Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir. FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP
By AFP
In Summary
- Bashir says opposition figures are backed by Egyptian intelligence services.
- Sudanese troops are fighting rebels in three conflict regions — Darfur, Blue Nile and South Kordofan.
- Bashir also denied allegations that Khartoum was hosting several members of the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood movement banned by Cairo.
Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir accused the Egyptian
government of harbouring and backing Sudanese opposition figures
fighting his troops, in remarks broadcast on Sunday.
In his first such accusation against Cairo, Bashir said in an
interview broadcast by Al-Arabiya that Sudanese opposition figures were
"backed by Egyptian intelligence services".
"We raise this issue every time when we meet Egyptian officials," said Bashir.
Sudanese troops are fighting rebels in three conflict regions — Darfur, Blue Nile and South Kordofan.
"Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi is a good man and he is
my friend, but it's the Egyptian intelligence that I am accusing," he
said.
"I'm not accusing President Sisi. I'm accusing the regime."
Bashir also denied allegations that Khartoum was hosting several
members of the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood movement banned by Cairo.
"Our policy is not to disturb the peace and security of any
country and not to intervene in any internal issues of any country," he
said.
Bashir reiterated that Sudan will protest to the United Nations
if Egypt does not end its occupation of a border region claimed by his
country.
"The Halayeb triangle is Sudanese and we will not make any concessions," he said.
Sudan will lodge a protest with the UN Security Council if Egypt
refuses to settle the dispute, said Bashir, calling for "negotiations"
with Cairo.
Egypt occupied the sparsely populated 25,000-square-kilometre
(10,000-square-mile) Halayeb triangle in 1995, during a low point in
relations between the two countries.
Sudan has regularly protested about Egypt's administration of
Halayeb, which lies near the Red Sea in a mineral-rich border region.
Khartoum says that Halayeb has been part of its sovereign territory since shortly after independence in 1956.
Bashir, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court on
charges of war crimes and genocide related to the conflict in Darfur,
also spoke in the interview of Sudan's ties with Washington.
The United States has blacklisted Sudan as a state sponsor of
terrorism since 1993 and imposed a trade embargo on Khartoum in 1997
over its alleged support for Islamist groups.
"There is a five-point roadmap between us and the United States.
The first point, terrorism, has been completed 100 percent and the
Americans have acknowledged that," said Bashir.
He said he now expected the US Congress to remove Sudan from the blacklist.
Before he left office, former US president Barack Obama
announced in a letter to Congress that he was easing economic sanctions
against Khartoum.
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