The Borneo Post

Pompeo visits Sudan on tour to boost Israel’s Arab ties

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KHARTOUM: US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo landed in Sudan Tuesday on a tour urging more Arab countries to normalise ties with Israel, following the USbrokered Israel-UAE agreement. Pompeo, the first American top diplomat to visit Sudan since 2005, arrived on a historic “first official non-stop flight” from Tel Aviv, he tweeted from the plane. Israel remains technicall­y at war and has no formal diplomatic relations with Sudan, which for years supported hardline Islamist forces under its former strongman Omar al-Bashir. But its new transition­al government has vowed to break with the Bashir era following his ouster last year amid popular pro-democracy protests. Pompeo was to meet Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok and Sovereign Council Chair General Abdel Fattah el-Burhan to discuss continued US support for the civilian-led transition­al government “and express support for deepening the SudanIsrae­l relationsh­ip,” the State Department said. Sudan, which has launched sweeping social and political reforms, now hopes Washington will soon take it off its blacklist of state sponsors of terrorism as it seeks to fully re-integrate into the internatio­nal community. Closer ties with US ally Israel would help, and both sides have already taken a series of steps, muddied however by mixed messaging from Sudan. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met Burhan in Uganda in February and later announced that the two leaders had agreed to cooperate towards normalisin­g ties. Sudan’s cabinet later denied that Burhan had made such a promise, which remains highly controvers­ial in much of the Arab world. More recently, Sudan’s foreign ministry spokesman Haider Badawi said he was in favour of such an accord, but foreign minister Omar Gamaledinn­e then said the issue had “never been discussed by the Sudanese government” and promptly fired the spokesman. The coalition of parties and civil society groups which led the protest movement, the Forces of Freedom and Change, argued Tuesday that the government has “no mandate” to normalise ties with Israel, pointing to “the right of Palestinia­ns to their land and to a free and dignified life”.

Thawing US relations

Pompeo’s regional trip, also taking in Bahrain and the UAE, comes in the wake of the landmark August 13 announceme­nt of a normalisat­ion of relations between the Emirates and the Jewish state. Speaking in Jerusalem on Monday, both Pompeo and Netanyahu said that they were hopeful that other Arab states would follow suit – in part to boost an alliance against their common arch foe Iran. Sudan has been under US sanctions for decades because of the presence of Islamists, including Osama bin Laden, who lived there for years in the 1990s before heading to Afghanista­n. While the US lifted a 20-year trade embargo against Sudan in October 2017, it kept the country on its list of state sponsors of terrorism, and Khartoum has been lobbying hard to have that designatio­n lifted. Sudan has been in talks on compensati­ng victims of Bashirera Al-Qaeda attacks, including the 2000 USS Cole bombing in Yemen and the simultaneo­us 1998 bombings of the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. Since January Washington has upgraded its diplomatic representa­tion in Khartoum from the level of charge d’affaires to posting an ambassador. The Pompeo visit comes as Sudan is in deep economic crisis – having suffered decades-long US sanctions and the 2011 secession of the country’s oil-rich south. Grappling with high inflation and the coronaviru­s pandemic, the country badly needs to attract more foreign aid and investment. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Pompeo (left) and Netanyahu arrive wearing protective masks to make a joint statement to the press after meeting in Jerusalem.
— AFP photo Pompeo (left) and Netanyahu arrive wearing protective masks to make a joint statement to the press after meeting in Jerusalem.

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