WASHINGTON, United States
The United States said on Thursday it would impose sanctions on Sudan after determining that its government used chemical weapons in 2024 during the army’s conflict with the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, a charge the army denied.
Measures against Sudan will
include limits on US exports and US government lines of credit and will take
effect around June 6, after Congress was notified on Thursday, State Department
spokesperson Tammy Bruce said in a statement.
“The United States calls on
the Government of Sudan to cease all chemical weapons use and uphold its
obligations under the CWC,” Bruce said, referring to the Chemical Weapons
Convention treaty banning the use of such weapons.
In a statement, Sudan rejected
the move and described the allegations as false.
“This interference, which
lacks any moral or legal basis, deprives Washington of what is left of its
credibility and closes the door to any influence in Sudan,” government
spokesperson Khalid al-Eisir said on Friday.
The war in Sudan erupted in
April 2023 from a power struggle between the army and the RSF, unleashing waves
of ethnic violence, creating the world’s worst humanitarian crisis and plunging
several areas into famine. Tens of thousands of people have been killed and
about 13 million displaced.
Washington in January imposed
sanctions on army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, accusing him of choosing war
over negotiations to bring an end to the conflict.
The US has also determined
members of the RSF and allied militias committed genocide and imposed sanctions
on some of the group’s leadership, including RSF leader General Mohamed Hamdan
Dagalo, known as Hemedti.
The New York Times reported in
January, citing four senior US officials, that the Sudanese army had used
chemical weapons at least twice during the conflict, deploying the weapons in
remote areas of the country.
Two officials briefed on the
matter said the chemical weapons appeared to use chlorine gas, which can cause
lasting damage to human tissue, the New York Times reported at the time.
Bruce’s statement said the US
had formally determined on April 24 under the Chemical and Biological Weapons
Control and Warfare Elimination Act of 1991 that the government of Sudan used
chemical weapons last year, but did not specify what weapons were used,
precisely when or where.
“The United States remains
fully committed to hold to account those responsible for contributing to
chemical weapons proliferation,” Bruce said.
“The intention here is to
distract from the recent campaign in Congress against the UAE,” a Sudanese
diplomatic source said.
The source said the US could
have gone to the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons to
investigate the claims and neglected to do so.
Sudan’s government is aligned
with the army.
It cut diplomatic relations
with the UAE this month, saying the Gulf power was aiding the RSF with supplies
of advanced weaponry in the devastating conflict that broke out following
disagreements over the integration of the two forces.
The UAE has denied the
allegations and says it supports humanitarian and peace efforts.
US congressional Democrats
sought last Thursday to block arms sales to the United Arab Emirates over its
alleged involvement in the war.
Sudan said this week that the
United Arab Emirates was responsible for an attack on Port Sudan this month,
accusing the Gulf state for the first time of direct military intervention in
the war.
The UAE denied the allegations
in a statement and said it condemned the attack.
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