Sudan's Bashir slams UN sanctions on Eritrea: media
By Jeremy Clarke
ASMARA (Reuters) - Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir has criticized the sanctions imposed on Eritrea last December by the United Nations Security Council, Eritrean local media reported on Saturday.
Bashir paid a one-day working visit on the Red Sea state on Friday during which he held talks with Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki and attacked the U.N. resolution.
"The people and the government of Sudan reject the unjust sanctions Resolution 1907 against Eritrea," the state-run Eritrea Profile reported Bashir as saying.
Yemane Gebreab, head of political affairs at Eritrea's ruling party, welcomed the support.
"Such a logical stance would further enhance Eritrean-Sudanese ties and Eritrea would as ever stand alongside the Sudanese people," the Profile reported Yemane as saying.
Bashir's visit follows Isaias' involvement in pursuing a peaceful resolution to the Darfur crisis in Sudan as the two nations continue to strengthen ties, the Profile said.
The Sudanese president is wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) on charges of "war crimes and crimes against humanity" for his alleged role in the humanitarian crisis in Darfur.
The United Nations believes that seven years of violence in Darfur has left 300,000 dead and ICC prosecutors say Bashir "masterminded and implemented" a plan to destroy three ethnic groups using a campaign of murder, rape and deportation. Continued...
