
Sudan accuses UAE of ‘support and complicity' in genocide at World Court
London and Abu Dhabi, UAE
CNN —
Sudan has accused the United Arab Emirates at the United Nations' top court of violating the Genocide Convention by supporting paramilitary forces in its Darfur region.
'A genocide is being committed against the ethnic group of the Masalit in the west of our country,' Sudan's acting justice minister, Muawia Osman, told the International Court of Justice, also known as the World Court, on Thursday.
He alleged that a genocide was being carried out by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces 'with the support and complicity of the United Arab Emirates.'
Sudan last month filed a case against the UAE at the court for allegedly arming the RSF, an accusation that the UAE has repeatedly denied.
The UAE on Thursday reiterated its rejection of Sudan's accusations, calling them 'baseless and politically driven,' adding that it 'supports neither side' in the Sudanese civil war, and that there is no evidence to support Sudan's claims. In its statement to the court, it questioned the ICJ's jurisdiction over the matter.
'Our only interest is in securing a lasting peace that ends the suffering of the Sudanese people and brings stability to Sudan and the wider region,' Reem Ketait, Assistant Deputy Minister of Political Affairs in the UAE foreign ministry, told CNN.
Since April 2023, two of Sudan's most powerful generals – Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, who leads the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), and former ally Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo of the paramilitary RSF – have engaged in a bloody feud over control of the country which is split between their strongholds.
The ongoing civil war has caused one of the world's worst humanitarian catastrophes and diplomatic efforts to bring the conflict to an end have failed.
Based in The Hague, Netherlands, the ICJ deals with disputes between states and violations of international treaties. Sudan and the UAE are both signatories of the 1948 Genocide Convention.
Osman alleged that 'direct logistic and other support' the UAE provided to the RSF and allied militias 'has been, continues to be the primary driving force behind the genocide' including 'killing, rape, forced displacement, looting and the destruction of public and private properties.'
Cases before the ICJ can take years to reach a final decision, and so states can ask the court to issue emergency measures that prevent the conflict from escalating.
The Sudanese minister asked the court to urgently order the UAE 'to refrain from any conduct amounting to complicity' in the alleged genocide against the Masalit, and that the Gulf state submit a report to the court within one month, and then every six months until the court comes to a final decision on the case.
UAE accuses Sudan of 'cynical PR stunt'
The United States in January found attacks against the Masalit to be genocide. Last year, a UN panel of experts found that the UAE's involvement, along with that of Chad, in the conflict was 'credible.' US lawmakers have also said they would hold all major US arms sales to the UAE for 'its support for the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), who the United States determined committed genocide.'
Sudan's lawyers referenced a recent Sudanese government intelligence assessment provided to the court which they said showed clear evidence that UAE-backed arms deliveries to the RSF through neighboring Chad 'continue even today.'
CNN has reported extensively on the atrocities committed by the RSF and its allied militias: a gruesome massacre of non-Arab people, including the Masalit, in the West Darfur capital of El Geneina, a campaign to enslave men and women there, as well as forced recruitment in Sudan's central Al Jazira state.
The UAE has repeatedly rejected Sudan's allegations, with Ketait on Thursday accusing the nation of weaponizing the ICJ 'for disinformation.'
Ketait told CNN that the accusations are 'nothing more than a cynical PR stunt' by the Sudan Armed Forces, adding that it is 'an attempt to deflect from its own well-documented atrocities against the Sudanese people and its refusal to cease fire or engage in genuine negotiations.'
After nearly two years of fighting, civilians continue to pay the price of war
The humanitarian situation in Sudan has deteriorated since fighting broke out in April 2023. Today, about 25 million people, or half the population, faces severe hunger with famine declared in five areas in southern and southwestern Sudan. Catastrophic food insecurity is expected to spread to five additional areas before June, according to the ICP monitoring group.
'This is a man-made crisis. Man made because it is driven by conflict. And man-made because of the intentional obstruction of the delivery of humanitarian assistance by parties the conflict,' the World Food Programme's Regional Emergency Coordinator Shaun Hughes said in a briefing Thursday, calling for access and safe passage for humanitarian workers and supplies.
'Humanitarian agencies don't have the influence to negotiate this on our own. It requires the world to pay attention, and coherent and tenacious engagement from the international community, particularly countries that have influence on those waging war,' Hughes added.
Civilians wait outside one of the only remaining medical clinics in Zamzam camp. CNN has obscured portions of this image to protect the identity of the individuals pictured.
Médecins Sans Frontières
Nearly two years after the conflict broke out, civilians continue to be targeted, compounding the humanitarian situation. At the epicenter of the malnutrition crisis in Zamzam refugee camp, Sudan's largest located in North Darfur, displaced civilians have been attacked by RSF fighters.
Now, cuts to USAID programs are leaving civilians in an increasingly vulnerable position, said Kate Phillips-Barrasso, Mercy Corps' vice president of global policy and advocacy.
Funding cuts to Mercy Corps' programs alone threaten to leave nearly 200,000 Sudanese civilians hungry or without safe drinking water, a development that Phillips-Barrasso compared to 'turning the oxygen off in a hospital.'
CNN's Mounira Elsamra contributed reporting.

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Egypt Independent
4 hours ago
- Egypt Independent
China has a valuable card to play as it holds trade talks with the US today
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Egypt Independent
5 hours ago
- Egypt Independent
Champion of the people or a traitor? A new force emerges in southern Gaza
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Israel – and in particular Netanyahu – has never laid out clear plans for what governance and security in Gaza might look like if or when Hamas is defeated. Israel has been trying to find groups or clans opposed to Hamas who might play a role, but more recently Netanyahu and other ministers endorsed a plan put forward by US President Donald Trump for relocating Gaza's residents and redeveloping the territory. A growing role Abu Shabab has had a presence near the ruins of Gaza's long defunct airport in Rafah since late last year. Shehada at the ECFR said that while the ceasefire held earlier this year, his group appeared to vanish. But his significance has grown in recent weeks, since Israeli authorities began to allow a trickle of aid to reach Gaza through Kerem Shalom in mid-May. Abu Shabab's social media presence, along with slick videos and fluent English commentary, has expanded. 'It's nearly impossible this is being done inside Gaza,' Shehada said. 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GHF told CNN on Sunday that it had no collaboration at all with Abu Shabab's group. 'We do have local Palestinian workers we are very proud of but none is armed and they do not belong to Abu Shabab's organization,' GHF said. Convoys and more Last month, soon after limited aid began entering Gaza, Abu Shabab posted that his group had secured 101 trucks of aid, mostly flour, brought in by the World Food Programme, and praised 'my loyal brothers who sacrificed their lives, and everyone who volunteered their primitive weapons or a drop of sweat to feed the bereaved and displaced.' Truck drivers told CNN that Shabab had provided 200 armed men to protect the convoys. 'Our forces regularly accompany aid convoys, and protecting vulnerable civilians is one of our top priorities,' Abu Shabab told CNN. His group's role has expanded beyond protecting convoys. 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Early in May, the far-right Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said the population of Gaza, would be 'concentrated' in a narrow strip of land between the Egyptian border and the corridor. A senior Israeli security official said at the same time that the goal was to separate humanitarian aid from Hamas 'by involving civilian companies and creating a secured zone patrolled by the IDF.' This would include a 'sterile area in the Rafah region beyond the Morag route, where IDF will screen all entrants to prevent Hamas infiltrators.' Palestinian branding Abu Shabab's force uses Palestinian insignia and flags prominently on its uniforms, but he told CNN that his 'grassroots forces are not an official authority, nor are we operating under a direct mandate from the Palestinian Authority.' The office of the spokesperson for the Palestinian Security Forces, Major General Anwar Rajab, told CNN there was no connection between the Palestinian security apparatus and Abu Shabab's group. Nor does his family want anything to do with him. 'Leaders and elders of the Abu Shabab family' said in a statement that they had confronted him about videos showing 'Yasser's groups involved in dangerous security engagements, even working within undercover units and supporting the Zionist occupation forces that brutally kill our people.' The family declared its 'complete disassociation from Yasser Abu Shabab' and urged anyone who had joined his security groups to do the same. 'We have no objection to those around him eliminating him immediately; we state clearly that his blood is wasted,' the family statement said. Abu Shabab told CNN that the statement was 'fabricated and false' and accompanied by 'a media campaign targeting me and my colleagues.' He said his group had endured 'false accusations and systematic smear campaigns, and we have paid a heavy price,' also alleging that Hamas had killed several of the group's volunteers 'and members of my own family while we were guarding aid convoys for international organizations.' Yasser Abu Shabab can be seen in this image posted on the Popular Forces' Facebook page. From Popular Forces/Facebook Muhammad Shehada at ECFR said there is evidence that Abu Shabab's presence is expanding with Israeli support into Khan Younis, to the north of his stronghold. Even so, his reach is still limited. The Popular Forces speaks of 'hundreds of daily requests we receive on our Facebook page from individuals seeking to join us,' but analysts believe Abu Shabab probably has only about 300 men under his command. Most people in Gaza would never think of joining him for fear of being branded collaborators, said Shehada. Even so, he added, Abu Shabab's militia now serve multiple functions for the Israelis, helping control where aid goes, or does not go; trying to entice desperate and hungry people to the so-called 'safe zone' in eastern Rafah; and carrying out high-risk missions to detect the presence of Hamas fighters.


Egypt Independent
5 hours ago
- Egypt Independent
Israeli military says it has recovered body of elusive Hamas leader Mohammed Sinwar
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