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Sudan's leader contemptuous of genocide indictment

  • Story Highlights
  • Omar al-Bashir says he won't be cowed by charges of masterminding genocide
  • On visit to Darfur, tells supporters it's a plot to threaten peace efforts
  • International court charges: genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes
  • Tells cheering crowd: "We will only bow to God, who is the sole provider"
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AL-FASHER, Sudan (AP) -- Sudan's president says he would not be cowed by his indictment on genocide charges nor allow it to distract him from the search for peace in troubled Darfur.

Sudanese families made homeless during the five-year Darfur war crowd to see President al-Bashir Wednesday.

Under heavy security, Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, center, greets supporters Wednesday in Darfur.

A defiant Omar al-Bashir addressed supporters Wednesday in Darfur's capital of al-Fasher. He also sought to cast himself as a peacemaker and discount the significance of his July 14 indictment by the International Criminal Court's prosecutor.

Al-Bashir says it's an attempt to foil his government's efforts to restore peace in Darfur. And he says Sudan would not be cowed by the threat of sanctions either.

He told a cheering crowd of some 3,000 that "we will only bow to God, who is the sole provider."

Without mentioning prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo by name, al-Bashir said: "Every time we take a step forward, make progress and signs of peace emerge, those people try to mess it up, return us to square one and distract us with marginal issues and false allegations."

The International Criminal Court's Moreno-Ocampo filed 10 charges against al-Bashir for masterminding a campaign of extermination and rape specifically targeting three Darfur tribes. The U.N. says about 300,000 people have died and 2.5 million have been uprooted over the past five years.

The charges include three counts of genocide, five of crimes against humanity and two of war crimes. Moreno-Ocampo also sought an arrest warrant for al-Bashir, but it will be months before a panel of judges decides on the request.

On Wednesday, al-Bashir acknowledged "injustices" in Darfur, but did not specify them, identify those behind them nor say whether he intends to prosecute the perpetrators.

"Yes, we all know that there have been problems in Darfur and we know that there have been injustices. But we, from Day One, sought to bring peace for all the people of Darfur."

But, he added, "Ocampo's talk will not bother us or distract us from our work."

Al-Bashir's troubles in Darfur began in 2003 when ethnic African rebels in the remote western region took up arms against his Islamist regime because of what they view as discrimination against them and to press demands for a larger share of state funds and services.

Sudan's ruler of 19 years, al-Bashir on Wednesday promised Darfur a new power station in the neighboring Kordofan region to meet its electricity needs and a new road linking it to Khartoum and the Red Sea city of Port Sudan farther to the east. He gave no timeframe for either project.

Al-Bashir's relatively restrained comments came one day after a presidential adviser warned that aid workers and peacekeepers might not be safe in Darfur if an arrest warrant is issued for al-Bashir.

Bona Malwal told reporters in Nairobi, Kenya, the government would not be able to guarantee the "well-being" of international staff helping to feed and protect millions of Sudanese, and said the government might withdraw their visas.

"The first casualty of (an attempt to arrest the president) ... is the international operations in Darfur," he said. "The next casualty would be ... international peacekeepers."

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

All About International Criminal CourtOmar al-BashirDarfur

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