AL-JAZIRA STATE, Sudan
Sudan recalled its ambassador from Nairobi Thursday in protest at Kenyan President William Ruto’s hosting of talks with paramilitary commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, its acting foreign minister said.
Dagalo, whose forces have been
at war with the regular army led by Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan since April, has
been touring African capitals on his first visit abroad of the conflict.
He already visited Uganda,
Ethiopia and Djibouti as well as Kenya and is currently in South Africa, to the
anger of Burhan, whose administration has lost ground to the paramilitaries in
recent months and is eager to deny them international legitimacy.
In a statement carried by the
official SUNA news agency, Sudan’s acting foreign minister Ali Al-Sadiq said
the ambassador had been recalled “for consultations in protest of the official
reception organized by the Kenyan government for the leader of the rebel
militia.”
He said those consultations
would “cover all possibilities for the outcome of Sudan’s relations with
Kenya.”
Ties between Burhan and the
Kenyan government have been strained for months, as Nairobi has sought to keep
lines of communication open with Dagalo so it can mediate in the conflict.
Over the past few days,
Hemetti has met with the leaders of Uganda, Ethiopia, Djibouti, and South
Africa. He received official receptions with a guard of honours at the Addis
Ababa airport, while he was welcomed with traditional dances at Nairobi airport
before meeting President William Ruto at the presidential palace.
In contrast, the receptions
hosted by President Museveni and President Cyril Ramaphosa were limited to
their respective private residences, outside the presidential palaces.
Prior to this incident,
Sudan’s Sovereign Council President Abdel Fattah al-Burhan had warned against
treating the commander of the RSF, which is engaged in hostilities against the
Sudanese army, as a legitimate representative of the Sudanese state. He had
also stated that Sudan would take “appropriate measures” in response to such a
reception.
It is worth noting that all
heads of diplomatic missions have left Sudan and have chosen to establish
offices in Port Sudan instead.
The war has killed more than
12,190 people, according to a conservative estimate from the Armed Conflict
Location and Event Data Project, and forced more than seven million to flee
their homes, according to UN figures.
Mediation efforts are largely
at a standstill amid deep animosity between the rival generals.
Although Burhan’s
administration continues to put out statements as the Sudanese government,
Dagalo’s Rapid Support Forces control the streets of Khartoum as well as nearly
all of Darfur and much of the central state of Al-Jazira, Sudan’s pre-war
breadbasket.
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