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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
World
Bethan McKernan

Trump to attend Saudi conference alongside Sudanese President wanted for genocide

Egypt’s authoritarian Abdel Fattah al-Sisi was the first world leader to get a phone call when US President Donald Trump entered office. Warm congratulations were offered to Recep Tayyip Erdogan on the result of a national referendum which will probably see him stay in power until 2029. 

And Mr Trump holds Vladimir Putin in such high regard he was apparently willing to share classified information with the Russian Foreign Minister last week.  

The latest international strongman – or dictator, as the rest of us would put it – who Mr Trump could soon be rubbing shoulders with is Sudan’s Omar al-Bashir, wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for crimes against humanity, including genocide.

Bashir is also attending a summit in Riyadh designed to bring 50 Muslim leaders together during Mr Trump’s visit to Saudi Arabia over the weekend, Sudan’s Foreign Minister confirmed on Wednesday.

The Sudanese President has “the removal of sanctions finally which were imposed by the US on Sudan [and] how to combat and how to fight terrorism” on the top of his agenda, ruling National Congress Party colleague Rabie Abdul Atti said. 

“What we know is that President Bashir and President Trump will be in the same conference hall, but we don't know whether he will meet President Trump,” he added.

Bashir, who has ruled the country for almost three decades, is officially blacklisted by the US for presiding over a state sponsor of terrorism, as well as his role in the Darfur conflict – for which he is wanted by the ICC on multiple charges. 

He has consistently denied any culpability in the violence which has killed at least 300,000 in Sudan’s east since 2003. 

“The concern is that any kind of meeting, handshake or photo-op between President Trump and President Bashir will send a dreadful signal to victims in Darfur and victims of crimes worldwide,” Richard Dicker, the director of the International Justice Programme at Human Rights Watch, told Newsweek.

Mr Trump’s administration has condemned the 73-year-old leader’s invite to the talks.

 

“We oppose invitations, facilitation, or support for travel by any person subject to outstanding ICC arrest warrants, including President Bashir,” a spokesperson from the US Embassy in Khartoum said.

Sudan was one of the six countries targeted by President Trump’s failed “Muslim ban” earlier this year. It is one of only thee – along with Iran and Syria – to be designated a “state sponsor” of terrorism. 

The week before Mr Trump entered office, Barack Obama’s administration announced that progress in reducing the level of violence in several restive regions and efforts to counter terrorism would be rewarded by the lifting of certain sanctions against the country.

The US President’s nine-day trip to Saudi Arabia, Israel, the West Bank and the Vatican, which begins on Friday, is his first foreign trip since entering office.

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