The tense Kenya, Sudan
diplomatic ties are likely to escalate once again following reports Nairobi is
set to host the second round of conference by the country's rebel forces
accused of genocide.
Sudan’s
Foreign Affairs ministry on Saturday issued a press release condemning the
meeting of the Rapid Support Forces and allied groups.
“The
Kenyan government’s insistence on continuing to support the terrorist militia
and harbour its activities demonstrates a disregard for international
legitimacy and the African Union Peace and Security Council,” the statement
said.
Sudan
said the move poses a “serious threat” to regional security, the sovereignty of
African nations and social stability within them.
“This
follows previous meetings sponsored by the Kenyan presidency in February of
this year, which sought to declare the so- called "parallel
government" for the genocidal militia and its followers. The entire
international community has condemned this move,” the statement added.
In
this regard, Sudan urged the international community to condemn what it termed
“irresponsible conduct” that violates international law, the UN Charter and the
AU Constitutive Act.
At the
same time Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi, who is also in-charge of
the Foreign Affairs docket, will on Tuesday attend the London-Sudan Conference
at Lancaster House on the second anniversary of the Sudan conflict.
Mudavadi’s
office on Sunday said he had been invited by the UK government, and will
present Kenya’s position on regional peace and security in the Greater Horn of
Africa, particularly Sudan.
“Since
the conflict began, Kenya has welcomed every key Sudanese stakeholder from both
sides of the divide including top Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) and Rapid Support
Forces (RSF) leaders, special envoys for the parties, representatives of local
communities, civil society, political parties and armed movements in a bid to
bring an end to the war,” the statement said.
It
added that Mudavadi will affirm that “Kenya supports a unified Sudan for the
people of Sudan, advocates for a Sudanese-owned political process with the
supportive role of external actors, and Kenya’s opposition to using military solutions
to address a political dispute”.
Additionally,
the PCS will also advocate for a peace process through African institutions
—IGAD, the African Union, EAC, and SADC — and “discourage members engaged in
forum shopping opting to choose methods that suit their selfish interests
rather than the common good”.
The
meeting will seek to address the worsening humanitarian situation and
gather support for a United Nations plan targeting assistance for 20.9 million
people. Kenya has pledged $2 million humanitarian support.
Sudan
has, however, objected to the conference, which is organised by the European
Union, the UK, Germany and France, saying it was not invited.
In a
message to UK Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs David Lammy, Sudan also
criticised the inclusion in the meeting of the United Arab Emirates, Kenya
and Chad, countries it accuses of backing RSF against the Sudan Armed Forces.
Former
Vice President and two-time Foreign Minister Kalonzo Musyoka said Kenya should
not have hosted the RSF in the first place.
“Our
foreign policy is messed up. Once we got involved with RSF it became a problem.
Now Khartoum has taken the RSF and their collaborators to the ICC. We should
not have allowed that thing [meeting] to happen in Kenya because this is a group
under international sanctions,” Kalonzo told the Star.
Kalonzo,
who has been involved in Sudan peace processes, added that developments in
Sudan have an over flow impact on South Sudan, whose security and political
instability has been fast escalating in recent months.
Kenya
in February hosted RSF and allied groups, which signed a charter to form a
parallel government and unveiled a new constitution in March under the banner
of Sudan Founding Alliance.
Kenya
was heavily criticised for hosting RSF activities, with various global powers,
the UN and the AU condemning the announcement of the parallel government.
Among
the global powers that condemned the move were the US, China and Russia. Saudi
Arabia, Turkiye, Guyana and Uganda also weighed in on the matter.
The AU
Peace and Security Council condemned the move and warned that it posed a huge
risk of partitioning the country, and warned against any recognition and or
support to the parallel government.
The
UNSC expressed “grave concern” over the move and its potential to fuel the
flames of war in Sudan, threatening its national unity and territorial
integrity.
Sudan
banned imports from Kenya, including tea, as a retaliation to the developments
in Nairobi. It had earlier recalled its ambassador in Nairobi.
Mudavadi
on Tuesday, however, denied that a parallel government in Sudan had been formed
in Kenya.
“For
the avoidance of doubt, no government of Sudan was declared or formed in Kenya,
in Nairobi. I want that to be understood very clearly because there has been
some misinformation that a parallel government of Sudan has been formed in
Kenya. That is not true,” Mudavadi told the diplomatic corps at the quarterly
diplomatic address.
“We
have had a chance to look at the documentation and there is no such wording of
a government being formed in Kenya,” he said.