KHARTOUM, Sept. 15 (Xinhua) -- Sudanese Foreign
Minister Lam Akol has accused Washington of preventing him from meeting U.S.
President George W. Bush during his visit in the United States earlier this
week, Sudan's al-Khartoum daily reported on Friday.
The foreign minister told the newspaper that U.S.
officials refused to arrange the meeting "without giving an explanation",
forcing him to bring home a message sent by Sudanese President Omer al-Bashir to
Bush.
Lam Akol returned to Sudan Thursday from the United
States where he had apparently failed to convince Washington on the problems of
Darfur and normalization of relations between the two countries.
During the four-day visit, Lam Akol held two meetings
with U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on bilateral relations and the
latest developments in Darfur as well as the UN Security Council Resolution 1706
which calls for the sending of international peacekeepers to Darfur.
However, he refused Washington's suggestion of
delivering al-Bashir's message to Rice, insisting that he had to hand it over by
himself to the U.S. president according to the Sudanese president's instruction.
Sudanese media reported that al-Bashir reiterated in
the message his country's refusal of deploying international peacekeeping force
in Darfur, and its keenness to solve the problem through dialogue instead of
confrontation.
The UN Security Council passed the resolution 1706
last month on the deployment of more than 20,000 international peacekeepers in
Darfur. But the resolution has been refused by the Sudanese government.
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