Discovering documents of the UAE’s secret participation in the Sudanese civil war
The Guardian English newspaper wrote in a report that it has obtained information that confirms the participation of the UAE in the Sudanese civil war alongside the rapid reaction forces against the government forces. This English newspaper said that the incoming information indicates that Emirati passports were found inside the wreckage of the plane belonging to the rapid response forces in Sudan.
The 41-page document sent to the Security Council shows that passports found in Sudan’s conflict fields confirm that the UAE is sending covert forces to the country to participate in Sudan’s devastating civil war.
The Guardian wrote: The passports were discovered in Om Durman, a city located on the banks of the Nile River and overlooking Khartoum, the capital of Sudan; The area under the control of the rapid reaction forces that the Sudanese army has recently taken back.
These documents include images of the pages of four passports that appear to belong to citizens of the UAE, two of whom were born in Dubai, one in Al Ain and the other in Ajman, the fifth largest city in the UAE. The average age of these people is between 29 and 49 years old.
A source familiar with the document discovery process said: The passports were removed from the wreckage of the car found in Omdurman in February. This source, who asked not to be named, continued: Evaluations indicate that these passports belong to UAE telecommunications officers.
The UAE has previously denied all accusations of providing weapons to Sudan’s rapid reaction forces. Nevertheless, the discovery of documents that the UAE has deployed people to help the conflicts in Sudan can increase the tension and geopolitical complications of the civil war that has been going on for 15 months between the rapid reaction forces and the Sudanese army.
Some experts believe that if it were not for the intervention of the UAE, the conflict that led to the worst humanitarian crisis in the world would have ended by now.
The document, which was sent to the Security Council last month, shows that the UAE has equipped rapid reaction forces with drones modified to drop controversial thermal bombs, which are more destructive than traditional bombs of similar dimensions, prompting calls for Its use has been banned.
Nevertheless, sanctions monitors at the United Nations found the claims of the UAE’s military support for the rapid reaction forces credible.
According to the Guardian newspaper, the document also contains details of military equipment brought back from the battlefields of Africa’s third largest country and is said to have enough information to link them to the UAE.
© | Webangah News Hub has translated this news from the source of Young Journalists Club |