El-Sisi calls on US to take Sudan off terror-sponsor list

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi speaks at the UN General Assembly on Tuesday. (Reuters)
Updated 24 September 2019
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El-Sisi calls on US to take Sudan off terror-sponsor list

  • The move would help Khartoum tackle economic problems, says Egyptian president
  • Egyptian president says concerted effort needed to stop militias taking control of Libya

NEW YORK: Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi used his speech at the UN General Assembly to amplify a call to get neighboring Sudan off the US’ list of countries deemed sponsors of terrorism.

El-Sisi told world leaders Tuesday that taking Sudan off the list would help the country tackle economic problems and reclaim what he called “the place it deserves among the international family.”

Sudan has been on the US list since 1993. Khartoum says getting off it is crucial to rebuilding the country after years of sanctions.

The US administration began a process to take Sudan off the list. The procedure was put on hold when mass protests erupted in December against former ruler Omar Al-Bashir. The military ousted him in April. Sudan’s new Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok recently said he’d discussed the issue with the Trump administration.

El-Sisi also said that a concerted effort was needed to stop militias taking control of Libya.

On Monday, US President Donald Trump voiced support to the Egyptian president, saying that El-Sisi “has done (in Egypt) some things that are absolutely amazing in a short period of time.”

“When he took over not so long ago, it was in turmoil. And it’s not in turmoil now,” Trump said in a press conference along with El-Sisi after their meeting. “Egypt has a great leader. He’s highly respected. He’s brought order. Before he was here, there was very little order. There was chaos. And so I’m not worried about that at all.”

El-Sisi, who has been waging a harsh crackdown on militants, blamed “political Islam” for the protests and the turmoil in the Mideast. He stopped short of naming the Muslim Brotherhood directly.

“I want you to rest assured that, especially in Egypt, the public opinion and the people themselves are rejecting this kind of political Islam in Egypt,” he said. 

“They have demonstrated their rejection before, and they reject those to have control on the country for only one year.” Egypt is fighting an insurgency led by a local affiliate of Daesh in the Sinai Peninsula as well as smaller militant groups allegedly belonging to the Brotherhood.

Meanwhile, Egyptian security forces killed six suspected members of the Muslim Brotherhood in a shootout in Cairo, the Interior Ministry said Tuesday.

The six were killed in a firefight when police raided their hideout in the Cairo suburb of Sixth of October, the ministry said in a brief statement. 

The ministry oversees police forces. The statement said the suspects were planning militant attacks. It did not say when the raids took place. Egypt branded the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organization in 2013 and arrested thousands of its members after the military’s ouster of President Mohammed Mursi, who hailed from the group, amid mass protests against his brief rule.


Palestinians await full Rafah reopening as Israel eases two-year closure

Updated 6 sec ago
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Palestinians await full Rafah reopening as Israel eases two-year closure

RAFAH: Palestinians were on Monday awaiting a full reopening of the Rafah crossing between Gaza and Egypt, after Israel partially reopened it a day earlier, nearly two years after seizing control of the key gateway during the war with Hamas.
The resumption of operations in a tightly restricted pilot phase on Sunday came after months of appeals from aid groups.
Israeli state broadcaster Kan reported that around 150 people were expected to leave Gaza for Egypt on Monday, including 50 patients. The report said around 50 people were also expected to enter the territory.
Kan said the crossing would be open for about six hours daily.
AFP images from Sunday showed ambulances queued up on the Egyptian side preparing to receive medical evacuees, who were expected to be the first groups allowed out.
An official at Gaza’s health ministry, which operates under Hamas authority, said about 200 patients were waiting for permission to leave the territory.
“The Rafah crossing is a lifeline,” said Mohammed Nassir, a Palestinian who had his leg amputated after being injured early in the war.
“I need to undergo surgery that is unavailable in Gaza but can be performed abroad.”
Rafah is considered a key entry point for aid into Gaza, where humanitarian conditions remain dire after two years of war in spite of a ceasefire in place since October 10.
The crossing has been closed since Israeli forces seized control of it in May 2024 during the war with Hamas, aside from a brief and limited reopening in early 2025.
COGAT, the Israeli defense ministry body coordinating Palestinian civilian affairs, made no mention of allowing in a long-hoped-for surge of aid, only saying the passage of individuals “in both directions” was expected to begin Monday.
Egypt’s state?linked Cairo News reported that the Egyptian side of the crossing would remain open “round the clock” and that Egyptian hospitals were prepared to receive patients coming from Gaza.

No displacement of Gazans

The leaders of Egypt and Jordan meanwhile renewed their rejection of any attempts to displace Palestinians from Gaza.
Israel had previously tied Rafah’s reopening to the return of the remains of Ran Gvili, the last Israeli hostage held in Gaza. His body was recovered and buried last week, prompting Israel to announce the phased reopening.
Violence continued ahead of the reopening, with Gaza’s civil defense reporting at least 32 people killed in Israeli attacks on Saturday.
The Israeli military said it had retaliated after militants emerged from a tunnel in Rafah.
Israel on Sunday also announced it was terminating the humanitarian operations of Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in Gaza after the charity refused to provide a list of its Palestinian staff — a requirement MSF said would put workers at risk.
Located on Gaza’s southern border with Egypt, Rafah is the only crossing into and out of the territory that does not pass through Israel.
It lies in an area held by Israeli forces following their withdrawal behind the so-called “Yellow Line” under the terms of the US-brokered ceasefire.
Israeli troops still control more than half of Gaza, while the rest remains under Hamas authority.