Bashir defies ICC's international arrest warrants with trip to Uganda

South African President Jacob Zuma laughs with Sudan's Hassan al-Bashir during the swearing-in ceremony of Uganda's president Yoweri Museveni at the Kololo independence grounds in Kampala, Uganda, May 12, 2016. Photo/REUTERS
South African President Jacob Zuma laughs with Sudan's Hassan al-Bashir during the swearing-in ceremony of Uganda's president Yoweri Museveni at the Kololo independence grounds in Kampala, Uganda, May 12, 2016. Photo/REUTERS

Sudanese President Hassan al-Bashir began a two-day visit to Uganda on Thursday in defiance of an international warrant for his arrest over acccusations of genocide.

This was reported by the official Sudanese news agency.

The Hague-based ICC issued arrest warrants for Bashir in 2009 and 2010, accusing him of masterminding genocide and other atrocities in his campaign to crush a revolt in Sudan's western Darfur region.

Uganda is a member of the ICC, which means it is required to act on the arrest warrant.

The trip is Bashir's first to Uganda since the ICC warrants were issued and follows Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni's visit to Khartoum last year.

Bashir, who has ruled Sudan since a 1989 and army-backed coup, rejects the ICC's authority and has flouted the warrant before, travelling inside the Middle East and Africa.

He has also visited China and Indonesia, which are not ICC members, over the past year.

Last June, Bashir was forced to flee South Africa, a member of the ICC, after a court ruled he should be banned from leaving pending the outcome of a hearing on his possible arrest.

In March South Africa's Supreme Court rejected an appeal by the government against a ruling that said the state had made an error in letting Bashir leave the country despite a court order.

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