KHARTOUM (Agencies)
President Omar Hassan al-Bashir returned to Sudan on Friday after defying indictment for genocide by visiting Chad, a party to the International Criminal Court and so in theory obliged to arrest him.
Chadian President Idriss Deby instead gave a red-carpet welcome to Bashir, who spent three days in N'Djamena scoring a propaganda coup and exposing the ICC's key weakness -- its lack of a mechanism to arrest war crimes suspects.
Upon his return to Khartoum, Bashir's visit to Chad was hailed by his entourage as "more than a double victory" as it boosted the neighbors' ties and was his first trip to a country that recognizes the ICC.
" We praise our relations with Chad very much. We have made very clear in previous occasions that we cannot see an end to the problem in Darfur without fixing the relationship with Chad "
Sudanese presidential adviser Ghazi Salaheddine"This summit... shows African solidarity and it also exposes the ICC and its agenda and it also exposes the agenda of some European countries and the United States in particular," presidential adviser Ghazi Salaheddine said.
"We praise our relations with Chad very much. We have made very clear in previous occasions that we cannot see an end to the problem in Darfur without fixing the relationship with Chad."
"It is a victory in the profound sense of the word (and) we are happy," Salaheddine told reporters in Khartoum after returning with Bashir from the summit of the Community of Sahel-Saharan (CEN-SAD) states.
Blasting European nations
" This court has become just a European court (formed) to judge Africans," Karti told reporters "
Sudanese FM Ali KartiForeign Minister Ali Karti, returning from Chad with Bashir, blasted European nations -- key supporters of the court -- and Washington which, despite failing to join the ICC itself, has said Sudan should cooperate with The Hague-based institution.
"This court has become just a European court (formed) to judge Africans," Karti told reporters. "Now the Africans have strongly rejected it and that is what is important to us."
The African Union has told its member states not to cooperate with the ICC, accusing the court of targeting the continent.
Deby voiced support for the court during a proxy war with Sudan which began in 2003 but, after a rapprochement this year with Bashir, Sudanese officials said they were confident he would not hand him over to the ICC.
The ICC issued an arrest warrant for Bashir in 2009 accusing him of war crimes and crimes against humanity during a counter-insurgency campaign in the western Darfur region which borders Chad. This month it added genocide to the charges.
Bashir ridicules the court and has wooed African and Arab support to defy the arrest warrant, the first the court has issued for a sitting head of state.
The United Nations estimates some 300,000 have died in a humanitarian crisis sparked after Khartoum mobilized militia to quell a revolt by insurgents demanding more wealth and power for the remote region. Many of those rebel leaders are from the same Zaghawa tribe as Deby.
Diplomats in Khartoum say Deby, whose capital has been twice attacked by Chadian rebels supported by Sudan since 2006, appears to have decided friendly neighborly relations are more important to his survival than his commitment to the ICC.
Bashir's government helped Deby take power in his 1990 coup, also launched from Darfur.

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