News Flash
PORT SUDAN, Sudan, April 28, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - Sudan has requested an
emergency UN Security Council meeting on what it calls UAE "aggression" for
allegedly supporting paramilitaries battling the army, a diplomatic source
said Saturday.
The fighting broke out in April last year between the regular army, headed by
Sudan's de facto leader Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, and the paramilitary Rapid
Support Forces (RSF) led by his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Daglo.
For months the regular army has accused the United Arab Emirates of
supporting the RSF, a charge the UAE denies.
"Yesterday, our permanent representative to the United Nations submitted a
request for an urgent session of the Security Council to discuss the UAE's
aggression against the Sudanese people, and the provision of weapons and
equipment to the terrorist militia," the source told AFP.
The country's official SUNA news agency confirmed that Sudan's UN
representative, Al-Harith Idriss, had submitted the request.
SUNA cited Idriss as saying this was "in response to the UAE representative's
memorandum to the Council", and that "the UAE's support for the criminal
Rapid Support militia that waged war on the state makes the UAE an accomplice
in all its crimes".
In a letter to the Security Council last week, the UAE foreign ministry
rejected Sudan's accusations that it backs the RSF.
The letter said the allegations were "spurious (and) unfounded, and lack any
credible evidence to support them".
Separately on Saturday, the UN Security Council expressed "deep concern" over
escalating fighting in Sudan's North Darfur region and warned against the
possibility of an imminent offensive by the RSF and allied militias on El
Fasher.
The city is the last Darfur state capital not under RSF control and hosts a
large number of refugees.
United Nations officials put out similar warnings Friday, with the UN's High
Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk expressing his "grave concern".
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres' spokesperson's office said an attack on
El Fasher "would have devastating consequences for the civilian population...
in an area already on the brink of famine."
The Sudan war has killed tens of thousands of people and forced more than 8.5
million people to flee their homes in what the United Nations has called the
"largest displacement crisis in the world".
In December, Khartoum demanded that 15 Emirati diplomats leave the country
after an army commander accused Abu Dhabi of supporting the RSF, and protests
in Port Sudan demanded the expulsion of the UAE ambassador.
The Wall Street Journal, citing Ugandan officials, reported last August that
weapons had been found in a UAE cargo plane transporting humanitarian aid to
Sudanese refugees in Chad, prompting a denial from Abu Dhabi.