US sanctions deputy leader of Sudan’s RSF over abuses

The United States is imposing sanctions on the deputy leader of Sudan's paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) over human rights abuses. (AFP/File)
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Updated 06 September 2023
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US sanctions deputy leader of Sudan’s RSF over abuses

  • US envoy to the UN met Sudanese refugees who have fled worsening ethnic and sexual violence in Sudan’s Darfur region

N’DJAMENA: The United States is imposing sanctions on the deputy leader of Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) over human rights abuses, the US envoy to the United Nations will announce during a trip to Chad’s border with Sudan on Wednesday.
The move to target Abdelrahim Dagalo — brother of RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, known as Hemedti — is the highest profile use of sanctions since conflict between the RSF and Sudan’s army broke out in mid-April and an apparent response to the dramatic violence seen in West Darfur, which the RSF is accused of perpetrating along with allied militias.
The RSF has denied the accusations by conflict monitors, rights groups and witnesses that it is behind the violence, while saying any of its soldiers found to be involved would be brought to justice.
Dagalo is the first official on either side to be sanctioned since the start of the war. Previous sanctions, levied on companies, also targeted the army.
He is being sanctioned “for his connection to abuses by the RSF against civilians in Sudan, including conflict-related sexual violence and killings based on ethnicity,” Linda Thomas-Greenfield will tell reporters, according to prepared remarks seen by Reuters.
Thomas-Greenfield is making the announcement after meeting Sudanese refugees who have fled worsening ethnic and sexual violence in Sudan’s Darfur region, which she described as “reminiscent” of atrocities 20 years ago, also in Darfur, that Washington declared a genocide.
Victims of the violence describe targeting of the Masalit ethnic group, razing of neighborhoods, and widespread looting and rape that pushed hundreds of thousands into Chad. The International Criminal Court has announced an investigation into the violence.
War broke out in Sudan on April 15, four years after former President Omar Al-Bashir was ousted by a popular uprising. Tensions between the army (SAF) and RSF, which jointly staged a coup in 2021, erupted into fighting over an internationally-backed plan to transition to civilian rule and integrate their forces.

PERSONALISED COMMAND STRUCTURE
In the capital Khartoum, the RSF has been accused of widespread looting, and, along with the army, of firing missiles into residential areas.
The US measures freeze any assets held by Abdelrahim Dagalo in the United States and stops US citizens from doing business with him.
Unlike the Sudanese army, the RSF’s command structure is highly personalized, centered on Hemedti and his close relatives and associates.
While the sanctions carry political weight, it is unclear that they would have any impact on the course of the current conflict.
The RSF has long cultivated its closest foreign ties with the United Arab Emirates and Russia.
Unlike his brother, who served as deputy to army chief General Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan on the country’s ruling council from 2019 until the war, Abdelrahim Dagalo carried no official position in the country’s government, but he played a leading role in developing the RSF’s political relationships.
Having kept a lower profile prior to the war, he appeared in video messages early in the conflict surrounded by RSF troops, calling on Sudanese army soldiers to desert.
In June, the US imposed sanctions on companies it accused of fueling the conflict in Sudan. The US Treasury Department targeted two companies affiliated with Sudan’s army and two companies affiliated with the RSF, accusing them of generating revenue from the conflict and contributing to the fighting.
A Reuters investigation in 2019 showed that Abdelrahim Dagalo was listed as owner of Algunade, a gold mining company that was sanctioned.


Israel calls for pressure on Turkiye to stop attack on Kurds

Updated 12 sec ago
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Israel calls for pressure on Turkiye to stop attack on Kurds

JERUSALEM: Turkiye must face pressure from world powers to stop attacks on Kurds in northern Syria, a senior Israeli foreign ministry official said on Tuesday.
"The international community must call on Turkey to stop these aggressions and killing. The Kurds must be protected by the international community," foreign ministry director general Eden Bar Tal told reporters.


Palestinian health ministry says 2 killed in Israeli West Bank raids

Updated 07 January 2025
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Palestinian health ministry says 2 killed in Israeli West Bank raids

  • Israeli troops or settlers have killed at least 820 Palestinians in the West Bank since the start of the war

Ramallah: The Palestinian ministry of health said Israeli forces killed two people on Tuesday in separate raids in the northern West Bank, while the military said it had targeted a “terrorist cell.”
One Palestinian was killed in the town of Tammun, and another in the village of Talouza, the Ramallah-based ministry said.
The Palestinian Red Crescent said its teams had transported the body of an 18-year-old from Tammun who was killed “as a result of shelling,” and that five other people were severely injured during the Israeli raid.
The body was taken to the Turkish Hospital in the nearby city of Tubas, where the director identified the deceased as Suleiman Qutaishat.
The Red Crescent said the other Palestinian was killed in an Israeli raid around the village of Talouza, near Nablus, and was 40 years old.
Residents in the area identified him as Jaafar Dababshe, who they said was shot dead by Israeli forces in front of his house.
The Israeli army when contacted did not offer details, but said on its Telegram channel: “An air force aircraft targeted an armed terrorist cell in the Tammun area” in the early hours of Tuesday.
Violence in the Israeli-occupied West Bank has soared since the war in Gaza erupted on October 7, 2023 after Hamas’ attack on Israel.
Israeli troops or settlers have killed at least 820 Palestinians in the West Bank since the start of the war, according to the Ramallah-based health ministry.
Palestinian attacks on Israelis have also killed at least 28 people in the West Bank in the same period, according to Israeli official figures.
On Monday, three Israelis were killed when gunmen opened fire on a bus and other vehicles in the West Bank, according to medics.
Israel has occupied the West Bank since 1967.


International flights resume at Damascus airport

Updated 07 January 2025
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International flights resume at Damascus airport

  • Syria will receive two electricity-generating ships from Turkiye and Qatar to boost energy supplies hit by damage to infrastructure during President Bashar Assad’s rule

Damascus: International flights resumed at Syria’s main airport in Damascus on Tuesday for the first time since Islamist-led rebels toppled President Bashar Assad last month.
A Syrian Airlines flight bound for Sharjah, in the United Arab Emirates, took off at around 11:45 am, marking the first international commercial flight from the airport since December 8.
Syria to receive electricity-generating ships from Qatar and Turkiye
Syria will receive two electricity-generating ships from Turkiye and Qatar to boost energy supplies hit by damage to infrastructure during President Bashar Assad’s rule, state news agency SANA quoted an official as saying on Tuesday.
Khaled Abu Dai, director general of the General Establishment for Electricity Transmission and Distribution, told SANA the ships would provide a total of 800 megawatts of electricity but did not say over what period.
“The extent of damage to the generation and transformation stations and electrical connection lines during the period of the former regime is very large, we are seeking to rehabilitate (them) in order to transmit energy,” Abu Dai said.
He did not say when Syria would receive the two ships.
The United States on Monday issued a sanctions exemption for transactions with governing institutions in Syria for six months after the end of Assad’s rule to try to increase the flow of humanitarian assistance.
The exemption allows some energy transactions and personal remittances to Syria until July 7. The action did not remove any sanctions.
Syria suffers from severe power shortages, with state-supplied electricity available just two or three hours a day in most areas. The caretaker government says it aims within two months to provide electricity up to eight hours a day.


France says fate of citizens held in Iran worsening

Updated 07 January 2025
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France says fate of citizens held in Iran worsening

PARIS: The situation of three French citizens held in Iran is worsening with some being detained in conditions similar to torture, France’s foreign minister said on Tuesday, adding that future ties and sanctions lifting would depend on their fate.
“The situation of our compatriots held hostage in Iran is simply unacceptable; they have been unjustly detained for several years, in undignified conditions that, for some, fall within the definition of torture under international law,” Jean-Noel Barrot told a conference of French ambassadors.
“I say to the Iranian authorities: our hostages must be released. Our bilateral relations and the future of sanctions depend on it.”


US transfers 11 Guantanamo detainees to Yemen after more than two decades without charge

Updated 07 January 2025
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US transfers 11 Guantanamo detainees to Yemen after more than two decades without charge

  • President George W. Bush’s administration turned Guantanamo into a detention site for the mostly Muslim men taken into custody around the world in what the US called its “war on terror.”

WASHINGTON: The Pentagon said Monday it had transferred 11 Yemeni men to Oman this week after holding them for more than two decades without charge at the US naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
The transfer was the latest and biggest push by the Biden administration in its final weeks to clear Guantanamo of the last remaining detainees there who were never charged with a crime.
The latest release brings the total number of men detained at Guantanamo to 15. That’s the fewest since 2002, when President George W. Bush’s administration turned Guantanamo into a detention site for the mostly Muslim men taken into custody around the world in what the US called its “war on terror.” The US invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq and military and covert operations elsewhere followed the Sept. 11, 2001, Al-Qaeda attacks.
The men in the latest transfer included Shaqawi al Hajj, who had undergone repeated hunger strikes and hospitalizations at Guantanamo to protest his 21 years in prison, preceded by two years of detention and torture in CIA custody, according to the US-based Center for Constitutional Rights.
Rights groups and some lawmakers have pushed successive US administrations to close Guantanamo or, failing that, release all those detainees never charged with a crime. Guantanamo held about 800 detainees at its peak.
The Biden administration and administrations before it said they were working on lining up suitable countries willing to take those never-charged detainees. Many of those stuck at Guantanamo were from Yemen, a country split by war, with its capital held by the Iranian-allied Houthi militant group.
The sultanate of Oman, on the eastern edge of the Arabian Peninsula, did not acknowledge taking in the prisoners early Tuesday. Officials in the country did not respond to questions from The Associated Press. The key Western ally has taken in some 30 prisoners in the past since the founding of the prison.
However, those prisoners have since been released in circumstances unexplained by Oman. Two Afghans once held by Oman returned to Taliban-controlled Afghanistan in February. One Yemeni died in Oman after being told he and 27 others would be repatriated to Yemen, the British activist group CAGE International said.
“Faced with little choice, 26 of the men and their families returned to Yemen after being pressured by the Omani government, which offered each $70,000 as compensation,” the group said. It wasn’t immediately clear what happened to the 28th prisoner.
The transfer announced Monday leaves six never-charged men still being held at Guantanamo, two convicted and sentenced inmates, and seven others charged with the 2001 attacks, the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole, and 2002 bombings in Bali, Indonesia.