US sanctions Indian CEO, 7 others for allegedly fuelling Sudan civil war
The Treasury Department imposed sanctions on SBL Energy Limited and other firms based in Sudan and Egypt.
PTI
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Among those sanctioned is SBL Energy CEO Alok Choudhari, accused of supplying explosives to a firm linked to the SAF (Linkedin/Alok Choudhari)
Washington, 27 June
The US imposed sanctions on eight persons and entities, including an Indian national associated with an explosives manufacturing firm, for allegedly fuelling the civil war in Sudan.
The US
Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) on Friday said
the targeted networks enabled both the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the
Rapid Support Forces (RSF) to expand and intensify civil war in the African
nation.
Among the
sanctioned individuals is Alok Choudhari of Raipur, the Chief Executive Officer
of SBL Energy Limited, also known as Amin Explosive Private Limited, which
allegedly supplied over 200 shipments of explosives and explosive-related
materials to a company that maintained the SAF's arsenal.
The
Treasury Department also imposed sanctions on SBL Energy Limited and other
firms based in Sudan and Egypt.
"These
networks supply weapons, explosives, and foreign fighters to both the Sudanese
Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces. Their support has prolonged a
conflict that has created the world's worst humanitarian crisis and provided
space for terrorist groups to operate," Tommy Pigott, spokesperson of the
US Department of State, said in a statement.
Raipur-based
SBL Energy allegedly supplied explosives and related material to Sudan-based
Target Multiactivities Company (TMAC), the US Treasury Department said. The
explosives were subsequently used in bombs deployed by the SAF, it said.
TMAC and
its general manager, senior DIS officer Tariq Hussain Muhammad Madani, have
also been blacklisted.
According
to the US Treasury Department, the Defense Industries System (DIS), Sudan's
largest defence enterprise, supports and maintains the SAF's arsenal of arms,
ammunition, vehicles and material, often acquired from Iran and other external
backers.
DIS
controls numerous subsidiaries, including the Sudanese conglomerate, Giad
Industrial Group (Giad) -- also known as Sudan Master Technology -- through
complex and opaque structures from which it has generated billions of dollars.
DIS's
acquisition of military equipment and related material has enabled the SAF to
sustain combat operations against the RSF, conduct attacks against civilians,
and reject and obstruct efforts to cease hostilities and achieve a ceasefire,
the US Treasury Department said, adding that DIS and Giad were sanctioned in
2023.
OFAC also
designated Ports Engineering Company Ltd, a state-owned civil engineering
construction firm established in 1998 and based in Port Sudan.
Linked to
Sudan Master Technology, the firm has reportedly imported military uniforms and footwear for Sudanese intelligence from a company in the United Arab Emirates, as well as ammunition belts and weapons cases from a Turkish firm, since the
conflict erupted in April 2023.
The
restrictions also targeted individuals tied to a transnational network that
recruits former Colombian military personnel to fight alongside the RSF.
The
network, led by retired Colombian officer Alvaro Andres Quijano Becerra and his
wife, Claudia Viviana Oliveros Forero, was previously sanctioned by Washington.
The US
authorities blacklisted three individuals associated with Panama-based Talent
Bridge, SA, a company allegedly used to obscure the recruitment operations.
The sanctioned individuals, who all held executive or managerial roles at the company, include Panamanian nationals Enrique Daniel Palacios Quintanilla and Jack Peter Derman Guzman, as well as Colombian national Fredy Alejandro Lopez Ocampo.
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