By Damian Zane, NAIROBI Kenya
The United States government
has imposed sanctions on the head of Sudan's army and de facto president, Gen
Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, the treasury department said.
He has been leading one of the
two sides in the 21-month civil war that has killed tens of thousands, uprooted
over 12 million and pushed the country to the brink of famine.
In a brief statement, the US
accused Gen Burhan of "destabilizing Sudan and undermining the goal of a
democratic transition".
The announcement follows
reports of the killing of civilians in the central city of Wad Madani in recent
days, however this was not mentioned in the statement.
Last week, Mohamed Hamdan
Dagalo, the head of the paramilitary group fighting the army, was also
sanctioned by the US.
The US accused Dagalo's Rapid
Support Forces (RSF) of committing genocide during the conflict.
In announcing the sanctions on
Burhan on Thursday, Washington said that the army under his command "has
committed lethal attacks on civilians" including targeting "schools,
markets and hospitals".
The US also alleges that the
army is "responsible for the routine and intentional denial of
humanitarian access, using food deprivation as a war tactic".
During the first year of the
conflict, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the army had committed war
crimes.
Earlier, Gen Burhan ordered an
investigation into allegations that his troops carried out widespread
atrocities after recapturing the capital of Gezira state from their
paramilitary rivals.
His move came after widespread
concern that civilians - including foreign nationals - were killed after the
seizure of Wad Madani.
Neighbouring South Sudan said
on Wednesday that it had summoned Sudan's ambassador to protest against
"the loss of lives among our innocent citizens".
Wad Madani, which is 87 miles
(140km) south of the capital, Khartoum, fell to the RSF about a year ago. The
military regained control of it on Saturday.
The city serves as a strategic
crossroads, connecting several states through key supply highways. It is also
the closest major town to Khartoum.
A Sudanese rights group
accused the military of going on a rampage, killing at least 13 people in Camp
Taiba, a village about 20km away.
The UN's humanitarian chief in
Sudan, Clementine Nkweta-Salami, said she was deeply concerned about reports of
retaliatory attacks against civilians in Gezira "based on alleged
affiliation or ethnicity".
The US special envoy for Sudan
Tom Perriello called the reports "appalling" and urged the army and
allied groups to investigate and hold those responsible accountable.
Gen Burhan said he had set up
a committee to investigate the alleged killings in Camp Taiba, and has asked it
to report back within a week.
He did not comment about the
concerns raised by South Sudan, and whether the investigation would focus on
alleged atrocities elsewhere in Gezira.
South Sudan's foreign ministry
said that it had received a "comprehensive report" from its embassy
in Sudan "detailing the unfortunate events that have resulted in the loss
of lives among our innocent citizens, who maintain a non-combatant
status".
The military has previously
accused the RSF of hiring South Sudanese as "mercenaries" to fight on
its side.
Social media videos of various
incidents, including one showing a man in civilian clothing being thrown over a
bridge and then shot at by a group of men, have been widely shared online.
BBC Verify has confirmed the
video was filmed along the Hantoub bridge over the Blue Nile river.
We have matched key elements
in the video including the railings and the painting on the railings as seen in
the video to earlier videos filmed at the bridge.
One of the men involved in the
incident, and who is carrying a Sudanese flag, is wearing clothing with a logo
used by the al-Bara'a bin Malik Brigade which has been fighting alongside the
Sudanese army in Khartoum and neighbouring states.
Two other videos filmed
elsewhere show at least 30 bodies of men in civilian clothing laid out on a
ground next to a wall.
BBC Verify has established,
through matching objects seen in the video with satellite imagery, that the
videos were filmed at a location north-west of Wad Madani just a few metres
from where the army appears to have ambushed RSF fighters.
It is not clear how the men
died and whether they were killed before the bodies were gathered there.
It is also not possible to
identify them nor whether they were affiliated to any of the fighting parties,
as it is common for armed fighters not to wear uniforms.
Videos of the ambush, heavy
exchange of fire, and the aftermath are also circulating.
The Sudanese armed forces on
Tuesday condemned what it called "individual violations" in some
parts of Gezira state, and promised that those responsible would be held
accountable.
The RSF was itself accused of
carrying out retaliatory attacks in Gezira following the defection of their
commander Abu Aqla Kaikal in October last year.
Kaikal was heavily involved in
the operation that led to the army wrestling back control of Wad Madani.