Pompeo signs order removing Sudan from terror sponsors list

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo (L) greets Sudanese Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok (R) in the capital Khartoum. (File/AFP)
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Updated 05 January 2021
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Pompeo signs order removing Sudan from terror sponsors list

  • He vowed to ensure compensation for US victims of terrorism and their families

LONDON: US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Tuesday that he had signed an order to remove Sudan from the list of State Sponsors of Terrorism following months of negotiations.
He also vowed to “ensure compensation for American victims of terrorism and their families.”
The US formally removed Sudan’s state sponsor of terrorism designation on Dec 14, 2020, 27 years after putting the country on its blacklist, the US Embassy in Khartoum announced. 

“Once in a generation opportunity for freedom — huge benefits,” Pompeo said in a tweet.
Washington once labeled Khartoum a hub of the “axis of evil,” but relations between the US and Sudan have warmed since ex-president Omar Bashir was ousted last year.
In 1993, the US put Sudan on its blacklist of countries it accuses of supporting terrorism.
(With AFP)

 


Syrian army chief, SDF delegation discuss integration measures

The meeting addressed military deployment and administrative arrangements. (SANA)
Updated 9 sec ago
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Syrian army chief, SDF delegation discuss integration measures

  • Iraqi and Syrian security officials told The Associated Press that the US military had begun moving its forces and equipment from the Qasrak base in Syria to Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region

DAMASCUS: Syrian Chief of Staff Maj. Gen. Ali Al-Naasan on Sunday met a delegation from the Syrian Democratic Forces to discuss steps for integrating SDF units into several brigades of the Syrian Arab Army.
The Defense Ministry said that the meeting also addressed military deployment and administrative arrangements.
Syria announced on Jan. 29 a comprehensive agreement with the SDF that includes a ceasefire, a phased integration of forces, and the return of state institutions and border crossings to government control.

BACKGROUND

Syria announced on Jan. 29 a comprehensive agreement with the SDF that includes a ceasefire and a phased integration of forces.

The media directorate of the presidency earlier announced that Brig. Gen. Ziad Al-Ayesh has been appointed as a presidential envoy to implement the Jan. 29 agreement.
The directorate said in a statement to SANA that the agreement enhances the state’s presence, removes obstacles and activates government services for citizens.
The deal includes a phased integration of military and administrative bodies, the deployment of security forces into Hasaka and Qamishli, and the state’s administration of civil institutions and border crossings.
The UN Security Council has welcomed the agreement. The council also praised the start of implementation and reaffirmed its commitment to Syria’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.
In a recent press statement, council members said the agreement must be upheld to ensure civilian protection, unhindered humanitarian access and Syria’s continued recovery.
Meanwhile, US forces were withdrawing from Qasrak base in northeastern Syria, in what appears to be part of a larger drawdown of US forces in the country.
Iraqi and Syrian security officials told The Associated Press that the US military had begun moving its forces and equipment from the Qasrak base in Syria to Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region.
AP journalists in the city of Qamishli in northeast Syria saw a convoy of dozens of trucks carrying military vehicles and equipment on Monday, with military helicopters circling overhead, moving toward the Iraqi border.
A senior Iraqi security official said evacuation of the base had begun Sunday and that on Monday, US forces and military equipment coming from the base crossed into Iraq’s semi-autonomous northern Kurdish region.
A Syrian security official said about 200 soldiers remained at the base on Monday and that work was underway to dismantle military jamming and air defense systems, and the engineering section at the base.
Earlier this month, CENTCOM and Syria’s Defense Ministry announced that US troops had left another base, Al-Tanf, located in eastern Syria near the border with Jordan.
Meanwhile, Syrian authorities are repairing key infrastructure at Deir Ezzor Civil Airport ahead of flights being resumed. 
Syria’s General Authority of Civil Aviation and Air Transport announced on Monday that technical and engineering teams were repairing the runway, essential facilities, and rebuilding the airport’s perimeter fence to meet international safety and security standards.