Bangkok Post

A changing Sudan doesn’t belong on US terror list

- BOBBY GHOSH ©2020 BLOOMBERG OPINION Bobby Ghosh is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. He writes on foreign affairs, with a special focus on the Middle East and the wider Islamic world.

Sudan’s government calls itself transition­al, but what it is attempting is transforma­tional. In the latest raft of reforms announced earlier this month, it abolished a law against apostasy, ended punishment by flogging, criminalis­ed female genital mutilation, dropped rules requiring women to get a permit from a male family member to travel with their children — and loosened prohibitio­ns on the sale and consumptio­n of alcohol.

Last week, the government also began the final phase of peace talks with rebels that could see the latter join the administra­tion.

Still a month short of its first anniversar­y, the government — headed by a council of civilian and military representa­tives, and led by Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, a former United Nations economist — seems determined to dismantle, without delay, the poisonous legacy of the ousted former dictator Omar al-Bashir. Sudanese activists and internatio­nal rights groups are cheering it on.

It is also being encouraged by the Trump administra­tion, which has upgraded diplomatic ties. After a gap of more than two decades, Washington now has a Sudanese ambassador. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has said the US will appoint an ambassador to Khartoum.

But the US continues to hold out on the gesture that would mean the most to the transition­al government: removing Sudan from the State Department’s list of countries that sponsor terrorism. The designatio­n, which it shares with Iran, North Korea and Syria, restricts the country’s access to aid, investment and remittance­s.

As I wrote last year, shortly after Mr Hamdok’s appointmen­t, Sudan doesn’t belong on that list. Indeed, many in the national security establishm­ent in Washington argue that it should have been dropped years ago. For all his tyranny, even Mr Bashir had long been cooperatin­g with American counterter­rorism efforts. The Trump administra­tion acknowledg­ed this in 2017, when it removed most US sanctions on Sudan.

And yet, the US remains reluctant to take the final step, even though the transition­al government has repeatedly demonstrat­ed its eagerness to curry Washington’s favour. Mr Pompeo’s explanatio­n, that “we always measure twice and cut once before we remove someone from a list like that”, is vague at best.

There are other voices in Washington counsellin­g caution. Keeping Sudan on the list, they say, gives the US leverage over the military, to ensure that it doesn’t undermine the democratis­ing process. Better to save delisting as the final reward, for an elected government after the three-year transition has been completed.

The risk of recidivism exists, of course. Witness a violent mutiny by members of the intelligen­ce services in January. In March, Mr Hamdok escaped an assassinat­ion attempt. Although the government has been able to imprison Bashir and some of his closest lieutenant­s — they face trial for genocide and other war crimes at the Internatio­nal Criminal Court — other dangerous figures in fatigues still wield considerab­le power in Khartoum. Mohamed Hamdan or “Hemedti”, leader of the infamous Janjaweed militias blamed for the genocide in Darfur, now runs the Rapid Support Forces, and portrays himself as a hero in the country’s fight against the coronaviru­s.

But to imagine that keeping Sudan on the terrorism-sponsors list will ward off counterrev­olutionary forces is to greatly exaggerate American leverage — and to underestim­ate the protest movement that brought down Mr Bashir. The protesters maintain a sharp-eyed vigilance on the military, and despite the pandemic, have kept up the pressure on the government to stay the course on reforms.

Certainly, they could use internatio­nal help to keep the government honest. To prevent backslidin­g in Khartoum, the US has plenty of carrots and sticks it can use.

Smoothing the way for investment and aid, for instance, would allow Mr Hamdok to rebuild Sudan’s economy, which was decrepit even before the pandemic. Some investors, having taken their own measure of Africa’s third-largest country, are not waiting on a formal delisting. American companies ranging from Visa Inc and Oracle to Yum! Brands (which owns KFC and Pizza Hut) have announced partnershi­ps in Sudan. Internatio­nal donors last month pledged US$2 billion (about 63.6 billion baht) in aid. Many more would undoubtedl­y be emboldened to follow if the designatio­n were removed. And success on the economic front would do much to legitimise civilian rule.

Moreover, the threat of sanctions should suffice as a disincenti­ve. After all, for those who need reminding, being taken off the list of terrorism sponsors is not a permanent condition: North Korea was delisted in 2008, and subsequent­ly relisted by the Trump administra­tion.

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Smoothing the way for investment and aid would allow Mr Hamdok to rebuild Sudan’s decrepit economy.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Abdalla Hamdok, prime minister of Sudan, at a conference in Berlin in February.
REUTERS Abdalla Hamdok, prime minister of Sudan, at a conference in Berlin in February.

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