US issues new sanctions to Sudan because of chemical weapon usage

The US will impose new sanctions on Sudan after finding it used chemical weapons last year in the ongoing civil war against the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), the state department has said.

US exports to the country will be restricted and financial borrowing limits put in place from 6 June, a statement from spokesperson Tammy Bruce read.

A Sudanese government spokesperson described the accusations as “baseless claims with no supporting evidence”.

Both the Sudanese military and the paramilitary group the RSF have previously been accused of war crimes during the conflict, which they have denied.

More than 150,000 people have been killed during the conflict, which began two years ago when Sudan’s army and the RSF began a vicious struggle for power.

In recent months, Sudan’s military has recaptured the capital of Khartoum, but fighting continues elsewhere.

No detail was provided about which chemical weapons the US said it found, but the New York Times reported in January that Sudan used chlorine gas on two occasions, which causes a range of painful and damaging effects and can be fatal.

This was said to have been in remote areas which were not named. No visual evidence has been shared so far as proof of the weapons having been used in the current war in Sudan.

“The United States calls on the government of Sudan to cease all chemical weapons use and uphold its obligations under the CWC,” the statement read, referring to the Chemical Weapons Convention under which signatories have committed to destroy their stockpiles of the weapons.

In a strongly worded statement, Sudan’s Culture and Information Minister Khalid Al-Ayesir described the US’s actions as “political blackmail”, adding that they further eroded US “credibility” and eliminated “any remaining influence it may have in Sudan”.

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