The United Nations Security Council adopted a draft resolution on Wednesday that extends the sanctions on Sudan until September 2025.
In a resolution adopted unanimously, the Council extended until 12 September 2025 the sanctions regime in place since 2005, which is aimed solely at Darfur.
That includes individual sanctions (asset freezes and a travel ban) on three people, and an arms embargo.
The “people of Darfur continue to live in danger and desperation and despair. This adoption sends an important signal to them that the international community remains focused on their plight,” said deputy US ambassador Robert Wood.
Though sanctions do not apply to the whole country, their renewal “will restrict the movement of arms into Darfur and sanction individuals and entities contributing to or complicit in destabilizing activities in Sudan,” he said.
More than 16 months of war between rival Sudanese generals has killed tens of thousands of people and triggered what the United Nations calls the world’s worst internal displacement crisis.
The war pits the army under Sudan’s military leader General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan against the RSF, led by his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Daglo.
The UN and humanitarian organizations fear that the war could degenerate into new ethnic violence, particularly in Darfur, already ravaged more than 20 years ago by the scorched-earth policy pursued by the Janjaweed — Arab militiamen who have since joined the RSF.
China and Russia, permanent members of the Security Council who abstained the last time the embargo was renewed, in 2023, this time voted in favour.
The move “will go some way towards stemming the steady flow of illicit arms into the battlefield and calming down and deescalating the situation on the ground,” said deputy Chinese ambassador Dai Bing.
He said the sanctions were “a means, not an end. They must not replace diplomacy.”