Posted
Monday, July 22
2013 at
09:47
In Summary
The Tanzania People’s Defence Forces (TPDF) acting
spokesperson, Major Joseph Masanja, said yesterday that the event will
start at 9am.
Dar es Salaam. The Commander in Chief of the
Armed Forces, President Jakaya Kikwete, will today lead mourners in
paying last respects to Tanzania’s seven soldiers who were killed on
July 13 in Darfur while on a UN peacekeeping mission.
The Tanzania People’s Defence Forces (TPDF) acting spokesperson, Major Joseph Masanja, said yesterday that the event will start at 9am.
The seven TPDF men were killed when their
contingent, part of the United Nations-Africa Peacekeeping Mission
(Unamid), was ambushed by heavily armed assailants in southern Darfur,
Sudan. Seventeen of their colleagues escaped with serious injuries.
Major Masanja said the last respects to the fallen
heroes will be conducted at the ministry of Defence and National
Service grounds in Upanga.
“The ceremony will commence at 9am, through 1pm,
after which the bodies of our colleagues will be transported to their
respective home areas for burial,” he said.
The bodies arrived in Dar es Salaam on Saturday
aboard a UN aircraft and were received by the Vice President Dr Mohamed
Gharib Bilal, Chief of Defence Forces General Davis Mwamunyange, First
Lady Salma Kikwete and other senior public figures.
The fallen soldiers are: Sargent Shaibu Othman,
Corporal Oswald Chaula from 42KJ, Corporal Mohammed Juma Ally from 94KJ,
Corporal Mohammed Chokizo of 41 KJ, Private Rodney Ndunguru, Private
Fortunatus Msofe from 36KJ and Private Peter Muhiri Werema of the 44KJ.
Last week, President Kikwete called on President
Omar Al-Bashir of Sudan to take urgent measures to track down and arrest
all those involved in the killings of the Tanzanian troops. A statement
issued by the State House in Dar es Salaam said in a telephone
interview that the President urged his Sudan counterpart to ensure the
law takes its course so that those behind the senseless killings are
brought to justice.
At the same time, President Al-Bashir expressed
deep shock on the killings and wounding of Tanzanian peacekeepers and
pledged that he would act swiftly to ensure the killers are apprehended
and prosecuted.
In the wake of the latest attack on Unamid forces, International Criminal Court (ICC) prosecutor Fatou Bensouda condemned the killings, saying the incident constituted a war crime.
The ambush, carried
out by a large unidentified group and which drew condemnation from UN
secretary general Ban Ki-moon and the Security Council, has been
described as one of the most serious attacks against Unamid since its
deployment in early 2008, and the third in the past few weeks.
“The ICC prosecutor reminds all parties to the conflict that the International Criminal Court has jurisdiction in Darfur and that any intentional directing of attacks against peacekeepers may constitute war crimes,” says a statement issued by the prosecutor’s office. “The office will not hesitate to investigate and prosecute those alleged to have committed such crimes should the national authorities fail to,” it adds:
“The ICC prosecutor reminds all parties to the conflict that the International Criminal Court has jurisdiction in Darfur and that any intentional directing of attacks against peacekeepers may constitute war crimes,” says a statement issued by the prosecutor’s office. “The office will not hesitate to investigate and prosecute those alleged to have committed such crimes should the national authorities fail to,” it adds:
“The prosecutor calls on the government of Sudan to carry out a
prompt and full investigation and to hold all those responsible to
account.”
Located in The Hague, in the Netherlands, the ICC is an independent, permanent court that tries persons accused of the most serious
crimes of international concern – namely genocide, crimes against
humanity and war crimes – if national authorities with jurisdiction are
unwilling or unable to do so genuinely.
The Darfur Region of Sudan is one of eight
situations currently under investigation by the ICC. The others are
northern Uganda, the Central African Republic (CAR), the Democratic
Republic of the Congo (DRC), Kenya, Libya, Mali and Côte d’Ivoire.
source: The citizen
source: The citizen