Sowetan

Europe to toughen its stance on Sudan war

EU plans to impose sanctions framework for individual­s, key sectors by September

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Brussels – The European Union is setting up a dedicated sanctions framework for Sudan to eventually target key actors in the ongoing war with travel bans and asset and bank account freezes, diplomatic sources familiar with the matter said.

A proposal document was shared between member states last week and the details will be discussed over the following weeks, diplomatic sources said.

The aim is to finish the framework by September, after which it could be used to compile a list of banned individual­s and companies, the sources said.

US president Joe Biden signed an executive order in early May laying groundwork for potential US sanctions.

The EU has already sanctioned entities and individual­s linked to Russia’s Wagner Group of mercenarie­s, led by Yevgeny Prigozhin, including its operations in Sudan and two gold companies.

“Setting up the regime should serve as a deterrent to Sudanese warlords. It’s a last warning,” one of the sources said, adding that the framework would stick to individual targets rather than any sectoral moves.

War broke out in April between the army, led by Gen Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, who ousted longtime autocrat Omar al-Bashir in 2019, and a paramilita­ry force led by Gen Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, known as Hemedti.

Hemedti derived his wealth from gold mines in Darfur and his Rapid Support Forces has close links to Gulf powers Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. Burhan’s army is supported by Islamist Bashir loyalists.

The UN’s special representa­tive to Sudan, Volker Perthes, warned in this month that the conflict showed no signs of a quick resolution and “risked morphing into an ethnicised civil war.”

Diplomatic mediation efforts has so far failed and ceasefires have been used by both sides to regroup.

Earlier this month, the Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration estimated three-million people had been displaced by the fighting and more than 700,000 had fled to neighbouri­ng countries such as Egypt and Chad.

A humanitari­an crisis is meanwhile unfolding as aid fails to be disbursed or reach its destinatio­ns.

 ?? /ZOHRA BENSEMRA / REUTERS ?? Sudanese refugees who have fled the violence in their country’s capital Khartoum and in West Darfur province cool off in the rainwater at Adré in neighbouri­ng Chad.
/ZOHRA BENSEMRA / REUTERS Sudanese refugees who have fled the violence in their country’s capital Khartoum and in West Darfur province cool off in the rainwater at Adré in neighbouri­ng Chad.

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