Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh said
Sunday that any move by the International Criminal Court (ICC) to
prosecute Sudanese officials over alleged war crimes would only 'ignite
more fires and instability.'
'Such a decision could not serve
security and stability in the region,' Saleh said in a telephone
conversation with Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir.
Quoted by the officials Saba news agency, Saleh condemned as
'unacceptable' the adoption of a 'double standards policy' by the ICC
toward poor countries.
The Yemeni leader was commenting on
reports last week that ICC chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo may seek
a warrant on Monday for the arrest of al-Bashir.
Saleh said
that such an 'irresponsible' move could only 'complicate the situation
and encourage more extremism, violence and instability in the region
and the world.'
The Washington Post on Friday quoted unnamed
United Nations officials as saying that the ICC chief prosecutor may
seek a warrant for the arrest of al-Bashir over charges of genocide and
crimes against humanity.
If ICC judges agreed to such a
request, it would be the first time that the tribunal would charge a
serving head of state, though such leaders as Slobodan Milosevic of
Serbia and Charles Taylor of Liberia were charged by other
UN-established war crimes courts while in office.
Since 2003,
at least 300,000 people have been killed in ethnic violence in Darfur,
and 2 million people have become refugees. The conflict in Darfur began
when black tribesmen took up arms against what they called decades of
neglect and discrimination by the Arab- dominated Sudanese government
in Khartoum.
The Sudanese government is blamed for retaliating by using proxy Janjaweed militia to carry out mass killings.
In 2003, the UN Security Council ordered the ICC in The Hague to investigate the events in Darfur.