From the BBC:
“USS Cole bombing: Sudan agrees
to compensate families”
Sudan has agreed to compensate
the families of 17 US sailors who died when their ship, the USS Cole, was
bombed by al-Qaeda at a port in Yemen in 2000. This is a key condition set by
the US for Sudan to be removed from its list of state sponsors of terrorism.
The US ruled Sudan was responsible for the attack as the two suicide bombers
involved were trained in the country. Removal from the US blacklist would allow
sanctions to be lifted, a major objective of Sudan's new government. High
inflation and shortages of fuel and foreign currency helped trigger the
protests which led to the downfall last April of the long-serving President
Omar al-Bashir. It is not clear how much Khartoum has agreed to pay to the
families, but the Reuters news agency quotes a source close to the deal as
saying it is $30m (£23m).
Why now? Sudan's new rulers are
desperate to end the country's economic isolation and gain access to the
dollar-based international financial system to attract loans and investment.
The compensation is one of several steps taken recently to appease Sudan's
critics. The transitional government has
agreed that Mr Bashir should be handed over to the International Criminal Court
(ICC) to face genocide and war crimes charges allegedly committed in the
country's Darfur region. Earlier in the month, Sudan's top general Abdel-Fattah
Burhan met Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Uganda in an apparent
effort to normalise relations after decades of enmity. The country's information minister told the
Associated Press that figures for the USS Cole compensation could not be
revealed as negotiations were ongoing to reach a similar settlement with
families of those killed in the 1998 al-Qaeda bombings of US embassies in Kenya
and Tanzania. More than 200 people were killed in those attacks.
Why was Sudan put in the US
blacklist? Al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden lived in Sudan for five years in the
1990s as a guest of Mr Bashir's government. Sudan was added to the US terrorism
list in 1993. The families of those killed in the USS Cole say Sudan gave
al-Qaeda and Bin Laden financial and technical support. They say this allowed
the group to establish training bases, run businesses and even use Sudanese
diplomatic passports to carry explosives. But Sudan has always insisted this
was not the case, and a justice ministry statement has reiterated this point.
"The government of Sudan would like to point out that the settlement
agreement explicitly affirmed that the government was not responsible for this
incident or any terrorist act," the state-run Suna agency quoted the
statement as saying. "It entered into this settlement out of [its]
determination to settle the historical allegations of terrorism left over by
the former regime, and only for the purpose of fulfilling the conditions set by
the US administration to remove Sudan from the list of state sponsors of
terrorism in order to normalise relations with the US and the rest of the
world."
What happened to the USS Cole? On
12 October 2000 two Yemeni suicide bombers in a rubber dinghy packed with up to
225kg (500lb) of high explosives rammed the US destroyer, leaving a gaping hole
in the side of the warship. Seventeen crew were killed and at least 40 people
were wounded in the attack on the ship as it was refuelling in the port of
Aden. Last year, Jamal al-Badawi, a militant linked to the attack, was killed
in a US air strike on Yemen. The attack's alleged planner, Saudi-born Abd
al-Nashiri, is being held in US custody at Guantanamo Bay. Last year, the US
Supreme Court overturned, on procedural grounds, a 2012 ruling ordering Sudan
to pay more than $300m to the victims' families.
^ It seems that Sudan really
wants to end its State-Sponsored Terrorist ways under the old regime and rejoin
the International Community. Hopefully this is just a step in the right
direction to make that happen. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-51487712
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