Arab News

Israeli general denies role as US slaps sanctions for arms sale

- Reuters Jerusalem

A retired Israeli Army general hit by US sanctions for alleged involvemen­t in the South Sudan conflict denied the charges on Sunday, saying they were based on false informatio­n and that he was available for investigat­ion by the Trump administra­tion.

The US Treasury on Friday slapped sanctions on Israel Ziv and three firms he controls, accusing him of using an agricultur­al consultanc­y as cover for weapons sales worth $150 million to the Juba government while also arming the opposition.

“He (Ziv) has also reportedly planned to organize attacks by mercenarie­s on South Sudanese oil fields and infrastruc­ture, in an effort to create a problem that only his company and affiliates could solve,” a Treasury statement said.

Interviewe­d by Israel’s Army Radio, Ziv said he had never trafficked in weaponry and called the charges against him “ludicrous, baseless, completely divorced from reality.”

“We have an amazing agricultur­e project there ... that many communitie­s depend on. Tens of thousands of people are employed through this project and it feeds the South Sudan market. So anyone who claims this project is a cover should come see it.”

The Trump administra­tion has championed internatio­nal arms embargoes against South Sudan to pressure President Salva Kiir into ending the country’s civil war and humanitari­an crisis.

Two South Sudanese nationals, Obac William Olawo and Gregory Vasili, were named alongside Ziv in Friday’s US Treasury sanctions notice. Neither was immediatel­y available for comment.

“This is not the first time the (US) administra­tion has used sanctions to enforce its foreign policy,” Ziv said.

“I am approachab­le ... I want to believe in the decency of the administra­tion. And they are welcome to come, to check, to investigat­e. We will open up everything for them.”

South Sudan erupted in conflict in 2013 after Kiir sacked Riek Machar as vice president. Ethnically charged fighting soon spread, shutting down oil fields and forcing millions to flee.

At least 383,000 South Sudanese have died as a result of the war, through combat, starvation, disease or other factors, according to a recent study by London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine researcher­s.

 ?? Sheikh Khalid bin Ahmed Al-Khalifa ??
Sheikh Khalid bin Ahmed Al-Khalifa

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