The secret trip of the Zionist security delegation to Sudan
Zionist media reported that a security delegation from the regime secretly visited Khartoum and met with Sudanese officials.
Zionist television reported today (Saturday) that a high-ranking security delegation from the regime traveled to Sudan last week and met with Saudi officials.
According to the Arab 21 news website, quoting the report, the focus of the Israeli delegation’s talks with Sudanese government officials was security issues and did not include political discussions.
Security coordination between Khartoum and Tel Aviv continues while the Sudanese people have demonstrated their opposition to the normalization of relations with the Zionist regime through numerous demonstrations.
On Friday, Anatolia news agency reported that Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, chairman of the Sudanese Governing Council, threatened on Friday that Volker Pertz, the UN envoy for Sudan and head of a delegation called the United Nations Mission to Assist in the Transition to Sudan. Expels (UNITAMS) for allegedly interfering in the affairs of this country.
The streets of Sudan have witnessed numerous demonstrations since October 25 last year; Popular opposition to al-Burhan’s unilateral decisions as commander of the army, the declaration of a state of emergency in the country, the dissolution of the governing council and the agreement to normalize relations with the Zionist regime are among the most important topics of these protests.
Last February, however, the head of Sudan’s governing council announced that security and intelligence relations between Tel Aviv and Khartoum had never ceased since his meeting with former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Sudan and Israel reached an agreement in October 2020, mediated by the previous US administration, to normalize relations, but so far no formal agreement has been signed between the two sides. The reason for this is that the Sudanese Governing Council is an interim government until elections are held in the country and is not legally entitled to sign binding international commitments for the Khartoum government.