Next July will be decisive for the future of Sudan-U.S. relations: diplomat

ArticleComments (0)EmailPrintSaveFebruary 1, 2017 (KHARTOUM) -

An U.S. embassy official in Khartoum said the eighth of July will be
decisive for the relations between Sudan and the United States because it
will resolve the matter of sanctions on Sudan permanently or reinstate it.

The Obama administration on 13 January 2017 decided to ease Sudan
sanctions, citing the cooperation of the east African country in
counterterrorism. However , the partial left of sanctions would be
definitive within six months after a last review by the US agencies.

Speaking in a symposium at the Association of Banks premises in Khartoum
the Political and Economic Advisor at the U.S. Embassy in Khartoum, David
Scott, stressed that the reports covering the upcoming six-month period
will determine the fate of sanctions.

The American diplomat further said the recent travel ban of President
Donald set off mass confusion in Sudan as many thought that it represents a
set back and cancelled the decision of the former President Barak Obama to
ease sanctions.

Scott was referring to the presidential executive order barring citizens of
Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen from entering the United
States for 90 days.American diplomats across the world and particularly in
the seven countries hit by the travel ban seek since last Friday to
minimise the impact of the new border policy based on religion.

For the State Department and the CIA, the two organs that worked to restore
relations with Sudan, Trump’s decision may break all their efforts to
improve relations with the government of President Omer al-Bashir to fight
terrorism and preserve the regional stability.

A Sudanese security official said in statements published on Tuesday that
the CIA office in Khartoum is the largest office in the Middle East. He
said that to give an idea about the important cooperation between
intelligence officers in the two countries.

Another diplomat at the economic section of the U.S. embassy in Khartoum,
Theodore Thomas, said the American investments will not flow to Sudan
immediately after the decision to ease sanctions.He stressed that
attracting investors requires improving the investment environment to gain
the confidence of investors especially through the adoption of laws that
protect them, and the fight against corruption which makes a lot of
investors are reluctant to invest in Sudan.

(ST)

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