Lift sanctions to prevent 'disaster' in Sudan, UN says

Without international backing, the country's transition towards peace and stability could swing into reverse, the United Nations says

Sudanese wait for sunset to break their daytime fast during the Holy Islamic month of Ramadan, amid a curfew due to the coronavirus pandemic, in a street in the capital  Khartoum, Sudan, Monday, April 27, 2020. (AP Photo/Marwan Ali)
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Sudan risks being plunged into a humanitarian disaster by Covid-19 unless sanctions are lifted and donors provide financial support, the UN rights chief said on Tuesday.

Without international backing, the country's transition towards peace and stability could swing into reverse, Michelle Bachelet said.

A year has passed since president Omar Al Bashir was made to step down by the army on April 11, 2019, after months of nationwide protests.

Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok took power as the head of a transitional government sworn in last September, but Sudan's economy remains in deep crisis.

Ms Bachelet said the promise of economic and social development, democracy, justice and peace was being threatened by acute resource constraints on the transitional government.

She said they were being exacerbated by ongoing unilateral sanctions, the failure of international institutions to provide debt relief, and a deficit of international support.

"The tipping point could be Covid-19," Ms Bachelet said.

"The health system is simply not equipped to handle an outbreak on the scale we have seen elsewhere in the world. There is only one way to prevent a humanitarian disaster, and that is for the donors to step up and extend a helping hand to Sudan."

Khartoum remains on a US blacklist as a state sponsor of terrorism, stifling investment.

It is for instance not eligible for access to the emergency financing set up by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund to help countries combat the Covid-19 pandemic.

Households continue to suffer from frequent power cuts and most Sudanese still queue up for hours to buy staple foods or to fill their cars with petrol.

In response to the novel coronavirus pandemic, the government announced a 24-hour curfew for three weeks from April 18 across Khartoum state.

Sudan has had 318 confirmed cases and 25 deaths, according World Health Organisation figures.

"The only way Sudan will ever be able to break out of this cycle of poverty and desperation is to be freed from the impediments of sanctions imposed at the time of the previous government," said Ms Bachelet.

The former Chilean president said that without addressing the economic and social grievances that sparked the departure of Al Bashir, "Sudan's successful transition to achieving a durable peace remains distant".