UN envoy declared persona non grata in Sudan

The government of Sudan on Thursday declared persona non grata the UN envoy to the country, the German Volker Perthes, whom it has accused for several weeks of being responsible for the ongoing war.

“The Government of the Republic of Sudan has notified the Secretary General of the United Nations that it has declared Mr. Volker Perthes […] persona non grata as of today,” the Sudanese foreign ministry said in a statement.

Mr. Perthes was in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on Thursday for a series of diplomatic talks, the UN announced earlier on Twitter.

The head of the Sudanese army, General Abdel Fattah al-Burhane, had called for the dismissal of the senior diplomat, accusing him of being responsible for the war which broke out on April 15 between his troops and the paramilitaries of the Support Forces (FSR) of General Mohamed Hamdane Daglo.

In a letter addressed to the UN, General Burhane notably accused Mr. Perthes of having “concealed” in his reports the explosive situation in Khartoum before the outbreak of hostilities. Without these “lies”, General “Daglo would not have launched his military operations”, he argued.

The fighting broke out the day the two rival generals were to meet for negotiations aimed at integrating the FSR into the regular army, as the UN had been calling for for weeks.

While many observers predicted a failure of these discussions, Mr. Perthes proclaimed his “optimism”. He also admitted to being “taken by surprise” the day the war broke out.

Guterres Trust

Volker Perthes was in New York when General Burhane sent his accusatory letter, and authorities have not issued visas to foreign nationals since the start of the war.

The UN Secretary General, António Guterres, had affirmed “his full confidence” in his envoy.

But at the beginning of June, the Security Council had only extended for six months the United Nations Integrated Mission for Transitional Assistance in Sudan (UNAMITS), of which Mr. Perthes is the head.

Created in June 2020 to support the democratic transition in Sudan after the fall of Omar al-Bashir the previous year, UNAMITS had since been renewed each year for one year.

For several months, thousands of people supporting the army and the Islamists had demonstrated against Mr. Perthes and the alleged foreign “interference”.

For a long time, pro-democracies have accused General Burhane of being instrumentalized by the Islamists of the regime of Omar el-Bashir (1989-2019).

General Daglo also plays on this rhetoric: he repeatedly fights “the Islamists” and the “remnants of the old regime” and makes himself the champion of “democracy” and “human rights”, while even that its thousands of men are accused of having committed atrocities on Bashir’s behalf during the war in Darfur (west) in the 2000s.

The war in Sudan has claimed more than 1,800 lives, according to the organization ACLED, which specializes in collecting information in conflict zones.

Nearly two million people have left their homes, according to the UN, which estimates that 25 of the 45 million people in the country, already one of the poorest in the world, needed humanitarian aid.

The situation is deadlocked, none of the multiple truces declared by the two rival generals having been respected. An attempt at mediation under the aegis of Saudi Arabia and the United States was suspended on 1er June. The day before, the army had withdrawn from negotiations aimed at creating secure corridors to allow civilians and humanitarian aid to pass.

Hospitals located in combat zones no longer function only partially, when they are not closed. And the crisis should worsen with the approach of the rainy season, synonymous with resurgence of malaria, food insecurity and child malnutrition.

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