Sudan make a re-evaluation of its contribution to the war against Yemen
YemenExtra
SH.A.
Sudan’s Minister of State for Defense Affairs Ali Salem announced that his country is making a re-evaluation of its contribution to a deadly campaign led by Saudi Arabia against Yemen.
Salem said that a decision on whether Sudan would continue to participate in the Yemen war or downgrade its presence in the military conflict would come after a thorough assessment of the case in the defense ministry, presstv reported.
The minister acknowledged that there have been negative consequences for Sudan to contribute to Saudi Arabia’s more than three years of military campaign against the kingdom’s neighbor to the South.
“This (assessment) involves various sides, the negatives and positives of the participation,” Salem said in first official acknowledgement of the repercussions of Sudan’s military presence in the Arabian Peninsula’s poorest nation.
The announcement came after a group of lawmakers condemned as “unconstitutional” the Sudanese military’s participation in war, urging President Omar al-Bashir to withdraw Sudan’s troops from the war-torn country.
“Dispatching Sudanese army soldiers and members of the Rapid Support Forces is an unconstitutional measure, and carried out without having been remitted to the parliament,” the lawmakers said in a statement, while insisting that Sudan should not interfere in the affairs of other countries.
Thousands of Yemeni people, mostly civilians, have been killed in Saudi-led airstrikes and other attacks since the war started in March 2015.
Sudan’s Akhbar el-Youm newspaper has quoted informed sources as saying that there is a strong trend among the leaders of the state to withdraw Sudanese forces from Yemen amid mounted pressure.