NEW YORK, United States
Russia vetoed a U.N. resolution Monday calling for an immediate cease-fire in the war between Sudan's military and paramilitary forces and delivery of humanitarian aid to millions in desperate need.
Russia’s ally China supported
the resolution sponsored by the United Kingdom and Sierra Leone, along with all
other U.N. Security Council members, but Moscow’s veto doomed the measure.
UK Foreign Minister David
Lammy, who chaired the meeting, told the council afterward: “This Russian veto
is a disgrace. … While Britain works with our African partners, Russia vetoes
their will.”
Sudan plunged into conflict in
April 2023, when long-simmering tensions between its military and paramilitary
leaders erupted in the capital, Khartoum, and spread to other regions,
including western Darfur, which was wracked by bloodshed and atrocities in
2003. The U.N. recently warned that Sudan has been pushed
to the brink of famine.
Last week, U.N. political
chief Rosemary DiCarlo accused allies of Sudan’s warring forces of “enabling
the slaughter” that has killed more than 24,000 people and created the
world’s worst displacement crisis.
U.S. President Joe Biden
echoed those concerns Monday at the G20 meeting in Brazil.
“On Sudan, we’re seeing one of
the world’s most serious humanitarian crises — eight million people on the
brink of famine," he said. “This deserves our collective outrage and our
collective attention. External actors must stop arming” the parties.
Biden urged “one voice” to
tell the rival forces: ’Stop tearing your country apart. Stop blocking aid to
the Sudanese people. Stop the violence.”
Russia's deputy U.N.
Ambassador Dmitry Polyansky told the Security Council that Moscow vetoed the
resolution because “it should be solely the government of Sudan” that should be
responsible for what happens in the country.
U.S. Ambassador Linda
Thomas-Greenfield retorted: “It is shocking that Russia has vetoed an effort to
save lives, though perhaps it shouldn’t be.”
She added that "for
months, Russia has obstructed and obfuscated, standing in the way of council
action to address the catastrophic situation in Sudan and playing ... both
sides of the conflict, to advance its own political objectives at the expense
of Sudanese lives.”
Sudan has accused the United
Arab Emirates of arming the RSF, which the UAE denies. The RSF has also
reportedly received support from Russia’s Wagner mercenary group. And U.N.
experts said in a report earlier this year that the RSF received support from Arab-allied
communities and new military supply lines running through Chad, Libya and South
Sudan.
As for the government, Gen.
Abdel Fattah Burhan, who led a military takeover of Sudan in 2021, has
received Russian support and is a close ally of neighboring Egypt and its
president, former army chief Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi. In February, Sudan’s
foreign minister held talks in Tehran with his Iranian counterpart amid
unconfirmed reports of drone purchases for government forces.
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