Top UN court rejects Sudan's bid to sue UAE for genocide

Top UN court rejects Sudan's bid to sue UAE for genocide
Top UN court rejects Sudan's bid to sue UAE for genocide

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Hind Al Soulia - Riyadh - THE HAGUE — The UN's top court has dismissed Sudan's case against the UAE accusing the Gulf state of complicity in genocide.

Sudan alleged the UAE supported the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in the Sudanese civil war, in which tens of thousands of people have died, forced millions from their homes and left many facing famine.

The UAE categorically denied the accusations, branding the case "political theatre" and "a cynical publicity stunt".

The International Court of Justice in The Hague ruled that the case could not proceed because the UAE had opted out Article 9 of the Genocide Convention, which means that it cannot be sued by other states over genocide allegations.

The court said that it lacked jurisdiction and was therefore "precluded by its statute from taking any position on the merits of the claims made by Sudan". The case was thrown out in a 14-2 vote.

Sudan case had claimed that the UAE's alleged military, financial and logistical backing of the RSF — including weapons shipments and mercenary recruitment — enabled systematic attacks against non-Arab communities, particularly the Masalit, in Darfur.

The allegations included mass killings, forced displacement and the use of sexual violence as a weapon.

Reem Ketait, the UAE's deputy assistant minister for political affairs, said the court's decision was "clear and decisive".

"The international community must focus urgently on ending this devastating war and supporting the Sudanese people, and it must demand humanitarian aid reaches all those in need," she said.

Both the Sudanese army and the RSF have been accused of committing atrocities, including ethnically targeted killings, obstruction of humanitarian relief and looting.

Sudan's case at the ICJ was unusual because it targeted an alleged sponsor of atrocities, not the direct perpetrators.

The case was seen as a test of whether states can be held responsible for fuelling atrocities abroad.

While the ICJ's judges found they did not have the power to rule in the case, it nevertheless serves as a powerful illustration of how international courts are becoming diplomatic battlegrounds. — BBC


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