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Economist Podcasts

The snails of justice: the International Criminal Court

Economist Podcasts

The Economist

News & Politics, News

4.35K Ratings

🗓️ 17 February 2020

⏱️ 21 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Sudan’s transitional government has pledged to hand over the country’s brutal former leader to the ICC—could justice for the court’s most-wanted man at last give it credibility? Even with a world-beating renewables push, Norway’s wealth depends on oil; how can it navigate the shifting economics of energy? And the bid to make Los Angeles just a bit less car-dependent.  

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome to the intelligence on Economist Radio. I'm your host, Jason Palmer.

0:09.1

Every weekday, we provide a fresh perspective on the events shaping your world.

0:17.5

Norway is a world leader when it comes to renewable power, but its fabulous wealth has come from,

0:23.7

still comes from, selling North Sea oil. A renewables' startup scene is starting up,

0:29.4

but the country is wrestling with the shifting economics of energy. And, even more than elsewhere

0:36.6

in America, people in Los Angeles love to travel by car.

0:40.5

The city is trying to coax Angelinos onto public transport, beefing up its infrastructure.

0:45.5

But people seem happier to pay for those works than to take a bus to work.

0:57.0

First up, though, Omar al-Bashir, the former president of Sudan, has long been the number one target of the International Criminal Court, or ICC.

1:10.0

It's more than 10 years since he was indicted

1:12.4

for war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide, mainly in the country's western region

1:17.6

of Darfur. But the ICC has had no power to arrest him, so as with others indicted

1:23.8

by the court, he's not been brought to justice. In fact, Mr. Bashir has traveled freely across the African continent in full view of the court.

1:32.7

That has damaged its reputation and raised questions about its potency.

1:37.6

But following the uprising last year in which Mr. Bashir was deposed, he now languishes

1:42.6

in a Sudanese jail, and the ICC, it seems, is closing

1:46.5

in on its man.

1:48.7

General Al-Bashir, he seized power in a coup in 1989 in a self-proclaimed Islamic revolution.

1:56.0

Richard Cockett is a senior editor at The Economist and author of Sudan, Darfur and the failure of an African state.

2:02.4

The Islamic phase of Israel lasts for about 10 years, and after that it was all about self-preservation

2:09.0

and self-enrichment, and particularly putting down the various rebellions that sprung up against

2:13.9

his rule in all parts of a country. The most famous conflict was the rebellion in Darfur, which began in 2003.

...

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