Sudan government not mandated to normalize Israel ties, Pompeo told during visit

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A handout picture provided by Sudan's Prime Minister's office on August 25, 2020, shows US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo (L) greeting Sudanese Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok (R) in Khartoum. (AFP/Sudan Prime Minister Office)
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A handout picture provided by Sudan's Foreign Media Council shows US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo (L) posing for a picture with Sudan's Sovereign Council chief General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan in Khartoum on August 25, 2020. (AFP/Sudan Foreign Media Council)
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Updated 26 August 2020
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Sudan government not mandated to normalize Israel ties, Pompeo told during visit

  • PM Hamdok reaffirmed the importance of separating normalization of ties from a US decision on removing Sudan's designation as a state sponsor of terrorism

JEDDAH: Sudan on Tuesday rebuffed efforts by the US to encourage the establishment of diplomatic relations with Israel.
Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok told US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo that Sudan’s transitional government had “no mandate” to take such a step.
“The transitional period in Sudan is being led by a wide alliance with a specific agenda — to complete the transition, achieve peace and stability in the country and hold free elections,” government spokesman Faisal Saleh said.
Hamdok told Pompeo that his interim government “does not have a mandate beyond these tasks or to decide on normalization with Israel.”
The rejection was a setback to a US-backed campaign for Israel to establish closer ties with the Arab world after the surprise Aug. 13 agreement with the UAE. That deal was followed up on Tuesday with unprecedented security talks between Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz and Mohammed Al-Bawardi, the UAE minister of state for defense. “We share important security interests, and collaboration will strengthen regional stability,” Gantz’s office said.

Israel remains technically at war with Sudan, which for years supported hard-line Islamist forces under former dictator Omar Bashir, and is on the US State Department blacklist of backers of terrorism.
Hamdok also urged the US not to link “the subject of lifting Sudan from the state sponsors of terrorism list and the subject of normalization with Israel,” his spokesman said.
The coalition that led Sudan’s protest movement, the Forces of Freedom and Change, also rejected diplomatic ties with Israel and defended “the right of Palestinians to their land and to a free and dignified life.”
Hamdok’s office said he had made the same point to Pompeo, the first US secretary of state to visit Sudan since Condoleezza Rice in 2005.

 

Pompeo also met Sudan’s Sovereign Council chief Gen. Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan for talks that the State Department said would express US “support for deepening the Sudan-Israel relationship.”
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met Burhan in February in Uganda and announced that they had agreed to cooperate toward normalizing ties. Sudan’s Cabinet later denied that Burhan had made such a promise.
Sudan’s joint civilian-military transitional government has pledged to break with the Bashir era, and launched a raft of social and political reforms. Bashir is on trial over the Islamist-backed coup that brought him to power over three decades ago.
The government in Khartoum hopes Washington will remove it from terrorism blacklist as it seeks to rejoin the international community and attract more aid and investment.

 


Tehran residents keep up semblance of normality amid destruction

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Tehran residents keep up semblance of normality amid destruction

  • Chaotic scenes followed of panicked passers-by, parents scrambling to retrieve their children from school, queues at bakeries and endless traffic jams
  • A week on, the noise and energy have ebbed, giving way to a rare, disquieting calm in a capital usually thronging with 10 million people

TEHRAN: For a moment Tehran resembled a city at peace, with birdsong, joggers and tranquil views of the snow-capped Alborz mountains in the distance. Then the sound of another explosion ripped through the air.
A week ago, opening strikes by the US and Israel killed Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, upended residents’ lives and transformed the city streets into a battleground.
In Tehran’s west, a block that belonged to the security forces had been blasted apart, and the entire surrounding area was choked with rubble.
Bizarrely, a green gate and fence enclosing the site stood untouched.
None were surprised by the war, and few had believed the nuclear talks then taking place between Iran and the US would avert it.
The broad-daylight strike at the country’s power center was nevertheless a shock.
Chaotic scenes followed of panicked passers-by, parents scrambling to retrieve their children from school, queues at bakeries and endless traffic jams.
A week on, the noise and energy have ebbed, giving way to a rare, disquieting calm in a capital usually thronging with 10 million people.
The city is at times granted breaks of a few peaceful hours before another string of explosions shatters the air.


- Mushroom clouds -

Another block, this one in the city center, had also been gutted.
Men stood guard, some of them heavily armed despite their apparent youth.
The blast was powerful enough to sow chaos through a nearby primary school, breaking windows and carpeting the playground with rocks and rubble.
Dust coated a row of motorbikes parked nearby.
In another neighborhood, only the steel framework of a bombed-out building had survived, still supporting a massive antenna on the roof.
Local people busied themselves with clearing away the rubble and recovering a few possessions.
They loaded salvageable sofas and home appliances onto decrepit blue pickup trucks in the unmistakable 1960s design of local brand Zamyad.
On the horizon, yet another black mushroom cloud reached skywards.

- ‘Ramadan War’ -

In the first days of the war, Tehran could seem like a ghost town.
But pedestrians were again venturing outdoors: a father walking with his daughter on a scooter, children playing with a ball, or locals sunning themselves in a park.
Runners and cyclists resumed their exercise. More shops were open again.
But the semblance of normality is skin-deep.
Along major roads, armed men in plain clothes and others in military fatigues and body armor inspected random cars at checkpoints.
The blockades made for traffic jams on the avenues, where other traffic was mostly restricted to scooters and delivery riders.
Forbidding armored vehicles appeared on high alert, one of them flying the banner of the Islamic republic.
At prayer time, armed Revolutionary Guards checked the faithful as they filed into a mosque.
One week after his death, posters and placards bearing Khamenei’s image were everywhere on the streets.
Some walls bore street art-style portraits in his honor that appeared in recent days.
In a neighborhood grocery shop, one employee was anxiously following the latest in what state TV had dubbed the “Ramadan War” across the Middle East.