Sudan, Iran Exchange Ambassadors after 8-Year Rupture

Al-Burhan received the credentials of the Iranian ambassador (Sovereignty Council website)
Al-Burhan received the credentials of the Iranian ambassador (Sovereignty Council website)
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Sudan, Iran Exchange Ambassadors after 8-Year Rupture

Al-Burhan received the credentials of the Iranian ambassador (Sovereignty Council website)
Al-Burhan received the credentials of the Iranian ambassador (Sovereignty Council website)

The head of the Sovereignty Council, Commander of the Sudanese Army, Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, received, on Sunday, the credentials of Hassan Shah, the new Iranian Ambassador in Sudan, after more than 8 years of complete estrangement between the two countries.
In press statements, the Undersecretary of the Sudanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Hussein Al-Amin, pointed to the “beginning of a new phase of bilateral relations,” and stressed strong ties between Sudan and Iran.
He added: “The President of the Sovereignty Council welcomed the new ambassador of Iran.”
In turn, the Iranian ambassador said that submitting his credentials “comes within the framework of the common consensus between the two countries regarding the exchange of ambassadors and the promotion of bilateral relations.” He added that he would do his “utmost to strengthen cooperation relations between the Islamic Republic of Iran and Sudan.”
He also noted that his country “supports national sovereignty and the territorial integrity of Sudan.”
In October, Sudan announced the resumption of diplomatic relations with Iran following meetings between officials in the two countries, which lasted for months.
The new rapprochement began during talks between their foreign ministers in Azerbaijan, in July 2023, on the sidelines of the meeting of the Ministerial Committee of the Non-Aligned Movement.
In June 2016, the government of deposed Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir announced that it was severing its relations with Iran and expelling its ambassador from Khartoum.



Confessions of Captured Iraqi Daesh Member Uncover Mass Grave in Fallujah

Members of the Iraqi forces during a previous chase operation of Daesh members (Reuters)
Members of the Iraqi forces during a previous chase operation of Daesh members (Reuters)
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Confessions of Captured Iraqi Daesh Member Uncover Mass Grave in Fallujah

Members of the Iraqi forces during a previous chase operation of Daesh members (Reuters)
Members of the Iraqi forces during a previous chase operation of Daesh members (Reuters)

The official spokesman for the Iraqi Security Service, Arshad Al-Hakim, announced on Sunday that the authorities have found the remaining bodies of the victims of Al-Musalaha mass grave, located in Fallujah.
This discovery comes after the Iraqi forces captured a senior Daesh leader, known as Abu Hiba, in Anbar, officials reported.
Abu Hiba allegedly admitted his role as the security official for the Fallujah district under Daesh control and disclosed the location of a mass grave in Fallujah’s Al-Musalaha cemetery.
The grave contained bodies of security personnel and civilians, with five individuals found, two of whom have been identified.
“The number of victims found aligns with Abu Hiba’s confessions,” Al-Hakim stated.
Investigations are underway to identify the remaining victims.
Abu Hiba’s arrest follows a months-long intelligence operation conducted by the security services in Iraq, which also uncovered the location of the mass grave, the spokesperson said.
Fallujah, one of the most important cities in the western Anbar Governorate, emerged among the largest strongholds of opposition to the regime established by the United States in Iraq in 2003. The city was the main incubator of terrorist and extremist groups from Al-Qaeda, and later ISIS, but today it is considered one of the calmest cities in the Anbar area.
On a different note, a Baghdad court issued death sentences on Sunday for eight individuals charged with aiding two suicide bombers for attacks which took place in Iraq around nine years ago.
A statement from the Iraqi Federal Supreme Court said that the eight men had “confessed to transporting two suicide bombers who blew themselves up in Bab al-Sharqi area and al-Wathba Square in 2015,” referring to two popular shopping locations in the Iraqi capital.
The sentences and executions carried out by the Iraqi authorities in accordance with Article 4 of the Counter-Terrorism Law were criticized by the Special Commissioner of the United Nations Human Rights Council.
The Commissioner stated in a report submitted to the Security Council at the end of June that Iraq’s “systematic executions of prisoners sentenced to death based on torture-tainted confessions, and pursuant to an ambiguous counterterrorism law, amount to arbitrary deprivation of life under international law and may amount to a crime against humanity.”