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Zmeselo
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The US Senate, to designate the RSF a terror group!?

Post by Zmeselo » 05 Aug 2025, 19:55

Darfur Union in the United Kingdom إتحاد دارفور بالمملكة المتحدة

A civil society organisation working towards achieving the togetherness of our people in the Sudan and beyond that in the diaspora,


Statement by Darfur Union in the UK: In Response to the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs Statement on Sudan

https://darfurunionuk.wordpress.com/202 ... /10113-02/

August 5, 2025

*As the U.S. Senate Moves to Designate RSF a Terror Group, the UAE Must Be Named as Its Chief Sponsor*

The statement issued by the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs on 5 August 2025 is not just a denial, it is a blatant attempt to whitewash the UAE’s well-documented role in supporting a genocidal campaign in Sudan, led by the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) militia.

It is now an established fact, backed by credible evidence from UN reports, international journalism, and field testimonies, that the UAE has played a central role in financing, arming, and training the RSF, which is responsible for widespread atrocities across Sudan, including in the besieged city of Al-Fashir.



Moreover, the UAE has been directly involved in the recruitment and deployment of foreign mercenaries from Colombia, Bosaso (Somalia), Libya, and Chad, transporting them to Sudan through coordinated routes and funding mechanisms to bolster RSF ranks. These mercenaries have been used to wage war against civilians, crush resistance, and enforce starvation sieges, all with Emirati support.

Darfur Union in the UK strongly asserts the following:

• The UAE’s statement is a failed attempt to deflect responsibility from its complicity in war crimes.

• By funding and facilitating the RSF and importing mercenaries into Sudan, the UAE is a full partner in the war against the Sudanese people.

• We call on the international community to launch an immediate investigation and hold the UAE and all its proxies accountable.

• We reaffirm our demand for the immediate lifting of the siege on Al-Fashir, unhindered humanitarian access, and an end to the use of starvation as a weapon.

• We remind the world that silence on the UAE’s role is complicity. No true peace can be achieved without confronting the sponsors of this genocidal project.

In light of recent developments, including the US Senate’s move on 1 August 2025 toward designating the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO), there is a growing international recognition of the RSF’s brutal tactics and its role in terrorising civilians. This is a significant and overdue step, and it should serve as a critical turning point in confronting the full network of enablers behind the RSF. Chief among them is the UAE, whose financial, military, and logistical support has allowed this militia to function as a terrorist actor on Sudanese soil. This designation must lead to real consequences, and the ties between the RSF and its sponsors must no longer be protected by diplomatic niceties.

The blood of Sudanese civilians cannot be erased with diplomatic statements. The UAE cannot pose as a neutral actor while enabling ethnic cleansing, mass starvation, and systematic destruction.

The international community must stop pretending. Accountability must start now.

Issued by:

Darfur Union in the UK

🔗 Website: darfurunionuk.wordpress.com

📧 Email: [email protected]

✖️ @DarfurUnionUK

📘 Facebook: @DarfurUnionUK

📷 Instagram: @Darfurunionuk

Tuesday, 5 August 2025




______________


Janet McElligott Exposes UAE's Use of Colombian Mercenaries in Genocide and Child Soldier Training in Sudan

Janet McElligott, a former White House official known for her diplomatic work on Sudan, has released a powerful video statement on social media addressing the ongoing humanitarian catastrophe in Darfur. Speaking from Los Angeles on August 3, McElligott accused the United Arab Emirates of orchestrating a cross-border operation that involves recruiting Colombian mercenaries to carry out systematic atrocities in Sudan.

According to McElligott, a UAE-based company called Global Security Group, in coordination with a Colombian firm called International Services Agencies, has been actively recruiting and transporting battle-hardened Colombian fighters into Sudan through Libya. Each mercenary was reportedly offered $2,600 per month, while battalion leaders were promised $3,600. These fighters were told they would be protecting oil infrastructure—but the reality on the ground was far more sinister.

Upon entering Libya, McElligott says, the mercenaries had their passports, travel documents—even their Bogota bus passes—confiscated by forces loyal to General Khalifa Haftar. They were told bluntly:
The only way home is to kill everyone in Al Fasher.
She estimates that at least 150 Colombian mercenaries have died, while between 50 and 80 managed to escape. But their mission was not limited to combat. McElligott revealed that they were tasked with training child soldiers—specifically Sudanese boys aged 10 to 12—thereby violating international law and U.S. counterterrorism statutes.
These fighters are not protecting anything,
she said.
They are teaching children how to kill their fellow citizens.
She noted that the United Nations has denounced the use of child soldiers, and Colombia’s president has reportedly attempted to shut down the pipeline of mercenaries being funneled through UAE-backed channels.

McElligott also highlighted that Somali parliamentarians have strongly rejected UAE efforts to use Somali ports to move these mercenaries, calling it
trans-shipping for genocide.
They know exactly what happens once these men reach Darfur,
she said, noting that Nyala has become a major staging ground for operations to
literally exterminate Darfurians.
Her video ends with a stark appeal:
We must stop the bombardment of Al Fasher.
We must stop the funding of genocide.
We must stop the importation of hardened Colombian mercenaries.
We must stop Libyan authorities from trapping them in a war they didn’t fully understand.
And most of all, we must free the starving, besieged people of Darfur.
Her statement, coming from a former U.S. diplomat with a long-standing focus on Sudan, adds a sharp and credible voice to growing international concern about the UAE’s role in sustaining the conflict through proxy fighters and covert logistics. It underscores the urgent need for accountability—not just for the war crimes being committed on Sudanese soil, but also for the international actors enabling them.




UAE's denial letter:


Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 36765
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: The US Senate, to designate the RSF a terror group!?

Post by Zmeselo » 05 Aug 2025, 20:28




In recent years, the UAE has been at the vanguard of Gulf states pledging billions of dollars in investments and aid money to gain influence in Africa.Photographer: Giuseppe Cacace/AFP/Getty Images

World
The UAE in Africa: Power, Influence and Conflict

The Gulf nation has built a logistical network to project power in countries surrounding Sudan that includes field hospitals and airstrips, according to regional diplomats, analysts and officials.

By Simon Marks

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features ... ckout=true

July 8, 2025

On November 23, Sheikh Shakhboot bin Nahyan Al Nahyan, a top diplomat for the United Arab Emirates, landed in Bangui, the capital of the Central African Republic, with an offer for President Faustin-Archange Touadéra.

In return for access to airstrips in the impoverished country’s remote east, the wealthy Gulf state would invest in the African nation’s defense, mining and agriculture sectors, according to two CAR officials familiar with the talks and two senior Western officials briefed on the matter.

The offer – which resulted in an economic partnership agreement signed in March – is part of a growing effort by the UAE to expand its influence in a region of vast mineral and agricultural wealth and [deleted] its support for the Rapid Support Forces militia in Sudan, said the people, who requested anonymity because they’re not authorized to speak to media.

The deal with CAR comes as the Gulf nation has built a logistical network to support the RSF and project power in countries surrounding Sudan that includes field hospitals over the border in Chad and South Sudan, according to regional diplomats, analysts and officials. Access to airstrips in CAR would provide the UAE with another destination through which it could discreetly supply the RSF, they said. The UAE has long denied that it backs the rebel group.

UAE Logistical Network in Africa Spreads Far and Wide

Sources: UAE government announcements; Bloomberg News reporting

In May, the top United Nations court — the International Court of Justice in the Hague — dismissed a case that Sudan’s army brought against the UAE on the grounds that it didn’t have jurisdiction to investigate the claims. The army didn’t appeal the judgment. Analysts say the UAE supports the RSF – which fought Yemen’s Houthis in a Saudi-UAE-led coalition a decade ago – because the wealthy Gulf state opposes political Islamists like those in Sudan’s army.
In regards to Sudan, the UAE strongly rejects the allegations that it is supplying weaponry to any party involved in the ongoing conflict. These claims are unfounded and lack any substantiated evidence,
a UAE foreign ministry spokesperson said in a written response to a detailed list of questions. The official didn’t respond specifically to a question about allegations from Western diplomats that it has built a support network for the RSF in countries surrounding Sudan.

The US earlier this year sanctioned the paramilitary group and accused it of committing genocide in its brutal two-year civil war against Sudan’s army – which the US also sanctioned, accusing it of committing atrocities – that has killed tens of thousands and displaced 12 million people. The war broke out in April 2023 after the heads of the two factions failed to reach a power sharing agreement following a coup they jointly orchestrated in 2021 against a popular democratic uprising.


Members of RSF paramilitaries stand guard outside the offices of the anti-corruption prosecution in Khartoum in 2019.Photographer: Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP/Getty Images

In recent years, the UAE has been at the vanguard of Gulf states building influence in Africa by pledging billions of dollars in investments in renewable energy, logistics, technology, real estate and agriculture, eclipsing the likes of China and European countries in terms of pledged FDI. That strategy is part of a broad campaign globally to transition the UAE’s economy away from oil and harness opportunities in areas such as trade and renewable energy.
Our engagement is not transactional; it is guided by shared values and a vision for sustainable development and inclusive growth,
the UAE spokesperson said.

The UAE’s end goal in Africa is unclear, but it seems to be less about making money – most of Sudan’s $2 billion in gold exports already go to the country for processing, according to Sudan’s finance ministry – than about building itself up as a major power on a continent whose long-time partners in the West and China are disengaging, according to Connor Vasey, a managing consultant on Africa at London-based J.S. Held.
The UAE has spent decades learning how others have entrenched and projected influence in the continent,
he said, referring to ex-colonial powers like France and newer players like China.
But now African governments’ traditional partners are either pulling back or just still don’t get it – leaving a big opportunity for the UAE.
African governments are still desperate for foreign partners to develop their economies, and the UAE can, fairly cheaply for a wealthy petrostate, build influence quickly through investment deals, humanitarian aid and taking sides in domestic conflicts, according to analysts.

Beyond CAR, the UAE has provided $600 million in humanitarian aid to Sudan since the war broke out and funded $3.5 billion in humanitarian projects over the past decade, according to the UAE Foreign Ministry. From 2023 until 2024, the UAE’s foreign assistance to Africa including development and humanitarian aid amounted to $1.01 billion, slightly less than the $1.2 billion provided in 2021 and 2022. Last year, the UAE made its biggest African commitment yet with a $35 billion investment that almost single-handedly ended a currency crisis in Egypt.

Critics allege that the wealthy country is trying to polish its image even as it simultaneously arms militias like the RSF in Sudan.
The UAE’s growing set of alliances in Chad, CAR, Ethiopia, South Sudan, Sudan and Libya demonstrates how important the Horn is to their regional ambitions,
said Cameron Hudson, a senior fellow in the Africa Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and a former CIA analyst for Africa.

Djibouti’s President Ismaïl Omar Guelleh said in a May interview with Jeune Afrique that the UAE’s
politics at large are profoundly destabilizing for the entire region.
Since April, Sudan’s army has routed RSF positions in the capital Khartoum and reasserted itself in central areas of the country, highlighting the limitations of the UAE’s support, according to analysts. The RSF has since taken back control of large swaths of Sudan's Kordofan region in the south and has seized a triangular-shaped strategic zone on the northwestern border with Egypt and Libya from the army.

The UAE’s first significant foray into Africa’s conflicts came in 2014, when it backed Libyan military commander Khalifa Haftar’s attempt to seize power in Africa’s second biggest oil producer with arms and funding. The UAE spokesperson didn’t comment on any role it may have had in Libya, though the country has previously praised Haftar’s army and called for a peaceful resolution to Libya’s crises.

Since then it has expanded its efforts on the continent to include investment and humanitarian aid. The UAE has built two field hospitals in Chad and another in South Sudan while forging close economic ties with governments in Uganda, Kenya and CAR. Analysts, diplomats and government officials in the region say the funding has also helped attract political support among neighboring countries for its backing of the RSF.

In Somalia, the UAE has expanded the airport in the coastal city of Bosaso where it runs a regional logistics hub and trains and supports the autonomously-run Puntland region’s military forces, according to three Western diplomats who insisted on anonymity in order to discuss sensitive matters. Satellite imagery shows a major scaling up of the airport in Bosaso with new loading bays, an extended runway and several hangars being built since the beginning of 2023, around the time when the war in Sudan broke out.

In 2022, DP World, a privately-owned Dubai-based logistics company, signed a construction agreement with Puntland’s government to upgrade the Port of Bosaso.
Today, we work with over 50 African countries across a wide range of sectors, including sustainable energy, food security, infrastructure, education, digital transformation, and healthcare. Over the past four years, the UAE’s foreign assistance in Africa has remained steady, supporting 51 beneficiary countries,
the UAE spokesperson said.​​​​


Port of Boasao has been steadily built up since 2023.Source: Planet


Port of Boasao on April 29.Source: Planet

In a May report, Amnesty International documented the existence of Chinese-made weaponry in Sudan, which it said the UAE had “almost certainly” sent to the RSF. The rights group used global arms data from the Swedish research organization SIPRI to determine that the UAE is the only country to have purchased the equipment during the reporting period — Norinco 155mm AH-4 howitzers.

The UAE denied that it exported the equipment.
The howitzer referenced in the report is a system manufactured outside the UAE and has been available on the international market for nearly a decade. The assertion that only one country has procured or transferred this system is invalid,
the UAE spokesperson said to Bloomberg.

Brian Castner, head of crisis research at Amnesty said that it’s “extremely unlikely” that another country with strategic interests in Sudan secretly purchased the equipment, imported them unnoticed to their home country and then moved them to Khartoum.


Members of the UAE Red Crescent distribute food aid to disaster survivors in Libya's eastern port city of Derna in 2023.Photographer: Karim Sahib/AFP/Getty Images

Since 2014, the UAE has established military outposts, mostly undisclosed, in six countries – including Yemen, Somalia, Chad and Libya –
to further its military, security, and economic goals in the region,
according to a 2024 report by the Carnegie Center for International Peace.
For the UAE, this degree of secrecy is needed to minimize negative political exposure — both among local populations, who may oppose the Emirati presence, and for the country’s international reputation, especially where outposts have served to support warring parties in conflict-torn countries,
it said.

The UAE didn’t respond to a question about the allegations in the Carnegie report.

Similar setups in countries surrounding Sudan follow the UAE’s Libyan blueprint, said Hudson – humanitarian operations as a cover for achieving its military and political goals.
The Chadians have basically given carte blanche to the Emirates to run a sophisticated and clandestine support operation for the RSF,
he said.

The UAE didn’t comment about its relationship with Chad.

In 2023, the UAE announced it was building a field hospital in the Chadian city of Amdjarass to support Sudanese refugees fleeing over the border from Sudan. UN investigators last year said evidence the UAE was using an airstrip close to the field hospital as a conduit for supplying weapons to the RSF was “credible.” A UN report from this year said that experts were lately
unable to confirm transfers of military material
from Amdjarass to the RSF.

The UAE spokesperson said allegations of it funneling weapons into Sudan “are baseless.” The official didn’t respond specifically to a question about whether its operations in Chad are used to support the RSF but the country has long denied it.


Drone strikes by the paramilitary RSF targeted the northern port in Port Sudan on May 6.Source: AP Photo

More recently the UAE opened a medical facility in South Sudan where it has treated
all of those in need, regardless of ethnicity, religion, gender or political affiliation,
Reem Kait, assistant deputy minister of political affairs for the UAE foreign ministry, told judges in the International Court of Justice in April.

In an unpublished report from November seen by Bloomberg, UN experts said there was a spike in cargo flights coming from the UAE to Amdjarass and N’Djamena between May and September 2024 that coincided with an escalation of hostilities in the Sudanese city of El Fasher, raising the potential of
possible covert operations.
In March, the Gulf state sent a high-level delegation including Al Nahyan to the Gorom Refugee Camp in South Sudan’s capital Juba to
demonstrate solidarity with displaced communities
that fled the war in Sudan.

The same month it inaugurated its field hospital in South Sudan’s Northern Bahr el Ghazal state close to the border with Sudan.

While the UAE has said the clinic will
address urgent healthcare requirements,
many of those treated at the hospital to date have been wounded soldiers fighting for the RSF, two health officials in the area said, speaking on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.
The UAE broadly speaking is diversifying. It was too heavily concentrated in Chad so they went to South Sudan and are looking at CAR,
said Hudson, the analyst.
This looks to be premeditated and highly strategic.
With assistance from Okech Francis, Mohammed Alamin, and Mohamed Sheikh Nor

Fiyameta
Senior Member
Posts: 19770
Joined: 02 Aug 2018, 22:59

Re: The US Senate, to designate the RSF a terror group!?

Post by Fiyameta » 05 Aug 2025, 21:28

After losing Djibouti to China, the UAE's displaced aggression is experienced by both Ethiopia and Sudan, the former of which being manipulated to serve UAE's destabilizing agenda at its own peril, while the latter being at the receiving end of UAE's wrath.

Sudan may go through trials and tribulations, but it has a better chance of surviving UAE's onslaught than Ethiopia doing UAE's bidding at the expense of disintegration, and could potentially die out of its own undoing.

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