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Africa Horn
Sudanese minister: US planes carried out strike on convoy
2009-03-27
Following unconfirmed reports that the US or Israel attacked a convoy of trucks carrying weapons headed for the Gaza Strip in Sudan, a new report by Sudanese sources cited an additional strike on a ship possibly making its way to Sudan from Iran.

"There were indeed two strikes in Sudan, in January and February," Sudan's deputy transportation minister told Channel 10 on Thursday evening. "I cannot confirm that Israel or the US were behind the attack, but I know that the US controls the airspace there," he said. "The second strike was against a ship at sea and it was completely destroyed," another Sudanese official said.

Earlier, Sudanese State Minister for Highways Mabrouk Mubarak Saleem said that American aircraft had carried out the first attack.

Saleem, who spoke to Al Jazeera on Thursday, was quoted by Israel Radio as having said that the death toll in the bombing was much higher than initial reports, and stood at 800 people. He also claimed that the trucks were filled with people, and did not contain weapons.

According to a CBS News report, 39 people were killed when IAF warplanes bombed the convoy and all 17 trucks were destroyed.

Saleem's statement was in stark contradiction to a Sudanese Tribune report from earlier this week in which he was quoted as saying that a "major power bombed small trucks carrying arms, burning all of them." He added that the raid killed "Sudanese, Eritreans and Ethiopians, and injured others."

On Thursday, Reuters quoted two Sudanese politicians who confirmed that the strike had taken place. They declined to point fingers but one of them said that his colleagues had spoken to a survivor of the strike. "There was an Ethiopian fellow, a mechanic. He was the only one who survived. He said they came in two planes. They passed over them, then came back and they shot the cars. He couldn't tell the nationality of the aircraft ... The aircraft destroyed the vehicles. There were four or five vehicles," he was quoted as saying.

Reuters quoted the politician as saying that the route along which the strike took place was located in a desert area northwest of Port Sudan on the Red Sea coast and was used regularly by groups that smuggled weapons into Egypt. "Everyone knows they are smuggling weapons to the southern part of Egypt," he was quoted as saying.
Posted by:Fred

#4  The region is the site of one of the oldest training camps founded by the Bashir government of the Sudan following the 30 June 1989 Revolution. Mubarak of Egypt has complained that Egyptian mujahideen were trained there. Yemenis have practically admitted that Sudanese were training Yemeni rebels there prior to the short, sharp civil war of 1994. The region has been of especial interest to Iran ever since meetings held in December 1991. Thus, intel agencies from a number of nations have kept a close watch on the place for years.
Posted by: balthazar   2009-03-27 20:06  

#3  "Sudanese. Eritreans, and Ethiopians" > WE MISSED THE ZULUS, ANC, + ANGOLANS, ETC. DIDN'T WE???
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2009-03-27 19:42  

#2  Can Sudan prove it wasn't IEDs set by those who oppose whoever sent/received* the convoy? Or RPGs?

*Ok, nobody received it, but someone wanted to.

Oh, and 800 people divided by 37 vehicles equals 21.6 people/vehicle. That strikes me as much too uncomfortable for 800 civilians to choose willingly... but why would someone transport troops like that, even if it were remotely true? Finally, does the Sudanese government have airplanes capable of dropping bombs or shooting missiles? Does Egypt?
Posted by: trailing wife   2009-03-27 13:37  

#1  "I cannot confirm that Israel or the US were behind the attack, but I know that the US controls the airspace there," he said.

Heh
Posted by: Halliburton AirSpace Control Division   2009-03-27 07:35  

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