... at the release of the criminals," Mohamed said.
"It is clear that the trial was a sham and there was a deal between the two countries and the victims were the children."
France has a policy of not extraditing its own citizens. Several members of the group have been placed under formal investigation in France for fraud and other charges, making it unlikely that Sudan's warrant would lead to an arrest.
Mohamed urged the United Nations to intervene to release the six Sudanese in a holding camp in eastern Chad.
Chadian rebels have been waging a low-level insurgency against the government for two years from the east which borders Sudan's Darfur region, embroiled in its own five-year rebellion. Continued...















