正在加载视频...

视频加载失败

🇸🇩 THREAD: Why Trump Won’t Confront the UAE Over Its Support for Sudan’s Genocidal RSF Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces (RSF) have spent the past month carrying out a genocidal massacre in al-Fasher, where satellite analysis suggests as many as 200,000 people are now unaccounted for. The RSF’s mass executions,...

212,471 次观看 • 7 个月前 •via X (Twitter)

0 条评论

暂无评论

原始帖子的评论将显示在这里

相关视频

🇺🇸🇸🇩 Pressed on RSF Atrocities in Sudan, State Department Won’t Utter “UAE” At a House Foreign Affairs hearing on crimes against humanity in Sudan, Congresswoman Sara Jacobs questioned the State Department Bureau of African Affairs about extensive evidence that the United Arab Emirates (UAE) is backing the Rapid Support Forces. She cited reporting from: ▪️Reuters ▪️The Wall Street Journal ▪️Amnesty International ▪️A UN Panel of Experts ▪️State Department–funded Sudan Conflict Observatory, ▪️and U.S. intelligence But, when Jacobs asked Deputy Assistant Secretary of African Affairs Vincent D. Spera directly whether the UAE was continuing to provide material support to the RSF, he was unwilling to name the RSF’s chief external backer or acknowledge its role, instead deflecting to vague references to “external actors.” Jacobs pressed further on U.S. leverage, pointing to ongoing arms sales to UAE, including a $1.4 billion sale of helicopter and F-16 parts, and asked why Washington is not using that leverage to stop another large-scale atrocity after some 60,000 people were estimated killed as El-Fasher fell to the UAE-backed RSF following a prolonged 18-month siege. The exchange comes as Rep. Jacobs and Sen. Senator Chris Van Hollen have introduced the Stand Up for Sudan Act, which would block U.S. arms sales to the UAE until it ceases material support for the RSF, which has carried out mass killings and ethnic massacres in Sudan and has been documented using rape, gang rape, and sexual slavery as tools of terror and displacement.

Drop Site

95,359 次观看 • 7 个月前

🇦🇪🇸🇩 At the NYT DealBook Summit, former USAID head Samantha Power blamed waning student activism for the lack of pressure over the conflict in Sudan, suggesting young people today are preoccupied with things like personal insecurity, “whether they’ll have jobs,” and “affordability,” rather than mass atrocities. The remark was striking given the scale of student mobilization over the U.S.-Israeli genocide in Gaza during the Biden administration, when Power was overseeing humanitarian assistance during Israel’s illegal siege on two million Palestinians in Gaza. Power also sharply criticized the lack of accountability for the UAE despite extensive evidence linking Emirati backing to RSF atrocities in Sudan, including “mass rape” and ethnic cleansing. She called it “incoherent” for Washington, including the Biden administration, to pursue major strategic and AI partnerships with the UAE while it continues the slaughter in Sudan. She highlighted that the U.S. is failing to use available leverage, pointing to “elite and sports diplomacy” as pressure points that remain unused. She cited the NBA in particular, as the league has deep and expanding ties to the UAE. Emirates Airline is the NBA’s global airline partner and the title sponsor of the league’s in-season tournament, now branded the “Emirates NBA Cup,” with Emirates logos appearing on referee jerseys and across league marketing. The NBA has also hosted preseason games in Abu Dhabi for several consecutive years, part of a broader expansion strategy that includes partnerships with UAE-linked entities and teams like the New York Knicks. Human rights groups, including Human Rights Watch, have warned these deals risk enabling “sportswashing,” allowing the UAE to polish its global image despite its key role in atrocities in Sudan. Sen. Chris Coons echoed the urgency, describing Sudan as a regional proxy war fueled by external powers, including the UAE and others, backing rival armed actors. He said the war will not end without “active U.S. engagement” to pressure those regional sponsors, and added that it was a “big mistake” to sign major business deals with UAE without conditioning them on ending support for the RSF. He also cautioned that U.S. cuts to humanitarian aid triggered a wider pullback by allies, leaving Sudan dangerously under-resourced amid the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

Drop Site

88,116 次观看 • 7 个月前

UK Hosts Sudan Conference Inviting UAE and Excluding Sudan: Protesters in London Chant “One Army, One People” and “UAE to ICJ” A large demonstration took place in London, organized by members of the Sudanese community, to protest the UK-hosted conference on Sudan that excluded the Sudanese Armed Forces while inviting the UAE—a country widely known for arming and funding the Rapid Support Militia (Janjaweed). Protesters held signs reading “Zamzam Refugee Camps Are Bleeding,” “One Army, One Nation,” and “UAE to ICJ,” denouncing the event as a betrayal of Sudan’s sovereignty and the suffering of its people. The chant “UAE to ICJ” referred to the case Sudan recently filed at the International Court of Justice (ICJ), accusing the UAE of violating the Genocide Convention by providing military and financial support to the Rapid Support Militia, enabling atrocities such as mass killings, ethnic cleansing, and systematic rape in Darfur. Protesters also condemned political factions participating in the “SOMOD” and “Ta’sees” initiatives, accusing them of siding with the UAE-backed militia in exchange for foreign support and political deals. The crowd erupted in a powerful chant: “How much? How much? How much? Did the FFC sell our blood for?” — a furious rejection of any compromise at the expense of Sudanese lives. This is not a civil war between equals—it is a war of national defense against a foreign-backed militia committing crimes against humanity. Sudan knows its enemy, and it knows who is defending the nation. #Sudan #UAEKillsSudanesePeople #RSFisTerroristOrganization

Sudanese Echo

14,111 次观看 • 1 年前

Australian Senator Lidia Thorpe Condemns Western and UAE Complicity in Sudan’s Genocide: “Sudan Is Burning, and the West Is Driving the Flames” In a powerful speech, Hon. Lidia Alma Thorpe, the first Aboriginal Senator for Victoria, delivered a blistering condemnation of Western governments’ inaction and complicity in the ongoing atrocities in Sudan. Thorpe described the situation in Sudan as a genocide actively fueled by foreign interests, particularly the United Arab Emirates (UAE), which she accused of backing the Rapid Support Militia (Janjaweed) in their assault on the city of El-Fasher. “Like most genocides, the West is not only complicit but an active driver of the conflict,” Thorpe said. “Sudan is burning, blood stains can be seen from space. Hundreds of mothers have been murdered in a maternity hospital, and thousands of civilians killed and displaced as UAE-backed paramilitary forces stormed El-Fasher.” The senator drew a haunting parallel between the current genocide in Darfur and the atrocities committed there twenty years ago, emphasizing that despite clear warnings from Sudanese advocates, the international community once again turned away. “We were warned,” she said. “The nightmare we are seeing was repeatedly predicted by Sudanese advocates on the ground who begged for urgent action from the international community to prevent a massacre.” Thorpe directly accused Western powers of prioritizing political and economic ties with the UAE over the lives of Sudanese civilians. “For Western powers, maintaining good relations with the UAE and their stranglehold over Sudan’s resources has taken priority over the people of Darfur,” she continued. She also called out the Australian government, particularly the Labour government, for failing to take moral action, urging immediate sanctions against the UAE and the opening of humanitarian corridors for Sudanese refugees. “This is indefensible. The Labour government must immediately cut trade ties and impose sanctions on the UAE. Open humanitarian pathways for refugees and provide support to our Sudanese community,” Thorpe urged. Closing her speech with solidarity, Senator Thorpe reaffirmed her commitment to the Sudanese people: “I stand with the people of Sudan. Our struggle is one struggle, and their fate is our own.” Her speech echoes growing international outrage over the UAE’s involvement in arming and funding the Rapid Support Militia (Janjaweed), a group accused of carrying out mass killings, ethnic cleansing, and atrocities across Darfur and El-Fasher. #Sudan #RSFisTerroristOrganization #UAEKillsSudanesePeople #UAESponsorsTerrorism

Sudanese Echo

21,886 次观看 • 8 个月前

In Sudan’s devastating conflict, where the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and Rapid Support Forces (RSF) fuel a brutal cycle of violence, both accused of war crimes and genocide by the US in 2025, the United Arab Emirates stands as a steadfast pillar of hope. While SAF tightens its hold on Port Sudan and RSF besieges El Fasher, displacing 13 million and pushing millions toward famine, the UAE has delivered USD 3.95 billion in aid to Sudan and its neighbors from 2014 to 2025, undeterred by baseless claims from the Muslim Brotherhood and its proxies. With 162 flights and one ship, the UAE has delivered 12,710 tonnes of vital supplies: 6,388 tonnes of food and 280 tonnes of medical aid for Sudan’s conflict-ravaged communities, 5,542 tonnes for Chad’s refugees, 200 tonnes plus a medical center, five wells, and ten health facilities for Uganda, and 300 tonnes for South Sudan’s desperate displaced. This is not posturing; it’s a lifeline for millions caught in the crossfire. To the Brotherhood and its allies, including Turkey, who cast accusations of UAE interference while arming SAF and prolonging Sudan’s chaos: your claims collapse against the UAE’s towering humanitarian record. Since 2023, USD 681.8 million has sustained over 2 million lives, with a bold USD 200 million pledged in Addis Ababa in February 2025. Two field hospitals in Chad have treated 90,889 patients, a new hospital rises in South Sudan’s Madhol, and 127 health facilities across 14 Sudanese states thrive with UAE support. Add USD 70 million to UN agencies, including 25 million to WFP, 20 million to UNHCR, and 8 million to WHO, plus USD 30 million for neighboring countries, USD 10.25 million for Sudanese refugee women, and USD 4 million for education in Chad, and the UAE’s priorities shine through. We condemn SAF’s aid blockades and RSF’s atrocities, advocate for civilian governance, and reject unfounded allegations of arms or gold dealings. While you fuel division, the UAE builds hope with hospitals, not headlines, for Sudan’s people. Humanity is our mission, and we will not falter.

Rauda Altenaiji

30,452 次观看 • 9 个月前

🇦🇪 The UAE, the chief external backer of Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces (RSF), has quietly become one of the NBA’s most important international partners through deals worth hundreds of millions of dollars. Most visible is the New York Knicks’ direct sponsorship agreement with Abu Dhabi. Since 2024, the UAE capital’s tourism agency, Experience Abu Dhabi, has appeared on Knicks jerseys in a partnership reportedly worth about $30 million annually. The deal also includes branding throughout Madison Square Garden and international marketing rights tied to the Knicks brand. The sponsorship is part of a much broader NBA-UAE relationship. Since 2021, Abu Dhabi has hosted annual NBA preseason games and become a hub for league marketing, youth programs, fan events and basketball development. In January 2026, the NBA and Abu Dhabi announced a long-term extension expected to be worth well over $300 million, including plans for an NBA Global Academy in the UAE capital. Critics describe the relationship as classic sportswashing, pointing to the NBA’s role in helping improve the image of a government that is fueling one the world’s worst humanitarian catastrophes — UAE’s militia in Sudan has been found to have committed genocide, and mass rapes and sexual violence in Darfur, including by the U.S. government. No current NBA player, and no NEW YORK KNICKS player, has publicly spoken out about the relationship, despite the NBA and the UAE’s complicity in the world’s largest humanitarian and hunger crisis. The NBA Finals begin June 3 with the New York Knicks taking on the San Antonio Spurs. 🎥 Video from Refugees International

Drop Site

68,288 次观看 • 1 个月前