Tensions rise between Sudan army and United Arab Emirates

Tensions rise between Sudan army and United Arab Emirates

KHARTOUM

For months, Sudan's army kept silent amid alleged Emirati interference in the country's civil war, but its anger has finally boiled over, leading to harsh exchanges between Khartoum and Abu Dhabi.

The brutal conflict broke out in mid-April between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), killing more than 12,000 people and displacing millions.

In November, General Yasser al-Atta, second-in-command to army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, openly denounced the United Arab Emirates, calling it a "state mafia" that had "taken the path of evil" by supporting the RSF and its leader Mohamed Hamdan Daglo.

Atta accused Abu Dhabi of funnelling weapons through Chad, Uganda and the Central African Republic to the RSF with the help of the Wagner Group, the Russian mercenaries who once enjoyed a foothold in Bangui.

"With the weakening of Wagner, their planes have also passed through Chad, landing for a week at N'Djamena airport," Atta added, also accusing eastern Libya leader Khalifa Haftar of being a conduit for paramilitary supplies.

UAE officials did not respond to AFP's request for comment.

Experts have warned of the existence of such a supply line since the start of the war, but until November Sudan's army had not made the accusation publicly.

 'Act of desperation' 

With rumours having swirled for months, tensions came to a head in November when hundreds of pro-army demonstrators took to the streets in the eastern city of Port Sudan demanding the expulsion of the Emirati ambassador.

Shortly after, Sudan's acting foreign minister Ali al-Sadiq said Abu Dhabi had expelled Sudanese diplomats from the UAE.

"We have not asked for justifications from the UAE, even though we had information of their involvement in the war," he told state television in early December.

"But they were the ones who expelled our diplomats, and so we had to respond."

Last week, the foreign ministry declared 15 UAE diplomats persona non grata, demanding they leave Sudan "within 48 hours".

The move came "because we are at an impasse with the UAE," Sadiq said.

However, according to Harchaoui, the move can be better understood as "an act of desperation" for a force whose "options are dwindling".

While neither side has been able to seize a decisive military advantage, the RSF now controls the streets of the capital Khartoum, the vast western region of Darfur, and is increasingly encroaching on the south.