Tuesday, May 09, 2023

Sudan: Number of displaced is more than 700,000

Read full story at BBC News
Dated Tuesday 09 May 2023
Sudan crisis: Number of internally displaced rises to more than 700,000:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-65528513
- - -


Report from China View - Xinhua

Editor: huaxia

Dated Wednesday 10 May 2023; 04:28

Sudan displacement doubles to 700,000 in one week: IOM - excerpt:


GENEVA, May 9 (Xinhua) -- The International Organization for Migration (IOM), a United Nations (UN) agency, reported on Tuesday that more than 700,000 people have already been internally displaced by the fighting in Sudan. The number was more than doubled in the past week.


IOM spokesperson Paul Dillon said that "last Tuesday, the figure stood at 340,000. Prior to the fighting, an estimated 3.7 million people had already been internally displaced in Sudan."


He said that the number of internally displaced persons increased in several areas, including the capital, where clashes were continuing. "The IOM has stocks of non-food items in six warehouses around the country, but to date the organization has been unable to deliver to those in need."


Full story: http://www.chinaview.cn/20230510/d8ad3e981d064a4f8716c120ac35ffd9/c.html


[Ends]

Monday, May 08, 2023

URGENT FROM ALEX DE WAAL - Sudan crisis: Mediators over a barrel in mission to end fighting

NOTE from Sudan Watch Editor: Here is Alex de Waal’s latest take on the current Sudan crisis. Fortunately, it was published yesterday in the form of a carefully worded piece for BBC News. See copy below. 


As usual, it didn't disappoint. I had to read it six times to see if there was any wiggle room in the stance he has taken. There is none, it is crystal clear with no way of misunderstanding this: speed is of the essence.


While reading it, I agreed with every word but my heart sank at not seeing anything that was news to me.


The overall message he conveys in his analysis, without appearing to be dramatic, is the urgent need for speed: that there's no time left to lose on haggling for peace. We're talking hours and days, not weeks.


Also, he didn’t mention justice or for Messrs Burhan and Hemeti to be called to account for their crimes. It seems to me that Alex's advice to the current mediators is this: appease them, agree amnesty for war crimes.


So, after giving it much thought, and it pains me to say this, one side will have to be backed in order to give Sudanese civilians a chance to run their country and army, which means backing Mr Burhan and SAF.


Rewarding Hemeti, treating him as a victor would make the Janjaweed victorious. Unthinkable. He must not have any role leading any part of Sudan or South Sudan. Retire him to Chad where he was born, or to the ICC. 


Over the past 20 years here at Sudan Watch, I've argued strongly in favour of the African Union, for Africa be governed by Africa-led solutions and initiatives, for it to be empowered and lead without outside interference and to be given a seat on the UN Security Council.


Please God stop the fighting, let the world unite in supporting Sudan and South Sudan by providing them with what they need, humanitarian assistance and access to aid until they can stand on their own feet. 


And let them decide what to do with the RSF. Hopefully, Hemeti will disappear peaceably, forever. 


Wish I had time to write a better intro instead of this half-baked draft but as Alex shows in his heavy-duty not light-weight piece, if one reads it carefully: there is not a minute to waste. Seriously. Every minute counts.

______________________________

Report from BBC News

By ALEX DE WAAL


Dated Monday 08 May 2023 - full copy:


Sudan crisis: Mediators over a barrel in mission to end fighting

AFP


With the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, transformed from tranquil city to war zone, Saudi Arabia and the US have called the warring parties to Jeddah to seek agreement on a ceasefire. But as Sudan expert Alex de Waal says, it will just be a short-term, emergency step.

______________________________


There is a dilemma for mediators: whatever decision they take on the format and agenda for emergency talks will determine the path of peace-making in Sudan through to its conclusion.


To silence the guns, the American and Saudi diplomats will deal only with the rival generals who have each sent a three-person negotiating team to Jeddah. 


The agenda is a humanitarian ceasefire, a monitoring mechanism and corridors for aid. Neither side wants to open negotiations towards a political agreement.


The civilian parties and neighbourhood resistance committees, whose non-violent protests brought down the authoritarian regime of long-time leader Omar al-Bashir four years ago, will be onlookers.


It will not be easy to get the two generals to agree to any kind of ceasefire.


The army chief, Gen Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, will insist that he represents the legitimate government. He will label Gen Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, better known as "Hemedti", as a rebel.


But Hemedti, his de facto deputy until the clashes, will demand equal status for the two sides.


He will want on a freeze-in-place, leaving his paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) fighters in control of much of Khartoum. Gen Burhan will require a return to the positions in the days before the clashes began.


Getting a compromise means hard bargaining with the generals. 


The mediators need to gain their confidence and assure them that, if they make concessions now, that will not leave them exposed and vulnerable.


The downside is that the two warring parties will then demand the dominant role in political talks and an agenda that suits their interests.


One thing on which Burhan and Hemedti - and the Arab neighbours - agree is that they do not want a democratic government, which had been on the cards before the fighting began. The two military men had run the country since the 2019 which ousted Bashir, refusing to hand power to civilians.

AFP

The real losers are the civilians who helped oust Bashir in 2019 and want elections and a democratic government


Another point of agreement will be amnesty for war crimes.


Negotiations dominated by the generals are likely to end in a peace agreement in which they share the spoils, setting back the prospects for democracy for many more years.


But if the fighting is not stopped soon, Sudan faces state collapse.


Abdalla Hamdok - prime minister of the joint military-civilian government ousted by the generals in 2021 - has said the country's new war threatened to be worse than Syria or Yemen. 


He might have added, worse than Darfur.


Frontline reinforcements


There is a grim predictability about how Sudan's civil wars unfold.


In the opening days, the military commanders - army generals and rebel leaders - are driven by an angry resolve to land a knockout blow on the other side.


Combat is fierce as each side focuses its attacks, and it is easy to identify who is on which side - and who is staying neutral.

AFP

The RSF has its roots in Darfur where some fighters are alleged to have been involved in what the International Criminal Court considers a genocide


We saw this when the Sudanese civil war broke out in 1983, again in Darfur 20 years later, and in the conflicts in Abyei, Heglig and the Nuba Mountains close to the north-south border at the time when South Sudan separated in 2011.


The first clashes in South Sudan's own civil war in 2013 also looked like this.


On 15 April, when fighting erupted between the army and the RSF, each side vowed to destroy the other.


They concentrated their firepower on each other's strategic positions in the capital, regardless of the massive destruction inflicted on the city and its residents.


Past wars show that if the fighting is not quickly halted, it escalates.


Each side brings reinforcements to the frontline, bids to win over local armed groups that are not yet involved, and solicits help from friendly foreign backers. 


We are in that phase now.


The regular conflict script tells us the adversaries will not be able to sustain their cohesion for long. They will run low on weapons, logistics and money, and cut deals to get more.


The fissures within each fighting coalition will begin to show. Other armed groups will join the fray.


Local communities will arm themselves for self-defence. Outsiders will become entangled. 


All of this is already happening. It is most advanced in Darfur, Hemedti's homeland, which is in flames again.


Up to now, we have not seen civilians being systematically targeted because of their ethnic identity.


But that is a major risk, and as soon as fighters on one side commit mass atrocities, the antagonism will escalate.


The next stage would be conflict spreading across the country, igniting local disputes as it goes.


Armed groups will fragment and coalesce, fighting for control over the lucrative locations such as roads, airports, gold mines and aid distribution centres. 


In Darfur, after the fierce battles and massacres of 2003-04, the region collapsed into anarchy.


The head of the joint African Union-United Nations mission called it "a war of all against all".


This was the lawless political marketplace in which Hemedti thrived, using cash and violence to build a power base.


There is an all-too-real scenario in which the whole of Sudan comes to resemble Darfur.


'Abandoned in moment of need'


The US and Saudi mediators are high-level and even-handed. Unlike other Arab neighbours - Egypt backs Burhan and the United Arab Emirates has ties to Hemedti - Riyadh does not have a favourite. 


The US is threatening sanctions. That is unlikely to deter the generals - Sudan has been under American sanctions since 1989, and military-owned businesses thrived nonetheless. 

GETTY IMAGES

The one thing Gen Burhan (R) and Hemedti (L) are likely to agree about is that neither wants a civilian government


Effective pressure needs international consensus. Everyone - including China and Russia - agrees that the fighting is a disaster.


Protocol at the UN puts the responsibility on its African members to raise the issue at the Security Council. 


Up to now, they have not acted, and the African Union has not even convened its Peace and Security Council.


In the meantime, every passing day risks the war becoming intractable.


Silencing the guns today is a hard-enough task. It would be far harder if there were dozens of fissile armed groups claiming a seat at the table.


What is unprecedented about today's armed conflict is that the battleground is in Khartoum. 


It is generating a humanitarian crisis quite different to the rural displacement and hunger that the country's aid workers have dealt with over the decades.


Civilians trapped in urban neighbourhoods may benefit from old-style food convoys, but they also need utilities - electricity, water, and telecoms. And they desperately need cash. 


With the central bank burned and local commercial bank branches closed, some people rely on mobile phone banking services. Others are penniless.


With the UN and most foreign aid workers evacuated, local resistance committees have stepped into the vacuum, organising essential aid and safe passage for civilians to escape. 

REUTERS

Civilians have become trapped in urban neighbourhoods with truces failing to hold


Many Sudanese feel that the international community abandoned them in their moment of need, and ask that such local, civilian efforts become the lynchpin of an aid effort.


There is a danger that hunger will become a weapon of war, and aid will be a resource manipulated by warlords.


Aid agencies will need to find ways to bypass them and directly help civilians.


There are no simple solutions to Sudan's escalating war. The situation may yet get much worse before it gets better.


And it is likely that whatever decisions are taken in the ceasefire talks - who is represented, on what terms, and with what agenda - will shape the country's future for years to come.


Alex de Waal is the executive director of the World Peace Foundation at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University in the US.

______________________________


View original: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-65495539


[Ends]

INTERVIEW: Deutsche Welle & Alexander Rondos, Former EU Special Representative, Horn of Africa

Sudan's rival factions meet for preliminary talks in Saudi Arabia

HERE is a video posted an hour ago by Germany's international broadcaster Deutsche Welle showing its interview with Mr Alexander Rondos, Former EU Special Representative for the Horn of Africa, currently in Nairobi.

The 07:39 minute interview is really good and gives one hope that there are many clever experienced knowledgeable people like Mr Rondos working hard to help Sudan and its neighbours avert catastrophic war.

Note that Mr Rondos rightly emphasises the importance of ensuring that talks involve and include Sudanese civilians and Sudan's neighbouring countries such as Chad, Libya, Egypt, Ethiopia, Eritrea.

To view the video click here: https://p.dw.com/p/4R2r8

or here: https://www.dw.com/en/sudans-rival-factions-meet-for-preliminary-talks-in-saudi-arabia/video-65551182

[Ends]

Men are getting carried away with themselves. Some trigger happy men spark a gunfight in the Gulf of Aden

NOTE from Sudan Watch Editor: While I was thinking that boys with toys are getting carried away with themselves, and the 246-year-old USA being the new kids on the block needs to stay home to get its own house in order before naively messing up more countries it's too young to understand, I saw a comment at this tweet that led me to this T-shirt for sale at Amazon which made me laugh because it tells me I am not alone in my thinking.

Turkish embassy in Khartoum to relocate to Port Sudan after ambassador's vehicle targeted by gunfire

Report from China.org.cn

By Xinhua

Dated Sunday 07 May 2023 - excerpts:

Turkish embassy in Khartoum to relocate to Port Sudan

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu announced on Saturday that Türkiye has decided to relocate its embassy in Khartoum, the capital of Sudan, to Port Sudan, in response to an earlier incident where the Turkish ambassador's vehicle was targeted by gunfire.

"For the safety of our embassy and our colleagues, we decided to move our embassy to Port Sudan," Cavusoglu was quoted as saying by the semi-official Anadolu Agency. […]

After the incident, the RSF and the Sudanese army exchanged accusations. The RSF claimed that the area where the attack occurred was under military control and reiterated its commitment to protecting diplomatic missions in the country. Conversely, the army attributed responsibility to the RSF for the assault.

View original: http://www.china.org.cn/world/2023-05/07/content_85270841.htm

[Ends]

Sunday, May 07, 2023

Qatar delivers 20 tonnes food and medical aid to Sudan, evacuates 79 more Qatari residency holders

Report from The Peninsula.com

Dated Monday 08 May 2023 12:30 am - excerpt:

Qatar delivers third relief aid to Sudan; evacuates 79 more Qatari residency holders

Port Sudan: A Qatari aircraft carrying 20 tonnes of food and medical aid arrived on Sunday at Port Sudan Airport in the Republic of Sudan, representing the third airlift flight allocated by the State of Qatar to support those affected by the fighting in Sudan.

The humanitarian aid, which includes development, food, medical and field hospital, comes within the framework of Qatar's support for the Sudanese people and its full support for their steadfastness in the face of the current difficult conditions due to the continuation of the fighting. […]

View originalhttps://thepeninsulaqatar.com/article/08/05/2023/qatar-delivers-third-relief-aid-to-sudan-evacuates-79-more-qatari-residency-holders

[Ends]

Arab League forms Arab group to address Sudan crisis

Report from Big News Network

By China View Xinhua

Dated Monday 08 May 2023 - full copy:

Arab League forms ministerial committee to address Sudan crisis


CAIRO, May 7 (Xinhua) -- The Arab League Council issued a resolution on Sunday to form an Arab ministerial contact group to communicate with the Sudanese parties and influential countries, aiming to reach a settlement of the crisis in Sudan.


The resolution, made during the Council's emergency meeting in the Egyptian capital Cairo, is meant to intensify Arab efforts to find a peaceful solution to the current conflict in Sudan between the Sudanese Army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) that erupted in mid-April.


Under the resolution, the contact group would include representatives from Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and the Arab League, according to an Arab League statement.


The contact group will hold communication with the Sudanese parties, influential countries regionally and internationally as well as relevant international organizations, according to the statement.


The committee aims to reach a complete and sustainable ceasefire in Sudan and address the causes of the crisis.


It will further coordinate with international relief organizations to provide urgent humanitarian and medical support to citizens and displaced persons inside Sudan.


The group will also work to help those taking refuge in neighboring countries.


The Council also stressed the need to fully respect Sudan's sovereignty, unity and territorial integrity, and not to interfere in its internal affairs to avoid fueling conflict and threatening regional peace and security.


View original: https://www.bignewsnetwork.com/news/273823326/arab-league-forms-ministerial-committee-to-address-sudan-crisis


[Ends]

Saudi Arabia: KSrelief to provide aid worth USD100M and a campaign via Sahem to help Sudanese people

Read more by SPA May 07, 2023: https://www.spa.gov.sa/en/4471f1ea37j

[Ends]

Saturday, May 06, 2023

UAE, WHO send plane with medical supplies to Sudan

Report from Daily Excelsior

Saturday 06 May 2023 - excerpt:

UAE, WHO send plane with medical supplies to Sudan

(Abu Dhabi/Khartoum) -The United Arab Emirates (UAE) and the World Health Organization (WHO) have completed the first medical aid delivery to Sudan, the WHO informs.

“The United Arab Emirates (UAE) and the World Health Organization have delivered 30 tons of urgent medical supplies to Sudan today. A plane carrying supplies for injury treatment, emergency surgeries, and essential drugs arrived in Port Sudan Airport early this morning,” the WHO said in a Friday statement.

According to the release, the shipment is valued at $444,000 and includes enough medical supplies and essential medicines to reach 165,000 people,

“The shipment” is the first that WHO has been able to deliver by air to Sudan since the outbreak of the conflict,” the WHO said.

View original: https://www.dailyexcelsior.com/uae-who-send-plane-with-medical-supplies-to-sudan/

[Ends]

We need more than words and laws - we need justice

"Our planet is in such pain and anguish and too many of us move as if it is of little consequence... We need more than words and laws - we need justice." 
-International Criminal Court Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan QC

[Ends] 

Addition of Sudan to UK FCDO travel black list means there are 65 nations partially or entirely off-limits

It is hard to recall a time when so much of the world was off-limits due to war, terrorism and unrest. 


The addition of Sudan to the UK FCDO travel black list means there are now 65 nations that are partially or entirely off-limits.


Report from The Telegraph

By Oliver Smith,

DEPUTY HEAD OF TRAVEL

Thursday 04 May 2023; 10:00am


Is the world becoming more dangerous? The Foreign Office thinks so


The addition of Sudan to the FCDO travel black list means there are now 65 nations that are partially or entirely off-limits

Meroe, Sudan, off-limits as of April CREDIT: Getty


Four years ago, a British globetrotter’s travel wishlist might have included the cultural wonders of St Petersburg and the cosy cafes of Lviv. The enthralling architecture of Isfahan and the tranquil gardens of Shiraz were on the radars of more ambitious holidaymakers, along with the lesser-known pyramids of Meroe. This reporter, in late 2018, spent a weekend in Chernobyl


Trips to all of these places are now either impossible or extremely ill-advised. Russia, Ukraine, Iran and Sudan, along with Belarus, represent the newest additions to the Foreign Office (FCDO)’s travel black list, where trips to the entire country are deemed perilous and which now numbers a depressing 21 nations. A further 44 countries are partially out of bounds. It is hard to recall a time when so much of the world was off-limits due to war, terrorism and unrest. 


Full story: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/advice/where-is-safe-foreign-office-map/


[Ends]

Friday, May 05, 2023

UN: South Sudan is facing violent clashes as it struggles to implement power-sharing deal

Report from The Washington Times

By Edith M. Lederer - Associated Press 

Friday 05 May 2023


U.N.: South Sudan struggling to implement power-sharing deal

Photo by: Peter Louis. People who crossed from Sudan are seen at a refugee camp in Renk County, South Sudan, Wednesday, May 3, 2023. Sudan has plunged into chaos since fighting erupted in mid-April between the country's two rival top generals and there is increasing concern for those trapped and displaced by the fighting. (Peter Louis/WFP via AP)


UNITED NATIONS — South Sudan is facing violent clashes and increasing disillusionment and frustration as it struggles to implement the most challenging provisions of a fragile 2018 power-sharing agreement, U.N. experts say in a new report.


The world’s newest nation is struggling to integrate rival military forces, draft a new constitution and prepare for its first election as an independent country in December 2024, the experts monitoring sanctions against the world’s newest nation said in a report to the U.N. Security Council obtained Friday by The Associated Press.


The country’s stability “will likely turn on the government’s ability to reward the patience of those who remain committed to peace, rather than those who have sought to reshape it through violence,” the report says.


There were high hopes when oil-rich South Sudan gained independence from Sudan in 2011 after a long conflict. But the country slid into a civil war in December 2013 largely based on ethnic divisions when forces loyal to the current president, Salva Kiir, battled those loyal to the current vice president, Riek Machar.


Tens of thousands of people were killed in the war, which ended with the 2018 peace agreement, bringing Kiir and Machar together in a government of national unity. Under the agreement, elections were supposed to be held in February 2023, but last August they were postponed until December 2024.


View original: https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/may/5/un-south-sudan-struggling-to-implement-power-shari/


[Ends] 

Sudan: SAF's sent envoys to Saudi for ceasefire talks

Sudan Crisis: Multiple truces have been agreed since the fighting between the rival security forces erupted on April 15, but none has been respected.

Report from NDTV

By AFP (Agence France-Presse)

Dated Saturday 06 May 2023 12:43 am IST


Sudan Army Says Sent Envoys To Saudi For Ceasefire Talks


Khartoum: The Sudanese army said late Friday that it had sent envoys to Saudi Arabia to discuss "details of the truce in the process of being extended" with its paramilitary foes.


Regular army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan had given his backing to a seven-day ceasefire announced by South Sudan on Wednesday, but early on Friday the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces said they were extending by three days a previous truce brokered under US-Saudi mediation.


Multiple truces have been agreed since the fighting between the rival security forces erupted on April 15, but none has been respected.


View original: https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/sudan-army-says-sent-envoys-to-saudi-for-ceasefire-talks-4009931


[Ends]

Fighting hits power supplies. MTN Sudan's network down. Khartoum's power and water supplies failing

Report from Reuters

By Reuters Staff


Friday 05 May 2023 2:23 PM


MTN Sudan's network down as fighting hits power supplies


JOHANNESBURG, May 5 (Reuters) - The Sudanese arm of Africa’s biggest mobile operator MTN Group said on Friday its network was down after fighting in the country led to fuel shortages and power cuts.


Heavy gunfire echoed around the capital Khartoum again on Friday, after more than two weeks of conflict between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF). Both appeared to be battling for control of territory ahead of proposed talks.


Across swathes of Khartoum, power and water supplies have been failing.


MTN said in a statement it was working to resolve the network outage as soon as possible.


“The company fully understands the impact this may have on communication needs and extends its apologies for any inconvenience experienced during this challenging time,” it said. 


(Reporting by Nqobile Dludla Editing by Mark Potter)


View original: https://www.reuters.com/article/sudan-politics-internet-idUSL1N3721JO


[Ends]

MTN is out, Zain calls mostly out, Sudani calls out, net OK for now. If this continues Sudan will be in blackout

Sudan Watch Ed: Hat tip with thanks to https://twitter.com/sudanreeves [Ends]

UAE’s long alleged link to the RSF. Emails sent by RSF to UK MPs by one of Sudan’s leading mining players

Report from the i

By Molly BlackallRichard Holmes

Friday 05 May 2023 1:59 pm (Updated 2:01 pm) - full copy:


Self-styled ‘ethical’ private equity firm in Dubai helped notorious Sudan militia to lobby UK MPs


EXCLUSIVE 

Revealed: The Rapid Support Forces have sent a string of “special bulletins” to UK politicians in recent days – but meta data exposing its Dubai links disappeared after i inquiries

A ‘special bulletin’ sent by the RSF to UK MPs this week. (Photo: i)


A self-styled ‘ethical’ investment firm based in the UAE supported the notorious paramilitary group the RSF in its bid to influence UK politicians about the conflict in Sudan, i can reveal. 


The Rapid Support Forces group (RSF), which has previously been accused of human rights atrocities in Sudan including rape and murder, has sent a string of “special bulletins” to UK politicians that it said was to combat “the disproportionate amount of disinformation” surrounding the conflict.


The memos contained allegations about barbarity by its opponents, the Sudanese Armed Forces, and claimed that the RSF was making dramatic progress in the fighting.  


i has analysed metadata from a briefing email that was sent from the RSF’s official media account to Westminster MPs on Tuesday, which shows it was put together by a designer at Dubai-based investment firm called Capital Tap Holdings.


When approached by i, the RSF initially confirmed that Capital Tap Holdings had produced parts of the briefing for them including the logo.


Capital Tap Holdings, which describes itself as “ethical” and a “responsible investor” has significant mining interests in Sudan and the wider continent. The RSF is reported to have control of some of Sudan’s gold mines.


Foreign Affairs Select Committee chair Alicia Kearns, who received the briefing, raised questions about the international support being given to the warring parties in Sudan. She told the House of Commons that it was “not some shoddily pulled together briefing” but a “clearly well-financed operation”.


Ms Kearns told i that any organisation providing PR to the RSF was stoking the current conflict and hinted that sanctions could be necessary to deter international support for the warring groups.


“Any organisation providing PR support to the RSF is seeking to legitimise them and reject peaceful transition away from military rule in Sudan,” she told i. “I urge them to stop, before international sanctions are required.”


A spokesperson for the RSF – which has been accused of group atrocities including rape and murder in Sudan in 2014 and 2015 – confirmed it had emailed MPs, journalists and “experts focused on the Middle East Africa” in order to “take measures to better inform the international community about what is happening on the ground in Sudan”. It said it had specifically targeted MPs who are sitting on committees related to security and Africa.


Metadata shows that the author of the briefing was a designer at Capital Tap. However, the RSF insisted there was “no working relationship” between the two and claimed the firm helped with the briefing free of charge.


“A relative of the RSF management reached out to a close friend, who [works] at Capital Tap, asking for design support to create a new letterhead and logo. The services were rendered at no cost. There is no working relationship between Capital Tap and the RSF,” an RSF spokesperson initially told i.


After further briefings in the same format were sent out to MPs on Thursday and Friday, the RSF then claimed Capital Tap “played no role in the creation of any of the press briefings, including the first press briefing, or any other press releases” and said they had “no relation” with them. Capital Tap Holdings did not respond to repeated requests for comment. The subsequent briefings had been stripped of metadata.


The discoveries raise further questions about foreign influence in the conflict in Sudan, after an i investigation revealed that Russian private mercenary group Wagner are on the ground and actively involved in the clashes.


Investment firm ‘one of Sudan’s leading mining players’


Capital Tap Holdings claims on its website to have a focus on “integrity” and green credentials, saying that “environmental responsibility is high on the agenda” and that it aims “to build a better and sustainable way of life for the weaker sections of society.”


The firm also describes itself as one of Sudan’s “leading metals and mining players” but the specific role it plays in the mining industry is unclear. Sudan is Africa’s third largest producer of gold, with an industry worth billions of pounds each year, and the RSF have long been reported to be involved in Sudan’s lucrative gold industry.


On its website, Capital Tap Holdings claims to “oversee operations” for more than 50 companies in 10 countries across Europe, the Middle East and Africa and Asia, providing “strategic direction and corporate support”. Their subsidiary company, Terra Metallis, claims to manage five mines in Africa. However, Capital Tap Holdings has little online footprint and is only mentioned in one 2021 news report online.


The RSF bulletin which received assistance from Capital Tap, issued on 1 May 2023, promised to provide “a breakdown of the most significant daily events from the field of battle in Sudan” and said it was founded by the RSF “due to the disproportionate amount of disinformation shared in the media about the conflict.”


It included criticism of its opponents, the Sudanese armed forces, saying that they have violated the ceasefire with “indiscriminate bombing campaigns” on civilians and claims that the RSF now controls 90 per cent of the Sudanese capital. It also provided a list of 20 “achievements” made since the start of the conflict, including claiming control of the airport, radio and TV service, Republican Palace and Defence Ministry.


Another 12-page briefing sent from the RSF to MPs two days later, after the RSF had been approached by i, had been stripped of metadata to indicate its origins.


It contained a series of pictures and videos depicting alleged atrocities against civilians made by the Sudanese Armed Forces, and also contained analysis of “popular memes circulating today on social media in Sudan” regarding the conflict. It included QR codes which could be scanned to take the reader to the RSF website.


Human Rights Watch has claimed that both sides of the current conflict – the RSF and the Sudanese Armed Forces – have killed civilians in bombing attacks on urban areas and left millions without access to basic necessities.

One page of a briefing sent out to UK Parliamentarians. (Photo: i)


A further briefing was sent out on 4 May, also with no metadata, containing more allegations against the Sudanese army, meme analysis and QR codes.


Sources working in research on Sudan noted that the RSF has previously worked with several high-end PR firms to improve the image of their leader Hemedti and said the press briefings “sound like a similar trend.”


“A significant portion of the RSF’s media arm appears to be based in the UAE, which is unsurprising given their extensive commercial networks across the Emirates,” they added.


Steve Double, a partner at crisis communications specialists Alder, said the briefings were a “remarkably slick communications programme, clearly designed at winning the propaganda war.”


UAE’s long alleged link to the RSF


While there is no evidence to suggest Capital Tap is linked to the UAE state, the state has long been reported to have links to the RSF.


Last month, a video appeared to show the RSF with bombs linked to the UAE. The thermobaric shells contained markings suggesting they were manufactured in Serbia in 2020 and later supplied to the UAE, according to The Telegraph.


Local reports citing RSF sources said that the UAE was considering transporting RSF fighters currently in Yemen back to Sudan to join the conflict. The reports said that the RSF’s leader Hemedti has appealed for help from the UAE, which has agreed to “support us in this war of liberation” and provide logistic and financial assistance to transport the RSF fighters to Sudan.


The paramilitary group are also reported to have sent fighters to support the UAE in Libya in recent years. The UAE Government did not respond to a request for comment.


One source assisting civilians in Sudan said that the UAE was presumed to have involvement in the current conflict, saying: “They support RSF and RSF have provided forces to the Yemen crisis. It is presumed that the RSF will be able to provide forces in future if need be in places like Bahrain should there be conflict there.”


The RSF’s social media accounts also appear to be based overseas, providing further indication that the group’s public relations are being outsourced to Gulf states.


The RSF’s Facebook page is being run jointly from the UAE and Sudan, according to information on the account, while its Instagram account appears to be based in Saudi Arabia. Both accounts are being shared by the RSF’s media operation as its legitimate online presence.


But the paramilitary group told i its media team was based in the Sudanese capital of Khartoum.


Conflict information ‘increasingly hard to trust’


The findings also raise questions about the impact of internet warfare, and the growing importance of technology in conflict zones.


Kyle Walter, Head of Research and Insights at Logically, an AI analysis firm, said: “What’s most concerning from this latest example of potential foreign interference is that it provides a look into how the nature of these threats are evolving, particularly in the context of the rapid onset of generative AI being used to create fake images and text.


“Although we don’t know if this so-called sophisticated ‘special bulletin’ was created by this technology, it is symbolic of the wider issue at hand: an inability to trust what you’re seeing, reading, and the undermining of the entire information landscape. If foreign influence campaigns continue to evolve and harness new technologies to produce mis- and disinformation at scale, we can expect to see more fabricated statements, or images of potential humanitarian crises to alter the wider discourse.”


Mr Walter said that the “attempt to manipulate the information environment is not surprising” and “nothing new in the context of foreign influence operations in Africa.”


“Recent years have witnessed foreign actors continuing to ramp up the use of different tactics to manipulate public discourse, whether it’s through propaganda, deception, and other non-military means. What we are seeing now in Sudan is another example of how the Wagner Group and other actors tied to foreign states seek to use the manipulation of information to have more control over public discourse and unsettle Western interests in the region,” he said.


View original: https://inews.co.uk/news/ethical-private-equity-firm-dubai-sudan-militia-lobby-uk-mps-2319805?ico=most_popular


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