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Sudan says removal from US blacklist imminent as deal on 1998 bombings nears

Wednesday June 24 2020
khartoum

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs building is pictured in the Sudanese capital Khartoum, on June 23, 2020. Sudan is close to finalising a deal with the United States to compensate the victims of 1998 embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania that killed 224 people. PHOTO | ASHRAF SHAZLY | AFP

By AFP

Sudan's foreign minister said Tuesday that her country is nearing a deal with Washington to compensate the families of victims of deadly 1998 embassy bombings, paving the way to Khartoum's removal from a US terror blacklist.

Massive, nearly simultaneous blasts at the American embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam in August 1998 together killed 224 people and injured around 5,000, almost all of them Africans.

Al-Qaeda claimed the attacks, but the US accused Khartoum of aiding jihadists linked to the bombers and retaliated by destroying a Sudanese pharmaceutical factory in Sudan which it claimed was producing a nerve agent.

Washington has since demanded compensation for the American victims' families, placed Sudan on a blacklist of state sponsors of terrorism and imposed crippling sanctions.

But Sudan's Foreign Minister Asma Abdalla told AFP on Tuesday that "the final touches of a settlement with victims of (the bombings) are being finalised."

"We now have a delegation in Washington negotiating with the victims' lawyers and officials at the US Department of State," she said, adding that such a deal would mean Sudan "will have fulfilled all the requirements" to be removed from the US blacklist.

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"We expect the US administration to complete the legislative measures and complete the removal of Sudan from the list... as soon as possible," she said in an interview.

Sudan had dire relations with the US under Islamist ex-president Omar al-Bashir, who came to power on the back of a military coup in 1989.

Bashir was ousted by the military in April last year following months-long protests against his rule.

Transitional authorities who came to power in August last year have been seeking to boost the country's international standing and rebuild ties with the US.

Warming US ties

Under Bashir, Sudan hosted Al-Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden and sent jihadist volunteers to fight in the country's civil war with South Sudanese separatists.

After being blacklisted in 1993, Sudan expelled Bin Laden—but the US designation and sanctions remained in place.

Sudan hopes bolstering relations with the US will rescue its ailing economy, decimated by sanctions and the 2011 secession of oil-rich South Sudan.

Khartoum recently finalised a deal compensating families of victims of the 2000 USS Cole bombing in Yemen's Aden harbour, for which Al-Qaeda also claimed responsibility.

Sudan always denied any involvement but agreed to the settlement to fulfill US conditions.

As their ties have warmed, Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok visited the US in December and in May, Sudan appointed its first ambassador to Washington in more than two decades.

Abdalla called that move "a stepping stone on the path of fully normalisation of relations between Sudan and the US."

Nile dam dispute

Sudan is also in a delicate position as neighbouring Egypt spars with Ethiopia over the filling of a vast dam Addis Ababa is building on the Nile.

Abdalla said Sudan was pushing for an agreement "despite Egypt and Ethiopia's divergent positions".

Tensions heightened as recent three-way talks faltered and Ethiopia said it would go ahead with filling the dam regardless of whether a deal was reached.

Egypt, which views the hydro-electric barrage as an existential threat to its water supply, appealed Friday for the United Nations Security Council to intervene.

But Abdalla noted that a 2015 declaration Sudan signed with Egypt and Ethiopia "did not provide for resorting to the UN Security Council or arbitration at the International Court of Justice".

She said the declaration meant heads of state would resolve the issue if water ministers failed to reach an agreement.

Addis Ababa insists that the dam is vital for its development and that downstream countries' water supplies will not be affected.

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has said that his country, which relies on Nile for almost all of its freshwater, remained committed to a political solution.

Abdalla insisted that "an agreement can be reached because there are not a lot of outstanding issues".

"Negotiations remain the only way," she said.

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