From Reuters:
“After fall of Bashir, Sudan
closes door on support for Hamas”
Sudanese authorities have taken
control of lucrative assets that for years provided backing for Hamas, shedding
light on how the country served as a haven for the Palestinian militant group
under former leader Omar al-Bashir. The takeover of at least a dozen companies
that officials say were linked to Hamas has helped accelerate Sudan's
realignment with the West since Bashir's overthrow in 2019. Over the past year,
Khartoum has won removal from the U.S. state sponsors of terrorism (SST) list
and is on course for relief of more than $50 billion in debt.
Hamas has lost a foreign base
where members and supporters could live, raise money, and channel Iranian
weapons and funds to the Gaza Strip, Sudanese and Palestinian analysts said. Seized
assets detailed by Sudanese official sources and a Western intelligence source
show the reach of those networks. According to officials from a task force set
up to dismantle the Bashir regime, they include real estate, company shares, a
hotel in a prime Khartoum location, an exchange bureau, a TV station, and more
than a million acres of farmland. Sudan became a centre for money laundering
and terrorism financing, said Wagdi Salih, a leading member of the task force -
the Committee to Dismantle the June 30, 1989 Regime and Retrieve Public Funds. The
system was "a big cover, a big umbrella, internally and externally",
he said. A Western intelligence source said techniques were used in Sudan that
are common to organised crime: Companies were headed by trustee shareholders,
rents collected in cash, and transfers made through exchange bureaux. Bashir
openly supported Hamas, and was friendly with its leaders. "They got
preferential treatment in tenders, tax forgiveness, and they were allowed to
transfer to Hamas and Gaza with no limits," said a task force member,
speaking on condition of anonymity.
ISLAMIST HUB Sudan's
journey from pariah state to U.S. ally has been gradual. In the decade after
Bashir took power in 1989 the country became a hub for radical Islamists,
sheltered Osama bin Laden for several years, and was sanctioned by the United
States over links to Palestinian militants. Bashir later tried to
distance himself from hardline Islamism, stepping up security cooperation with
Washington. In 2016 Sudan cut ties with Iran and the following year U.S. trade
sanctions against Khartoum were dropped after Washington accepted that state
support for Hamas had ceased. But until Bashir's fall, networks that had
supported Hamas remained in place. Hamas investments in Sudan began with
small-scale ventures such as fast food restaurants before venturing into real
estate and construction, according to an official on the task force. An
example was Hassan and Alabed, which started as a cement company and expanded
into large real estate developments. The task force says it was in a
network with about 10 other large companies with interlinking share ownership
connected to Bashir ally Abdelbasit Hamza that moved large sums through foreign
bank accounts. The biggest was Alrowad Real Estate Development,
established in 2007 and listed on Khartoum's stock exchange, with subsidiaries
that the Western intelligence source said laundered money and traded in
currency to finance Hamas. Hamza was jailed in April for 10 years on corruption
charges and sent to the Khartoum prison where Bashir is being held. The task
force said he had assets worth up to $1.2 billion in his name. Hamza's lawyer,
who also represents Bashir, could not be reached for comment. A second
network, worth up to $20 million, revolved around the broadcaster Tayba and an
associated charity named Almishkat. It was run by two Hamas members who got
citizenship and amassed businesses and real estate, according to Maher Abouljokh,
the caretaker brought in to manage Tayba. The TV channel was funnelling money
from the Gulf, laundered millions of dollars, and had clear links to Hamas,
said Abouljokh. Contacted by Reuters, Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri denied the
group had investments in Sudan, but acknowledged an impact from Sudan's
political shift: "Unfortunately, there were several measures that weakened
the presence of the movement (Hamas) in the country (Sudan) and limited
political ties with it," he said.
NORMALISATION By last
year, Sudan was desperate to escape the SST list, a prerequisite for debt
relief and support from international lenders. Under pressure from the
United States, it joined the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Morocco in
agreeing to normalise ties with Israel - though it has moved slowly to
implement the deal. A former U.S. diplomat who worked on Sudan under the
Trump administration said shutting down the Hamas network was a focus in
negotiations with Khartoum. "We were pushing on an open door," he said.
The United States gave Sudan a list of companies to shut down, according to
one Sudanese source and the Western intelligence source. The State Department
declined to comment. Many Hamas-affiliated figures went to Turkey with
some liquid assets but left behind about 80% of their investments, the task
force official said. Sudan's transitional leaders "consider
themselves the exact antithesis of Bashir in regional terms," said
Sudanese analyst Magdi El Gazouli. "They want to sell themselves as a
component of the new security order in the region." "The coup against
al-Bashir caused real problems for Hamas and Iran," said Palestinian
analyst Adnan Abu Amer. "Hamas and Iran had to look for alternatives -
alternatives that had not been in place because the coup against al-Bashir was
a sudden one."
^ This news is great on so many
levels. Not only does it mean Sudan is no longer supporting terrorists, but it
also means one of the major means of funding Hamas (and their attacks against
Israel) is now gone. ^
https://www.reuters.com/world/africa/after-fall-bashir-sudan-closes-door-support-hamas-2021-09-23/
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