DAMASCUS, July 20 (Xinhua) -- The International
Criminal Court's(ICC) move against Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir amounted to
a "direct interference" in Sudan's internal affairs, a senior Sudanese diplomat
said here on Sunday.
Sudan's ambassador in Damascus Abdul Rahman Dirar
told a press conference that the ICC's chief prosecutor's decision against his
President was "a dangerous unprecedented act in international relations and a
decision of political nature", according to the official SANA news agency.
Sudan had been seeking to confront the move through
finding a political solution to the problem in Darfur as soon as possible in
cooperation with all of the political parties in Sudan and through diplomatic
moves to clarify his country's point of view and disclose the ICC's illegal
basis, Dirar claimed.
He criticized the double-standard policies pursued by
the international community when dealing with the issues in the region, citing
their silence over Israeli inhuman exercises against the Palestinians and the
killings and destruction in Iraq caused by the American occupation.
The Sudanese Ambassador also underlined Arab
solidarity and its role in facing the challenges.
Last Monday, the Hague-based ICC Chief Prosecutor
Luis Moreno-Ocampo formally requested an arrest warrant against al-Bashir for
alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity in the western Sudanese region of
Darfur.
It was the first time that the ICC charges a sitting
head of state, a move decried by Khartoum as undermining peace efforts in the
region.
So far, Sudan, which is not a member of the ICC, has
maintained the ICC has no jurisdiction over its territory and warned that UN
peacekeeping work in its Darfur region would suffer if al-Bashir were to be
indicted for war crimes and arrested by the ICC.