Op-Ed: The Sudan Sanctions Must Stay
Last week, at least five peaceful protesters in Darfur were killed by Sudanese security forces at the Kalma refugee camp. The killings took place before a provocative attempt by war crimes-indicted head of state President Omar al-Bashir to visit the camp and paint a picture of life in his country at odds with the reality of millions living in camps and caves; they are in reality desperately reliant on humanitarian assistance that is often obstructed by Bashir’s government and are continuously under the threat of government-sponsored atrocity crimes.
Despite Sudan’s long and well-documented history of persecuting Christians and other religious and ethnic minorities, the timing of these killings is especially surprising, as the Bashir regime is engaged in a full-court press to lift long-standing U.S. sanctions, including hiring Washington power-lobbyists Squire Patton Boggs to sell its case to the Trump administration.
We can only imagine what the Khartoum regime will do if it gets its way on the sanctions and the U.S. loses its most significant point of leverage. Even at a time of heightened scrutiny, the regime has pursued the demolition of 25 churches and church properties in Sudan, alleging “construction irregularities.” In August alone, according to reports, at least four churches were demolished. The nonprofit Open Doors ranked Sudan the fifth-worst country in the world for Christian persecution, one spot behind Syria.
During President Barack Obama’s final year in office, his administration sought to improve Sudanese behavior along five tracks of engagement. Before leaving office, Obama temporarily suspended the sanctions, and now the Trump administration will decide in the next month whether to make that decision permanent. But progress – particularly on the conflict and humanitarian tracks – has been limited, most egregiously with the regime continuing to obstruct the delivery of humanitarian aid to millions of Sudanese civilians trapped in active war zones.
Read full report here.