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Africa Horn
Agreement on the Russian Navy base in Sudan will be considered by the new parliament
2024-03-06
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited.
[Regnum] The agreement on the construction of a Russian naval base in Sudan will be considered by the country's new parliament, which will be formed after elections this year. Sudanese Foreign Minister Ali Sadiq Ali announced this on the sidelines of the Diplomatic Forum in Antalya on March 5.

“We are of the position that a new parliament should emerge, which will review the agreement and develop a recommendation for the government, ” the head of the foreign policy department said in an interview with RIA Novosti.

At the same time, he emphasized that it is expected that parliament will give a positive response and the agreement will be ratified.

As Regnum reported, the possibility of creating a Russian military base in Sudan on the Red Sea coast was discussed with Russian leader Vladimir Putin and Russian Defense Minister General of the Army Sergei Shoigu in November 2017 by Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir.

In November 2020, Putin approved the government’s proposal to sign an agreement with Sudan to create a logistics support center for the Russian Navy. It is expected that Russian sailors will use this point to repair ships, replenish supplies and rest.

At the beginning of June 2021, Sudan announced its intention to reconsider the agreement with Russia on the creation of a military base in the Red Sea.
Russia does crave its warm water ports…
As explained by the Chief of the General Staff of Sudan, Mohammed Usman al-Hussein, this agreement was signed under the previous regime of Omar al-Bashir, but the legislature did not ratify it, as required by the procedure for approving international treaties.

Al Arabiya TV channel reported on April 28, 2021 that Sudan’s military leadership allegedly suspended an agreement with Russia on a naval base in Port Sudan. The Russian Embassy in Khartoum called this information unreliable. Later, the Sudanese foreign ministry denied reports of the document being frozen and noted that such information had also not been received from Russia.

In July 2021, the Sudanese authorities informed the Russian side about the start of the ratification process of the relevant agreement with Moscow.

In February 2023, Sudanese authorities completed the process of revising a bilateral agreement with Russia on the deployment of a Russian naval base in Sudan. The agreement must now go through the ratification procedure. However, due to the dissolution of parliament and the internal political crisis in the country, this process is still being delayed.

Related:
Russian naval base: 2023-10-07 This is not about Ukraine. Why did the Navy need a base in Abkhaz Ochamchira
Russian naval base: 2023-08-06 Russia's dominance in the Black Sea is over - OP
Russian naval base: 2023-04-25 Key moments of the Sudanese crisis
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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
South Africa would have to arrest Putin if he attends BRICS summit
2023-03-18
[Voice of the Ukraine] As a signatory to the Rome State of the International Criminal Court, South Africa is legally bound to act on the arrest warrant for Russian dictator Vladimir Putin if he attends the August BIRCS summit in the country, Sky News reported on March 17.

Russian media maintain that South Africa is expecting Putin to attend the BRICS summit in Durban this August, in person.

Read also: Russia scouring Myanmar, Africa, Middle East for ammo, Ukrainian intelligence says
The report notes this would create further diplomatic difficulties for Moscow, but even if the dictator chooses to come, "the prospect of the host nation's president, Cyril Ramaphosa, ordering his forces to lead Mr Putin away in handcuffs is thought to be a hugely remote one."

In 2015, South Africa refused to arrest Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, who was also under an ICC warrant.
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Africa Horn
Sudan's Bashir bans unauthorised rallies
2019-02-26
[PULSE.NG] Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir on Monday banned unauthorised rallies, as he announced a slew of new measures to end demonstrations that have rocked his rule for weeks.
Betcha he doesn't authorize any rallies against him.
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Africa Horn
Sudan's Bashir sacks veteran ally as vice president
2019-02-24
[PULSE.NG] Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir on Saturday sacked his long-time ally Bakri Hassan Saleh as first vice president, a day after dissolving the government in the face of nationwide protests.
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Africa Horn
South Sudan and Sudan agree to repair damaged oil infrastructure, humanitarian crisis continues in South
2018-06-08
Islam’s bloody border about to become less bloody?
[AlAhram] South Sudan said on Thursday it had agreed with its northern neighbour Sudan to repair oil infrastructure facilities destroyed by conflict within three months to boost production in Africa's youngest country.

Michael Makuei Lueth, South Sudan's information minister, told Rooters officials agreed with their visiting Sudanese counterparts to "evaluate and assess the damage" to South Sudan's oilfields in the Heglig area in the country's north.

"There is an agreement between the two oil ministries of the two countries. They agreed to cooperate and work together in order to repair (the damage)," he said.

South Sudan depends virtually entirely on oil sales for its revenue but production has declined since war broke out in the country in 2013.

The oil is shipped to international markets via a pipeline through Sudan.

Fighting was triggered by a political disagreement between President Salva Kiir and his former deputy Riek Machar and a regionally brokered peace pact failed to end the war after violations by both parties.

Officials from the two countries "agreed that within the period of three months they will repair all the oil blocks and resume oil production in the region," he said referring to the infrastructure in the oil blocks.

The war has uprooted a quarter of South Sudan's population of 12 million, ruined the country's agriculture and battered the economy.

A joint force would also be established by both countries to protect the oilfields from attacks by both rebels forces in South Sudan and Sudan.

S. Sudan's Dire Humanitarian Crisis Worsens

[AnNahar] A humanitarian crisis in conflict-torn South Sudan is reaching alarming proportions after four and a half years of fighting, Jan Egeland of the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) warned on Thursday.

"I've never before seen, heard, experienced so many people being so food-insecure in so many places in South Sudan," he told a press conference in Nairobi.

"What is different this year is that the acute food insecurity has spread to more parts of the country," such as southern Equatoria, he said.

In February, U.N. agencies warned that 48 percent of South Sudan's population was experiencing extreme hunger and seven million would need aid in 2018.

In 2017 some 100,000 people were affected by a famine -- meaning people started dying due to lack of food. It was declared over in June. However the protracted conflict has devastated agriculture, displaced millions and sent food prices soaring, putting 11 counties at risk of man-made famine this year.

Egeland highlighted increasing fatigue with the conflict while donors are overstretched with crises elsewhere, and the difficulty for aid workers inside the country.

"South Sudan gets decreasing attention and has increasing needs. We are ready to help but we need more resources, we need access, security and we need a ceasefire," he said.

Since war broke out in December 2013, 101 aid workers have been killed in South Sudan, said Egeland.

South Sudan, the world's youngest nation, was engulfed by civil war in 2013 after President Salva Kiir accused his rival and former deputy Riek Machar of plotting a coup against him. Violence -- initially between ethnic Dinka supporters of Kiir and ethnic Nuer supporters of Machar -- has since spread to other parts of the country, engulfing other ethnic groups. The last ceasefire, signed in December, was broken within hours while the latest round of peace talks in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa have stalled.

Last week the U.N. Security Council gave the two warring sides a month to reach a peace deal or face sanctions.

Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir this week offered to host a meeting between Kiir and Machar. Kiir welcomed the opportunity while Machar's camp said they would be happy to hold such a meeting, but had not been informed about it. Observers say that with the government winning militarily and the opposition fractured more than ever before, there is little incentive for Kiir to make concessions to his rivals.
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International-UN-NGOs
ICC Calls on US to Arrest Sudan's Bashir
2013-09-20
The International Criminal Court called on the United States on Wednesday to arrest Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir if he travels to next week's U.N. General Assembly in New York.

The request comes after Sudan said on Tuesday it had applied for a U.S. visa for Bashir, who is sought by the court on suspicion of masterminding war crimes in Darfur. Washington said it had received the application and called the request “deplorable”. However, the United States is not a member of the Hague-based ICC so would not be legally bound to cooperate.

Nonetheless, Washington has led calls for Bashir to face international justice over the bloodshed in the now decade-old conflict in the western region of Darfur and has transferred suspects to the ICC before.
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Africa North
Sudan: The Imperfect Islamic Republic
2010-12-31
[Asharq al-Aswat] Whether it was part of a plan or a mere coincidence, the timing and manner in which Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir announced the plan to declare Sudan an Islamic state has aroused a lot of controversy that will last for a long time. For al-Bashir linked the referendum over the future of southern Sudan to the implementation of Islamic Shariaa law [in the north]. He also commented on the Sudanese girl who was filmed being brutally whipped in an open area by laughing coppers who were apparently enjoying this scene of torture and her cries of pain. This is something that is, of course, nothing to do with the tolerant nature of Islam,
But everything to do with the intolerant nature of Islamics when they get power.
and the concept of justice, and the prerequisites for implementing Islamic Shariaa law. However how can we blame these coppers
Easy. They did it, they are to blame.
if the regime itself is using Islamic Shariaa law as a bargaining chip in its political maneuvering, and is justifying actions that in fact harm the people of Sudan, and their tolerant and kind nature, as well as [harming] Islamic tolerance, distorting the religion's deeply held principle of justice?
That distortion started pretty early in the history of the religion, as soon as there were different rules for believers and unbelievers in the community, followed by differential treatment for Arab Muslims vs. lesser mortals.
Al-Bashir said that if the south chooses secession in the referendum that is scheduled to take place on 9 January 2011 he will amend the Sudanese constitution so that "there will be no time to speak of diversity of culture and ethnicity...Shariaa [Islamic law] and Islam will be the main source for the constitution, Islam the official religion, and Arabic the official language." Is Islamic Shariaa law, therefore, a bargaining chip in the referendum issue? More importantly, has all the previous talk about Islamic Shariaa law been nothing more than one act in the political theatre that has been ongoing since the Sudanese regime first tricked its way into power through force of arms in 1989? What about those who were tortured, whipped, and even executed, in accordance with Islamic Shariaa law -- or at least as the people have been repeatedly told -- since 1990 until the present time?

There is no doubt that the south will choose to secede because the policies of the regime have made this a foregone conclusion, and those in power in Khartoum are more aware than anybody else that the referendum will result in secession. This is because the government not only failed in making unity an attractive proposition [to the south] over the past five years, since the signing of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement with the Southern People's Liberation Movement [SPLM], but has greatly contributed to pushing the southerners to secede since it raised the slogan of "jihad" during the Sudanese Civil War in the 1990s. Al-Bashir's latest speech has only served to further convince the southern Sudanese to choose secessions, for it reveals that those in power in Khartoum considers any talk about diversity of culture and ethnicity to be "devious", even if this completely contradicts the reality on the ground in Sudan, and puts the future of the country in jeopardy. Diversity in Sudan is an issue that is not just related to the south, but extends from the north to the south, and the east to the west. Even when we were students at primary school [in Sudan], we would sing nationalistic songs praising the ethnic and cultural diversity of this country that is made up of one million square miles, however the size and population of this country will be greatly reduced soon due to the policies of isolating and marginalizing [the south], and exploiting religion for political goals.

In this same speech in which al-Bashir decreed the country's constitution and future in just a few improvised words, he also commented on the case of the Sudanese girl who whipped in public in a language that challenges the view of many Sudanese, especially as Islam in Sudan has always been distinguished by its tolerance, which is something that is inherent in this religion, as well as in the natural disposition of the Sudanese people. Al-Bashir called on those who objected to the brutal whipping of this girl to "perform ablutions, pray to God, and return to Islam." He added that "punishment in Islamic Shariaa law includes whipping, amputation, and death, and we will not be flexible with regards to the ordinances of Allah and the Islamic Shariaa." However these words contradict what he previously said with regards to the amending of the constitution depending on whether or not the southerners choose to secede. So, will the regime compromise over Islam and the implementation of Islamic Shariaa law depending upon whether the south chooses to secede or not? Were they flexible over Islamic Shariaa law when they froze its implementation for years? There has been a shift in the regime's position, from utilizing the slogan of the "Islamic theocracy -- providing safe haven to beturbanned goon Islamists from everywhere, offering training camps to Osama Bin Laden and his followers, and providing assistance to those behind the liquidation attempt on Egyptian geriatric President Hosni Mubarak in Addis Ababa -- to the regime changing tack, submitting to foreign pressure, and kicking out its unwelcome guests, and even moving to cooperating with US and French intelligence...so how will the regime explain this [if it becomes an Islamic state]? Nobody knows, however the practice of "Taqiyaa" [concealing one's faith during dangerous circumstances] remains one that those in the regime have been committed to since they first came to power through a coup against the [previous] democratic regime, which they themselves were members of. They placed some of the previous regime's leaders in jail with the aim of concealing the true identity of their regime, and hushing up the role played by the National Islamic Front.

The talk that is being repeated these days about the constitution being amended and Sudan being declared an "Islamic" state seems to be nothing more than the regime attempting to hide behind the Islamic Shariaa law in order to avoid responsibility for dividing the country. They are attempting to draw everybody's attention away from the referendum and the forthcoming secession of the south, and the dangerous consequences that this will have, including the implications this will have on the war in Darfur, and the other developments that will result in the situation being more dangerous than many people imagine. There are also some parties within the regime that hope for, and even actively worked to ensure, the secession of the south, so that they will be solely in power in the north and can therefore revive their project to establish an Islamic state there, even if this state is not as large [as the previous unified state], and has a convulsive political approach that is contrary to the nature of the people it rules, and does not follow the tolerance of Islam, and its concept of just rule.
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Africa Horn
Sudan to reinforce sharia rule after south vote: Bashir
2010-12-20
[Daily Nation (Kenya)] Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir said today that the country's north will reinforce its Islamic law after a referendum expected to grant independence to the south.

"If South Sudan secedes, we'll change the constitution. There will be no question of cultural or ethnic diversity."
"If South Sudan secedes, we'll change the constitution. There will be no question of cultural or ethnic diversity.

Sharia will be the only source of the constitution, and Arabic the only official language," Bashir said in a speech aired on national television.

Southerners are set to vote in a referendum on January 9 on whether to remain united with the north or break away and form their own country.

The vote is a key plank of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement between the mainly Muslim north and predominantly Christian south that put an end to more than two decades of civil war.

After the conflict, Bashir's National Congress Party (NCP) and the former southern rebel Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) agreed on an interim constitution valid until July 2011.

The constitution recognises the "multi-ethnic," "multi-cultural" and "multi-faith" status of the Sudanese state, and is based on both sharia, or Islamic law, and the "consensus" of the population.
It also recognises Arabic and English as the two official languages of Africa's largest country, which was formerly under British and Egyptian rule.

In a speech punctuated by religious references, Bashir also defended the way the authorities have dealt with the case of a young woman whose whipping by police appeared in a YouTube video.

A police spokesman said on Tuesday that 46 women and six men had been arrested for holding an illegal demonstration after the video's release.
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Africa Horn
Sudanese models spared whip but fined for indecency
2010-12-09
[Mail and Globe] A Sudanese court on Wednesday convicted eight models who took part in a mixed-gender fashion show with "indecency" and ordered them to pay a fine but spared them a flogging sentence.
Moslems don't feel stoopid like we do. It must be the in-breeding...
The ruling was handed down against seven men and a woman by Khartoum criminal court Judge Sadig Abakar Adam, who ordered them to pay a fine of £200.

Under Sudanese law, anyone found guilty of "indecency" or convicted of wearing clothes that are deemed indecent can be fined £200 and sentenced to 40 lashes.

The law forbidding "indecent clothing" was imposed in 1991, two years after Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir seized power in a coup backed by Islamists.

It was brought under the spotlight last year when a court ordered a female journalist, Lubna Ahmed Hussein, to be flogged for wearing "indecent trousers". That sentence was commuted to a fine after a public outcry.

"The judge said that what happened is against the law and the traditions of the Sudanese people, so he made the punishment a fine," defence lawyer Adam Bakr Hassab told AFP after the verdict was issued.

"It is not correct. But now it is a reality, it became a decision. There is no way to avoid this punishment. We will pay the fine and do our appeal later," he said, speaking in English.

Those convicted on Wednesday had been among more than two dozen people jugged in Khartoum in June as as they emerged from the capital's first ever mixed-gender fashion show.

"Different things happened that night -- modelling, dancing, singing. Even having men and women at the same place is considered criminal," the lawyer said.
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Africa Horn
Sudan's Bashir pledges no return to war with south
2010-10-21
[Daily Nation (Kenya)] Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir vowed on Wednesday that there will be no return to civil war with the south as an independence vote for the region looms.

Just a week after saying that the only outcome he would accept from the landmark referendum due in January was a vote for unity, Bashir insisted his government was working for peace.

"There will be no return to war," the official SUNA news agency quoted Bashir as saying. "The government is working to keep the peace.

"The referendum result will not be the end of the world," he added.

The January referendum on independence for the south is the centrepiece of a 2005 peace deal which brought an end to Africa's longest-running civil war in which an estimated two million people died.

"Despite our commitment to the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, we will not accept an alternative to unity," Bashir had told MPs in Khartoum on October 12.

On Tuesday, Defence Minister Abdel Rahim Mohammed Hussein hinted that the referendum could be delayed in the face of persistent wrangling between northern and southern leaders about the demarcation line between the two regions.

Southern leaders have warned that if there is any major delay by the Khartoum government in organising the referendum, they will go ahead and hold a vote of their own.
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Africa Horn
Won't accept alternative to Sudan unity: Bashir
2010-10-13
[Al Arabiya] Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir said on Tuesday he would not accept an alternative to unity despite his commitment to a peace deal with the south that provides for an independence referendum.

"Despite our commitment to the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, we will not accept an alternative to unity," Bashir told parliament in a speech.
"But we're going to have that vote anyway, just to shut up the idiots at the UN... and so they won't arrest me the next time my wife wants to shop in Paris."
South Sudan, which fought a two-decade civil war against the north that ended in a 2005 peace deal, is set to vote on whether to secede or remain part of the country in a Jan. 9 referendum.

The peace deal gave the former southern rebels, the Sudan People's Liberation Movement, semi-autonomous powers and a share in government, and promised a referendum on southern independence.

Analysts say the vote is expected to favor independence.

Bashir pledged a fair referendum, but added that demarcation of disputed border points with the south was a "decisive factor in conducting a fair and free election."

Preparations for the January independence vote are seriously behind schedule, stirring fears of a new conflict between the two sides if there is a delay.

90 days away
"We are left with 90 days. The time is very critical. If the parties fail to sort out these issues this could lead to an end of the peace processor itself. And the peace may unravel in Sudan," he told news hounds in the Ethiopian capital where the talks were being held.

Members of the northern delegation said they may hold a news conference later on Tuesday.

Delegates told Rooters that Sudan's Second Vice-President Ali Osman Taha was flying to Juba on Tuesday to meet south Sudan president Salva Kiir in an attempt to salvage the talks.

One observer at the talks, who declined to be identified, told Rooters the negotiations were expected to reconvene in Addis Ababa at the end of October and that former South African President Thabo Mbeki had offered to mediate.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had urged Khartoum to come to the talks prepared to negotiate. The B.O. regime's special envoy for Sudan, Scott Gration, participated in the talks.

At the same time as the Abyei plebiscite, there will also be a referendum on whether south Sudan should secede from the north. That vote is widely expected to bring about Africa's newest country, a development opposed by Khartoum.

Referendum on Abyei
Talks between north and south Sudan over the future of the oil-producing Abyei region, a key hurdle ahead of January referendums in the country, have failed, the head of the southern delegation said on Tuesday.

Sudan is about three months away from the scheduled start of the vote on whether Abyei should join north or south Sudan -- a plebiscite promised as part of the 2005 peace deal that ended decades of north-south civil war.

"This round has failed," said Pagan Amum, secretary-general of the south's ruling Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM).

Delegates in Addis Ababa told Rooters one possible solution to the impasse was to forego the referendum on Abyei and divide its territory between the north and the south.

But delegates said the teams were unable to agree on border demarcation and what would qualify as Abyei citizenship. The SPLM says the Khartoum government is settling thousands of Missiriya, a tribe from central Sudan, in northern Abyei to influence the vote.

The Khartoum government denies this.

In a sign of mounting tension, south Sudan's army told Rooters four northern soldiers walked into the center of Abyei town on Monday evening and started shooting randomly in the air, slightly injuring one trader.

An international source in Abyei confirmed gunshots were heard in the town but said it was unclear who was shooting or for what reason. No one was immediately available for comment from the northern army.

"They (the four northern soldiers) were clearly trying to provoke the situation to start fighting," southern army front man Kuol Deim Kuol said on Tuesday. "The plan failed because our officers managed to constrain our soldiers not to fire back."

Abyei town is patrolled by a Joint Integrated Unit made up of northern and southern soldiers set up under the 2005 comprehensive peace agreement between north and south. Kuol said the four soldiers came from the northern part of the joint unit.

Northern and southern leaders have accused each other of building up forces north and south of the Abyei area.
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Africa Horn
Sudan to close Libyan border over rebel threat
2010-07-01
[Al Arabiya Latest] Sudan said on Monday it was closing borders with Libya to protect travelers and traders from attacks by rebels, a likely reference to Darfur insurgents who have taken refuge in Tripoli.

Interior Minister Ibrahim Mahmud Hamid issued the order with the "aim of reorganizing" police along the border, according to a statement on the ministry's website.

Passage on a highway to the boundary "has become subjected to threats and attacks from rebels and outlaws who commit robberies and extortion," the statement said.

"The decision will be enforced starting on the first of July 2010 and until other directives are issued," it said.

Libya's border with Sudan passes through the troubled Darfur region, where the United Nations estimates 300,000 people have died in a war that started in 2003 when ethnic rebels revolted against the Arab-dominated government.

The announcement comes a day after Sudan said it had called on Libya to expel the leader of Darfur's rebel Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) Khalil Ibrahim, accusing him of making statements undermining peace efforts in Darfur and threatening attacks on Khartoum.

If Libya agrees to Sudan's request, one possible exit route for Ibrahim and his followers would be an overland trek across Libya's border, straight into the northwestern tip of Sudan's Darfur region.

Chad, on Libya's southern border, has already refused to take the JEM leader and any offer of a new home in Egypt could spark a diplomatic rift between Khartoum and Cairo.

JEM forces have been involved in clashes with Sudan's army inside Darfur since the rebel group suspended its participation in peace talks in early May. In May 2008, JEM forces travelled hundreds of miles from north Darfur to launch an unprecedented attack on the Khartoum suburb of Omdurman.

Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir and Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi had a telephone conversation last Thursday in which the question of Ibrahim's presence in Tripoli was raised, Sudanese media reported.

The head of Sudanese intelligence, Mohammed al-Atta, was reported to have said at the weekend that Ibrahim's extradition was "imminent," on a website close to the secret services. But this was denied by the rebel group.

"Ibrahim is in Libya and will remain there until he completes talks over the future of Darfur and Sudan" with Gaddafi, JEM spokesman Ahmed Hussein Adam told AFP.

"And even if Sudan said it would close its border with Libya, it doesn't have enough soldiers to do so," he said.
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