South Africa's ruling party said on Sunday it wanted the country to withdraw from the International Criminal Court, saying the court has lost direction and no longer fulfilled its mandate.
The decision comes after a spat with The Hague-based court over South Africa's failure to arrest Sudanese leader Omar al-Bashir when he arrived in the country in June to attend an African Union summit.
"The National General Council has just resolved that South Africa should withdraw from the international court. However, only after we have followed certain processes," said Obed Bapela, who heads the ANC party's international relations commission.
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The ANC said it still believed in the founding principles of the ICC, such as prevention of genocide and stopping the violations of human rights, and that such principles led the country to become a signatory to the Rome Statute that governs the court.
But Bapela said that the ICC "has lost its direction".
South Africa was the first African country to sign up to the ICC and adopted the court's founding Rome Statute into domestic law in 2002.
The ANC also raised concern that there were powerful nations which were refusing to be members of the court, yet have "unfettered powers to refer matters to the ICC".
The United States is one of the countries that is not a member of the ICC.
Bapela also said the reasons for the South Africa move would have to be shared with the rest of the continent.
The government earlier this year issued a threat to sever ties with the ICC following the Bashir saga.
South Africa's failure to arrest Bashir sparked international condemnation, prompting the international court to order Pretoria to explain its decision.
This month, government asked for an extension of the October 5 deadline to give its reason.
Bashir is wanted by the ICC for alleged war crimes related to the conflict in the Darfur region of Sudan.
The government has argued that he had immunity from arrest because he was visiting the country as the head of a member state of the African Union.