December 5, 2007 2:28 PM
- Text
Rice's Crew Roughed Up In Sudan
(CBS/AP)
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice held a congratulatory round of meetings with officials of the new unified Sudanese government Thursday, but expressed outrage after security forces manhandled aides and reporters accompanying her.
"It makes me very angry to be sitting there with their president and have this happen," she said. "They have no right to push and shove."
Rice made her remarks to reporters after she and her entourage boarded an airplane to fly from the Sudanese capital to a refugee camp in the western Darfur region.
The incident happened as Rice was about to meet with Sudan's President Omar el-Bashir inside his residence in Khartoum, said CBS News Reporter Charles Wolfson.
"Security officials from his office scuffled with Secretary Rice's senior staff and the press," reported Wolfson. "Some of the senior officials were not allowed into the meeting, and some of the press were kept outside as well. Jim Wilkinson, senior adviser to Rice, says 'We don't frankly appreciate being manhandled at the front door.'"
Click here to hear Wolfson's report on the incident.
After landing near the camp, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the Sudanese foreign minister had responded to Rice's demand for an apology by telephoning her aboard the plane to say he was sorry for what had happened in Khartoum.
"Diplomacy 101 says you don't rough your guests up," Wilkinson said as he and reporters were facing off with guards at the ultra-high-security residence.
"It makes me very angry to be sitting there with their president and have this happen," she said. "They have no right to push and shove."
Rice made her remarks to reporters after she and her entourage boarded an airplane to fly from the Sudanese capital to a refugee camp in the western Darfur region.
The incident happened as Rice was about to meet with Sudan's President Omar el-Bashir inside his residence in Khartoum, said CBS News Reporter Charles Wolfson.
"Security officials from his office scuffled with Secretary Rice's senior staff and the press," reported Wolfson. "Some of the senior officials were not allowed into the meeting, and some of the press were kept outside as well. Jim Wilkinson, senior adviser to Rice, says 'We don't frankly appreciate being manhandled at the front door.'"
After landing near the camp, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the Sudanese foreign minister had responded to Rice's demand for an apology by telephoning her aboard the plane to say he was sorry for what had happened in Khartoum.
"Diplomacy 101 says you don't rough your guests up," Wilkinson said as he and reporters were facing off with guards at the ultra-high-security residence.
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