Oman Daily Observer

Sudan made ‘positive’ steps on sanctions terms

-

KHARTOUM: Sudan has made “positive” steps towards meeting Washington’s conditions for permanentl­y lifting 20-year-old sanctions on the African country, the US envoy to Khartoum said in an interview.

Then-president Barack Obama eased the sanctions in January, but made their permanent lifting dependent on Khartoum’s progress in five areas of concern during a six-month review period that ends on July 12.

These conditions — known as the “five tracks” — include improved access for aid groups, an end to support for rebels in neighbouri­ng South Sudan, an end to hostilitie­s in the conflict zones of Darfur, Blue Nile and South Kordofan, and counterter­rorism cooperatio­n with US intelligen­ce agencies.

“I can say without much hesitation that, with the few exceptions, the advances on the five tracks have been positive,” US charge d’affaires in Khartoum, Steven Koutsis, said.

“The few exceptions being... the implementa­tion of humanitari­an access is uneven... and that we want to see that the government begins to act more on moving towards a more permanent agreement with the opposition” on ending hostilitie­s.

Koutsis was speaking after touring Darfur, which has been gripped by conflict since 2003 when ethnic minority rose up against the government in Khartoum.

Koutsis travelled across vast stretches of the western region, which is as large as France, to make a firsthand assessment of security ahead of President Donald Trump’s decision on the trade embargo next month.

Washington first imposed the sanctions in 1997 over Khartoum’s alleged support for militant groups. Washington has kept the sanctions place largely in response to the in tactics that President Omar al Bashir’s regime has used against the rebels in Darfur. At least 300,000 people have been killed and 2.5 million displaced in the region, the United Nations says.

Koutsis said it was highly unlikely that a permanent agreement to end hostilitie­s would be signed before July 12, but said Khartoum had shown “extreme restraint” in responding to rebel attacks over the past year.

“The fundamenta­l issue that we asked for in return for sanctions relief was to stop any offensive,” Koutsis said in El Daien, the East Darfur state capital.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman