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Sudan: Biden and Harris Raise Sudan Issue With UAE President

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Washington — Following two separate meetings of US President Joe Biden and US Vice President Kamala Harris with United Arab Emirates (UAE) President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed in Washington on Monday, the US President recognised the UAE as a “major defence partner.”

The leaders expressed their deep concern about the tragic impact of violence on the Sudanese people and neighbouring countries, including mass displacement, famine, and the atrocities committed by the warring parties against the civilian population.

A statement issued by the White House after Biden’s meeting in the Oval Office with bin Zayed stated that “there is no military solution to the conflict in Sudan.” It renewed “their firm and steadfast position on the need to take immediate and concrete steps to achieve a permanent cessation of hostilities and a transition to civilian rule.”

Regarding the continued fighting in Darfur, the two presidents called on all parties to the conflict to abide by international humanitarian law and hold accountable all individuals and groups that commit war crimes.

‘Major defence partner’

The UAE’s recognition as a major defence partner will deepen military ties despite friction over the war in Sudan and as deadly tensions ratchet in the Middle East. The UAE is the second country to receive the designation after the Biden administration gave India the designation in 2021.

The designation would “further enhance defence cooperation and security in the Middle East, East Africa, and the Indian Ocean regions,” according to the statement.